New President, New World

Guest Post by Patrick J. Buchanan

New President, New World

“Don’t Make Any Sudden Moves” is the advice offered to the new president by Richard Haass of the Council on Foreign Relations, which has not traditionally been known as a beer hall of populist beliefs.

Haass meant the president should bring his National Security Council together to anticipate the consequences before tearing up the Iran nuclear deal, moving the U.S. embassy to Jerusalem or shooting down a missile being tested by Kim Jong Un.

In arguing against rash action, Haass is correct.

Where the CFR and the establishment are wrong, and Donald Trump is right, however, is in recognizing the new world we have entered.

The old order is passing away. Treaties and alliances dating from the Cold War are ceasing to be relevant and cannot long be sustained.

Economic patriotism and ethnonationalism, personified by Trump, seem everywhere ascendant. Transnationalism is yielding to tribalism.

The greater danger for President Trump is that the movement he led will be abandoned, its hopes dashed, and the agenda that Trump rejected and routed will be reimposed by a Republican Establishment and its collaborators in politics and the press.

Again, it was Trump who read the nation right, which is why he is taking the oath today.

The existential threat to the West no longer comes from the East, from a Russian army crashing through Poland and Germany and driving for the Elbe and Fulda Gap.

The existential threat to the West comes, instead, from the South.

The billion-plus peoples of the Maghreb, Middle East and sub-Sahara, whose numbers are exploding, are moving inexorably toward the Med, coming to occupy the empty places left by an aging and dying Europe, all of whose native-born populations steadily shrink.

American’s bleeding border is what concerns Americans, not the borders of Estonia, South Korea, Kuwait or the South China Sea.

When Trump calls NATO “obsolete,” he is saying that the great threat to the West is not Putin’s recapture of a Crimea that belonged to Russia for 150 years. And if the price of peace is getting out of Russia’s face and Russia’s space, maybe we should pay it.

George Kennan himself, the architect of Cold War containment of Stalin’s Russia, admonished us not to move NATO to Russia’s border.

Of Brexit, the British decision to leave the EU, Trump said this week, “People, countries want their own identity and the U.K. wanted its own identity … so if you ask me, I believe others will leave.”

Is he not right? Is it so shocking to hear a transparent truth?

How could Europe’s elites not see the populist forces rising? The European peoples wished to regain their lost sovereignty and national identity, and they were willing to pay a price to achieve it.

Apparently, the Davos crowd cannot comprehend people who believe there are more important things than wealth.

Yet while President Trump should avoid rash actions, if he is to become a transformational president, he will spurn an establishment desperately seeking to hold onto the world that is passing away.

Article V of the NATO treaty may require us to treat a Russian move in the Baltic as an attack on the United States. But no sane president will start a war with a nuclear-armed Russia over Estonia.

No Cold War president would have dreamed of so rash an action.

Rather than risk such a war, Ike refused to send a rifle or bullet to the heroic Hungarian rebels in 1956. Painful, but Ike put America first, just as Trump pledged to do.

And given the strength of ethnonationalism in Europe, neither the eurozone nor the EU is likely to survive the decade. We should prepare for that day, not pretend that what is taking place across Europe, and indeed worldwide, is some passing fever of nationalism.

Notwithstanding Secretary of State-designate Rex Tillerson’s diktat, the United States is not going to force China to vacate the fortified reefs in a South China Sea she claims as her national territory.

Stick to that demand, and we best prepare for war.

As for the Taiwan card, it was played in 1972 by Richard Nixon as the price of his opening to China. Four decades ago, Jimmy Carter cut diplomatic ties to Taiwan and terminated our security pact.

For Xi Jinping to accept that Taiwan might be negotiable would mean an end of him and the overthrow of his Communist Party of China.

The Chinese will fight to prevent a permanent loss of Taiwan.

The imperative of the new era is that the great nuclear powers — China, Russia, the United States — not do to each other what Britain, France and Germany did to each other a century ago over a dead archduke.

President Trump should build the wall, secure the border, impose tariffs, cut taxes, free up the American economy, bring the factories home, create millions of jobs and keep us out of any new wars.

With rare exceptions, wars tend to be fatal to presidencies.

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9 Comments
Maggie
Maggie
January 20, 2017 7:07 am

I think there is always an initial “rally around the flag” frenzy when a conflict kicks off, but that soon wanes when legs and arms start getting blown off.

Stucky
Stucky
January 20, 2017 7:13 am

“President Trump should build the wall, secure the border, impose tariffs, cut taxes, free up the American economy, bring the factories home, create millions of jobs and keep us out of any new wars.” ——– JB

Yeah! And he better have all that shit done by this weekend!!!

Suzanna
Suzanna
  Stucky
January 20, 2017 12:04 pm

Stuck,
I love you…you are making me laugh 3 days in a row.

kokoda the deplorable
kokoda the deplorable
January 20, 2017 8:20 am

Trump has to remove our troops and military hardware from the Russian border. In order to do that, commands in the military and Defense establishment.

Note: while writing ‘Defense establishment’, I realized that it is actually an Attack establishment.

Anonymous
Anonymous
  kokoda the deplorable
January 20, 2017 9:25 am

The “Defense” department and Secretary of Defense used to be the Department of War and the Secretary of War.

Changed the name in 1949, IIRC.

Seems to me that the former name was more honest than the latter one.

Anonymous
Anonymous
January 20, 2017 8:37 am

According to Sennels, close to half of all Muslims in the world are inbred. … Even in England, more than half of Pakistani immigrants are married to their first cousins, and in Denmark the number of inbred Pakistani immigrants is around 40%.Sep 29, 2015
Muslims suffer insanity, low IQ, recessive disorders from 1400 years … why O can not say muslum terrorist? Thank God Trump elected

musket
musket
January 20, 2017 8:46 am

Keep the training sites in Germany and rotate US forces for training with “NATO” allies. Reduce the total concentration of US resource requirements there. Damn, I lived as a dependent at Stuttgart at 7th Corps HQ in the mid 50’s. War’s over and the cold war is too…do not restart it to keep the neoclowns happy.

Also…our forces have been fighting or preparing to fight since August of 1990….they need break badly and if they don’t get it soon all hell is going to break loose. Additionally the past 8 have been terrible as they have been a petri dish for the PNT clowns who think they know better…….

overthecliff
overthecliff
January 20, 2017 11:29 am

We must keep our commitment to NATO????? When they don’t keep their commitments to us. Treaties are a two way street time for the Europeans to stop riding for free.

Suzanna
Suzanna
  overthecliff
January 20, 2017 12:08 pm

NATO is just a cover story and we are so sick of it.