Everything
that follows was said by Donald Trump:
'When you talk about currency manipulation ... they [China] are world
champions.' -- Interview with Financial
Times, 2 April 2017
'[China] are not currency manipulators.' -- Interview with Wall Street Journal, 12 April 2017
'I said it [Nato] was obsolete. It's no longer obsolete.' -- press
conference, 12 April 2017
'China has great influence over
North Korea.' - Interview with Financial
Times, 2 April 2017
'After listening [to President Xi
Jinping of China] for 10 minutes, I realised it’s not so easy.' -- Interview
with Wall Street Journal, 12 April
2017
You get the picture. The president
of the United States is a man who has redefined the art of the political
flip-flop. According to one calculation, he reversed position on no fewer than
six policy issues last Wednesday alone.
So here's the question: do you
approve or disapprove? One interpretation of what he's up to is that he's
learning fast -- and that the simplistic, shoot-from-the-lip stuff that served
him well enough on the campaign trail is now being jettisoned in favour of a
more nuanced, bipartisan, even globalist approach.
Mr Trump seems, however, to recognise
that he's vulnerable to the charge that he's ripping up his promises by the
barrel-load. On Twitter, which is where you find the 'real' Donald Trump (not
for nothing is his Twitter handle @realDonaldTrump), he insisted: 'One by one
we are keeping our promises - on the border, on energy, on jobs, on
regulations. Big changes are happening!'
He also claimed, for good measure: 'Things
will work out fine between the U.S.A. and Russia. At the right time everyone
will come to their senses & there will be lasting peace!'
I can't tell you how much better
that made me feel.
And I think we have to assume that authorising
the US air force to drop the most powerful non-nuclear bomb in its arsenal --
the 21,000-ton so-called 'mother of all bombs' -- on a cave complex in eastern
Afghanistan must have made Mr Trump feel a lot better as well. After all, he did
promise to 'bomb the shit' out of the Islamic State group, so he probably
regards this as one promise he has kept.
Perhaps, though, he's not learning anything.
Perhaps he's just listening to different people. His arch-ideologue chief
strategist Steve Bannon is apparently being pushed out of the inner circle, and
perhaps out of the White House entirely, which is probably the best place for a
man who once said: 'Lenin wanted to destroy the state and that’s my goal too
... I want to bring everything crashing down ...'
My suspicion is that what we're
actually witnessing is a president who still doesn't have a clue what he's
doing. This, after all, is the man who when he proudly described to a TV
interviewer how he broke the news to President Xi that he had authorised a cruise
missile attack on Syria used these exact words:
'I was sitting at the table. We had
finished dinner. We are now having dessert. And we had the most beautiful piece
of chocolate cake that you have ever seen. And President Xi was enjoying it. And
I was given the message from the generals that the ships are locked and loaded.
What do you do? And we made a determination to do it. So the missiles were on
the way. And I said: "Mr President, let me explain something to you …
we’ve just launched 59 missiles, heading to Iraq."'
Iraq. He said Iraq. And when the
interviewer gently corrected him, he just shrugged 'Yeah, heading towards Syria.'
As if he didn't know the difference. And didn't much care either.
Before he took office, Mr Trump told
everyone who would listen that he expected to get on just fine with Russia but
that the real enemy was China. Now, after less than a hundred days in the White
House, it's exactly the other way round.
He was going to get rid of
Obamacare, introduce a massive tax reform programme, and build a wall (sorry, a
beautiful wall) along the border with Mexico. He has done none of it.
Good news? Bad news? Personally, I
see no cause for celebration. The best that we can hope for is that the Trump
administration may not turn out to be quite as bad as we feared at the
start. But I still regard the words
President Trump as two of the scariest words in the English language.
3 comments:
I watch with endless fascination, the daily utterances of Mr.T. Sometimes I laugh out loud. It's beyond hysteria.
If he really is as uninformed as he appears to be on just about everything outside his own business world, then the future of international stability seems to lean on those around him who he relies on for advice. With his current team and his seeming reliance on family members (and Fox News), it really doesn't fill you with confidence, does it? We survived Reagan and Dubya - but a third time lucky?
And what's he going to do for an encore (serious question)? I imagine sensible Democrats in expectation of better election results in 2018 are already in private conversations with the more blue-blooded Republicans with a view to moderating a POTUS shoot-from-the-hip policy.
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