In Europe, Trump almost sounded like an adult
If you closed your eyes and listened to the words emanating from President Trumpâs meetings in Europe last week â" instead of, say, reading his tweets â" it sounded as if American foreign policy had suddenly been hijacked by adults. Most of the time, at least.
At the G-20 summit in Hamburg, Trump returned U.S. policy on Russia toward something resembling normalcy. Secretary of State Rex Tillerson described Trumpâs meeting with Russian President Vladimir Putin as the very model of a pragmatic, well-briefed president at work.
âThere's a lot of things in the past that both of us are unhappy about,â Tillerson said. âThe perspective of both of them was: This is a really important relationship. Two largest nuclear powers in the world. It's a really important relationship. How do we start making this work?â
Itâs hard to quarrel with that kind of practicality. Of course we want a productive relationship with Russia, even though our interests still collide much of the time.
The one exception to my ânormalcyâ thesis is t hat while Trump âpressedâ Putin on election hacking, in Tillersonâs retelling, the pressure was evidently a little soft. The president didnât threaten consequences if Russia were to continue its subversion. (He warned that Congress might pass new sanctions, but thatâs only semi-tough.)
Nor did he get a clear commitment from Putin to stop interfering. Instead, Putin denied ever doing anything of the sort â" and whatever Trump said in response was mild enough that Russiaâs foreign minister described it as U.S. acceptance of Putinâs denial.
Months after the election, Trump still wonât state plainly and publicly, without absurd hedges, that Russia meddled on his behalf. For Trump, thatâs not foreign policy, itâs personal: A shadow on his legitimacy as president.
Trump and Tillerson sounded a bit soft on Syria too. They tacitly confirmed that their policy now is to allow Russiaâs client, Bashar Assad, to remain in power if thatâs the only way to end the countryâs dreadful civil war. Assad shouldnât be allowed to stay for the long run, Tillerson added, but that was well short of the Obama administrationâs demands for regime change â" a demand, it must be noted, that Obama never managed to enforce.
âBy and large, our objectives [in Syria] are exactly the same,â Tillerson said optimistically, unconsciously echoing his predecessor, John Kerry, who pursued Russian cooperation fruitlessly for years.
The two countries announced an agreement on a ceasefire in southwest Syria, a sensible deal designed to show that the two countries can work together. And it will be a useful test of Russiaâs intentions. (If itâs anything like the ceasefire deals Kerry negotiated, it wonât last a month.)
The real surprise was how tough Trump came across on some issues â" particularly NATO.
In Warsaw, Trump finally reaffirmed the U.S. treaty commitment to defend NATO countries against Russia. Trump also charged â" in harsher language than heâs used before â" that Moscow is threatening Europe's security through âpropaganda, financial crimes and cyberwarfareâ as well as old-fashioned military pressure.
âWe urge Russia to cease its destabiliz ing activities in Ukraine and elsewhere and its support for hostile regimes including Syria and Iran, and to instead join the community of responsible nations,â he said.
Not much promise of bromance in that. Score one for the foreign policy aides known in Washington as Trumpâs âgrownups,â especially his national security adviser, H.R. McMaster. In May, McMaster tried to get Trump to embrace NATO at a summit in Brussels; when Trump balked, U.S. allies were frantic. The Warsaw speech was the presidentâs do-over.
Of course the president is still capable of derailing carefully-plotted policies by tweeting â" and by the time you read this, he may have done just that. (He tweeted from the G-20 Summit that âeverybodyâ there was talking about Hillary Clinton advisor John Podestaâs e-mails, an assertion that must have puzzled the 19 leaders who were all talking about other things.)
Still, Trump made it through his first face-to-face meeting with Putin without any gaffes. There was no bear hug, no Trump-style bombast. Trump did not claim, as he once did, that his special bond with Putin would make âgreat dealsâ easy. Most important, Trump finally made it clear that he accepts the 68-year-old obligation to defend NATO countries from Russian pressure.
His critics will say thatâs a low bar, and theyâre right. But itâs a start.
Twitter: @DoyleMcManus
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