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Trump the Intimidator Fails Again


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2020 Jan 6, 11:26pm   2,070 views  10 comments

by marcus   ➕follow (7)   💰tip   ignore  

yes, it's Krugman, so you Trump Cucks are probably going to want to ignore it. But he nails it in my opinion.

https://www.nytimes.com/2020/01/06/opinion/trump-iran-trade.html?algo=top_conversion&fellback=false&imp_id=552305063&imp_id=118600904&action=click&module=trending&pgtype=Article®ion=Footer


International crises often lead, at least initially, to surging support for a country’s leadership. And that’s clearly happening now. Just weeks ago the nation’s leader faced public discontent so intense that his grip on power seemed at risk. Now the assassination of Qassim Suleimani has transformed the situation, generating a wave of patriotism that has greatly bolstered the people in charge.

Unfortunately, this patriotic rallying around the flag is happening not in America, where many are (with good reason) deeply suspicious of Donald Trump’s motives, but in Iran.

In other words, Trump’s latest attempt to bully another country has backfired — just like all his previous attempts.

From his first days in office, Trump has acted on the apparent belief that he could easily intimidate foreign governments — that they would quickly fold and allow themselves to be humiliated. That is, he imagined that he faced a world of Lindsey Grahams, willing to abandon all dignity at the first hint of a challenge.

But this strategy keeps failing; the regimes he threatens are strengthened rather than weakened, and Trump is the one who ends up making humiliating concessions.

Remember, for example, when Trump promised “fire and fury” unless North Korea halted its nuclear weapons program? He claimed triumph after a 2018 summit meeting with Kim Jong-un, North Korea’s leader. But Kim made no real concessions, and North Korea recently announced that it might resume tests of nuclear weapons and long-range missiles.

Or consider the trade war with China, which was supposed to bring the Chinese to their knees. A deal has supposedly been reached, although details remain scarce; what’s clear is that it falls far short of U.S. aims, and that Chinese officials are jubilant about their success in facing Trump down.

Why does Trump’s international strategy, which might be described as winning through intimidation, keep failing? And why does he keep pursuing it anyway?

One answer, I suspect, is that like all too many Americans, Trump has a hard time grasping the fact that other countries are real — that is, that we’re not the only country whose citizens would rather pay a heavy price, in money and even in blood, than make what they see as humiliating concessions.

Ask yourself, how would Americans have reacted if a foreign power had assassinated Dick Cheney, claiming that he had the blood of hundreds of thousands of Iraqis on his hands? Don’t answer that Suleimani was worse. That’s beside the point. The point is that we don’t accept the right of foreign governments to kill our officials. Why imagine that other countries are different?

Of course, we have many people in the diplomatic corps with a deep knowledge of other nations and their motivations, who understand the limits of intimidation. But anyone with that kind of understanding has been excluded from Trump’s inner circle.

Now, it’s true that for many years America did have a special leadership position, one that sometimes involved playing a role in reshaping other countries’ political systems. But here’s where Trump’s second error comes in: He has never shown any sign of understanding why America used to be special.

Part of the explanation, of course, was raw economic and military power: America used to be just much bigger than everyone else. That is, however, no longer true. For example, by some key measures China’s economy is significantly bigger than that of the United States.

Even more important, however, was the fact that America was something more than a big country throwing its weight around. We always stood for something larger.

That doesn’t mean that we were always a force for good; America did many terrible things during its reign as global hegemon. But we clearly stood for global rule of law, for a system that imposed common rules on everyone, ourselves included. The United States may have been the dominant partner in alliances like NATO and bodies like the World Trade Organization, but we always tried to behave as no more than first among equals.

Oh, and because we were committed to enforcing rules, we were also relatively trustworthy; an alliance with America was meaningful, because we weren’t the kind of country that would betray an ally for the sake of short-term political convenience.

Trump, however, has turned his back on everything that used to make America great. Under his leadership, we’ve become nothing more than a big, self-interested bully — a bully with delusions of grandeur, who isn’t nearly as tough as he thinks. We abruptly abandon allies like the Kurds; we honor war criminals; we slap punitive tariffs on friendly nations like Canada for no good reason. And, of course, after more than 15,000 lies, nothing our leader and his minions say can be trusted.

Trump officials seem taken aback by the uniformly negative consequences of the Suleimani killing: The Iranian regime is empowered, Iraq has turned hostile and nobody has stepped up in our support. But that’s what happens when you betray all your friends and squander all your credibility.

Comments 1 - 10 of 10        Search these comments

1   Ceffer   2020 Jan 7, 1:56am  

So, Krugman has severe, naysaying TDS disease, the affliction that keeps on giving. Might as well add it to his long and embarrassing list of crummy preaching fails.
2   komputodo   2020 Jan 7, 5:12am  

so patriotism in foreign countries is a bad thing?
3   MisdemeanorRebel   2020 Jan 7, 8:39am  

marcus says
Under his leadership, we’ve become nothing more than a big, self-interested bully — a bully with delusions of grandeur, who isn’t nearly as tough as he thinks.

Translation: America is acting like a nation for the benefit of it's citizens, not as the leader of an ideological notion, neoliberalism, which makes us aggressive internationalists very angry. We are a nation for the benefit of the life, liberty, and pursuit of happiness of it's citizens. NOT the ideological vanguard of a religion or philosophy, like the Kaliphate or the USSR.

We abruptly abandon allies like the Kurds; we honor war criminals; we slap punitive tariffs on friendly nations like Canada for no good reason. And, of course, after more than 15,000 lies, nothing our leader and his minions say can be trusted.

This is where Krugman's Mendacity or Ignorance shines.

The Kurds do not have a state; they are divided into two very different political groups and several smaller ones. We are in a formal Alliance with Turkey called "NATO".
NATO members are contributing far below the 2% of GDP recommended.

Canada is so awful we are ending up doing the lion's share of providing forces to protect THEIR Arctic, even though Canada has the most bordering coastline with it, and we have a ton of other areas of interest from Europe to Korea to the Gulf. Frankly, Trudeau ought to be given a one year deadline to shape up or be kicked out of NATO.

Canada is very selfish in trade; it excludes US companies from their telecom and banking industries, for example. It heavily subsidizes lumber and diary and floods the US market and dumps goods that are often cheaper here than in Canada itself.

Why doesn't Krugman care about these nuances and injustices?

Because the US to him is just a tool to advance Neoliberalism.

HOW DARE YOU American Citizens demand the countries policies align with your self-interest? Sacrifice for the great Globalist Oligarchy of Technocrats! (Revolving door corporate-government bureaucrats)
4   mell   2020 Jan 7, 1:12pm  

Krugsheister?? lol fuck off.
5   theoakman   2020 Jan 7, 1:19pm  

the only thing Krugman nailed was his student which he subsequently married.
6   Ceffer   2020 Jan 7, 1:22pm  

Krugman's followers are waiting for him to be wrong ALL the time instead of just 95 percent of the time. Then they'll scream "The Nobel Made Me Do It!"
7   EBGuy   2020 Jan 7, 2:19pm  

I'll see your Krugman and raise you a Friedman...
In 2015, the United States and the major European powers agreed to lift virtually all their sanctions on Iran, many dating back to 1979, in return for Iran halting its nuclear weapons program for a mere 15 years, but still maintaining the right to have a peaceful nuclear program. It was a great deal for Iran. Its economy grew by over 12 percent the next year. And what did Suleimani do with that windfall?
He and Iran’s supreme leader launched an aggressive regional imperial project that made Iran and its proxies the de facto controlling power in Beirut, Damascus, Baghdad and Sana. This freaked out U.S. allies in the Sunni Arab world and Israel — and they pressed the Trump administration to respond.
9   MisdemeanorRebel   2020 Jun 30, 1:43pm  

Krugman, so moderate, so wise, so centrist:

"Die, Old People"

10   RWSGFY   2020 Jun 30, 1:53pm  

marcus says
Trump Cucks


Isn't this against the rules?

@Patrick, how do I flag a thread?

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