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The Trump-Putin Summit and Reliving the Cold War
The National Interest ^ | July 19, 2018 | Daniel McCarthy

Posted on 07/20/2018 1:32:47 PM PDT by Yo-Yo

President Trump blundered in his appearance with Putin, but his intuitions are nevertheless correct: a new Cold War with Russia would not end as happily as the real Cold War did.

Donald Trump has the magic touch. After eighteen months in office, and eighteen more before that as the pre-eminent figure in American politics, Trump’s shock value might have worn off. The political establishment might have become inured to his heresies about cherished policies and sacred institutions, even to the point of learning to control its own response to his provocations. But hell no!—Trump can still do it. He can goad his enemies into saying even crazier things than he does, with the difference that what Trump says speaks to the national psyche, or at least the Republican subconscious. What the defenders of politics past have to say speaks only to a consensus that evaporated when no one was looking.

President Trump does not care what the U.S. intelligence community thinks about Russia. He advertised that fact in his Monday press conference with Vladimir Putin. Dan Coats, the director of national intelligence, says one thing about Russian meddling in the 2016 election. Putin says another. Trump shrugs—metaphorically, if not in fact—and asks himself aloud: why would the Russians do it? A day later, in the face of the fury, Trump amends his statement in the most brazenly casual way possible: oh, did he say “would?” He meant “wouldn’t.” Why wouldn’t the Russians interfere?

The correction, if you can call it that, like the original statement, flags up exactly how Trump feels about his critics, the intelligence world, and investigations into Russian interference, including the possibility of collusion between Trump associates and the Kremlin. He left nothing equivocal on that last point—Trump forcefully denied any collusion with Russia and instead asked what ever became of the server on which the hacked DNC information resided. All of this—from the press remarks to his retroactive reversal to his subsequent assertion, once back in the United States, that Russia is not interfering in the 2018 midterms—may not have been premeditated to provoke his critics (and fair-weather allies) to apoplexy, but could not have been better chosen to do so if it had been planned. John Brennan, director of the CIA under Obama, took to Twitter to proclaim Trump’s words not only impeachable but “nothing short of treasonous.” Others piled on, with the grand prize in histrionics going to former Watergate prosecutor Jill Wine-Banks, whose hyperbole took bad taste and ahistorical fatuity to hitherto unimagined extremes: “It’s just as serious to me as the Cuban missile crisis in terms of an attack or the 9/11 attack,” she told MSNBC, “I would say that his performance today will live in infamy as much as the Pearl Harbor attack or Kristallnacht.”

Top that!

“Treason” and “traitor” became buzzwords. Charles Blow titled his New York Times column on the Trump-Putin meeting “Trump, Treasonous Traitor,” and concluded it by writing, “America is under attack and its president absolutely refuses to defend it. Simply put, Trump is a traitor and may well be treasonous.” So many things of this sort appeared that a counterliterature popped up, with Slate and the Daily Beast running stories whose headlines warned, “Accusing Trump of treason makes him stronger” and “Stop Saying Trump Committed ‘Treason.’ You’re Playing Into His Hands.” “By federal statute, treason is a capital crime, punishable by death,” Fred Kaplan reminded his readers in Slate. “It is also the only crime that the founders chose to define in the Constitution, and they did so very carefully and very narrowly,” such that outside of aiding an enemy with whom the U.S. is in armed conflict, hardly anything qualifies.

President Trump’s extemporaneous, untutored, and highly personal style of speaking is less suitable for international relations than domestic politics, and least suited of all for appearances alongside as dangerous and supremely self-controlled a figure as the leader of Russia. But once again America’s former leadership class is excessively invested in appearances and ritual and oblivious to the substance of a changing world, one in which neither domestic politics nor international affairs remains within the margins established by the post–Cold War liberal consensus.

Public opinion polls in all but a handful of NATO member countries show that Europeans do not want their own countries to fight in the event of a conflict with Russia—outside of Poland and Holland, most Europeans believe that only the Americans, if anyone, should be responsible for an armed confrontation with Russia. Some 49 percent of Americans, meanwhile, believe that the United States should not fight for NATO allies if they do not increase their defense spending. These numbers point to a profound lack of legitimacy on the part of NATO and the posture toward Russia that the alliance automatically assumes. But even as NATO loses legitimacy in the eyes of Europeans and Americans, it expands inexorably, now taking in the country formerly known as the Yugoslav Republic of Macedonia.

Vladimir Putin has an interest in seeing NATO weakened or destroyed, and this alone is enough to reinforce the old Western leadership’s commitment to the almost seven-decade-old anti-Soviet alliance. But neither in the United States nor in Europe, where the public is concerned, is Putin’s desire what matters most. If American voters were as Russophobic as American elites, Mitt Romney would have been elected president in 2012, when he all but promised a new Cold War.

The original Cold War NATO had obvious, limited aims within the context of an ideological struggle. It was an alliance aimed at holding the line against Soviet expansion—not continually expanding itself. After NATO’s founding in 1949, only four additional countries joined the alliance before the end of the Cold War some forty years later. But in the mere two decades between 1999 and now, a further thirteen countries have joined, with Macedonia’s membership pending. This is a very different alliance, one that has never renewed its wellsprings of legitimacy among the peoples of its founding members.

The Soviet Union, which provided NATO its raison d’etre, has been gone for almost thirty years. Putin’s Russia is still a menace to its immediate neighbors and a source of mischief—up to and including murder, but most often taking the form of support for disruptive political movements—to all Western countries. But whatever ideological or subversive reach Putin’s Kremlin may have, it is paltry compared to the often religious zeal of twentieth-century Communism, which infected every Western country and revolutionized much of the developing world. Putin’s strength is exaggerated in the eyes of Western liberals, however, because they identify it with their own weakness—a weakness that has more to do with their own alienation from their fellow citizens than with Russia’s tampering with other nation’s politics. By misidentifying an internal lack of legitimacy with an external threat, the liberal West makes itself doubly vulnerable: to further erosion of norms within its own sphere, arising from a failure to address its real causes, and to unnecessary conflict with Russia, including the ultimate risk of nuclear war. That North Korea’s nuclear program causes such consternation among the Western political class, while the infinitely greater danger posed by Russia’s nuclear arsenal is overlooked in the frenzy to castigate Putin, is an index of how unserious the West’s leadership class has become. Needless to say, a Western leadership class distracted by re-enacting the Cold War of thirty years ago is also a leadership that is unfit to address the much different challenge of China’s rise toward pre-eminence in the 21st century.

President Trump blundered in his appearance with Putin. His intuitions are nevertheless correct: a new Cold War with Russia would not end as happily as the real Cold War did, for reasons that have nothing to do with Romney-esque hype about Russian power. Trump was even correct in substance, if not in the occasion he chose to raise it, to defy the unconstitutional belief that the president has a duty to act as public advocate for the executive agencies that are, in fact, subordinate to him. To speak of “treason” is silly, but if anything is against the Constitution, it is the belief of Trump’s critics that the president cannot gainsay the “intelligence community.” On the contrary, whatever it may report to him, he is free to speak and act as he deems best—the president’s orders are binding upon the intelligence community, not the other way around. If Trump decides that Russia will not be our enemy, the intelligence community has no standing to challenge him. To do so would be a coup d’etat. Congress can impeach him, and the voters can choose not to re-elect him. But the intelligence community’s role is only to advise and serve, not to command or constrain.

Daniel McCarthy is the editor of He is also the editor at large of The American Conservative. His writing has appeared in the New York Times, USA Today, The Spectator, Reason and many other publications.


TOPICS: Business/Economy; Constitution/Conservatism; Foreign Affairs; Front Page News; Government; News/Current Events; Politics/Elections
KEYWORDS: 2018election; 2020election; election2018; election2020; europeanunion; finland; helsinki; mediawingofthednc; nato; partisanmediashills; presstitutes; putin; smearmachine; trump
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[Trump] can goad his enemies into saying even crazier things than he does, with the difference that what Trump says speaks to the national psyche, or at least the Republican subconscious. What the defenders of politics past have to say speaks only to a consensus that evaporated when no one was looking.

The brilliance of Trump is in not being beholden to political correctness. He says what we are all thinking.

1 posted on 07/20/2018 1:32:47 PM PDT by Yo-Yo
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To: Yo-Yo
He says what we are all thinking.

But I believe he would be more effective if he paused before speaking.

2 posted on 07/20/2018 1:41:16 PM PDT by Jeff Chandler (President Trump divides Americans . . . from anti-Americans.)
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To: Yo-Yo

Bump!


3 posted on 07/20/2018 1:44:58 PM PDT by Jim Robinson (Resistance to tyrants is obedience to God!)
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To: Yo-Yo
Vladimir Putin has an interest in seeing NATO weakened or destroyed,

Typical National Review blather.

Since we pay for this cold-war relic no one has more of an interest in weakening NATO than the US, which is a mostly a jobs program for high-falutin deep state international has-been bureaucrats, and great jobs they are.

4 posted on 07/20/2018 1:46:26 PM PDT by AndyJackson
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To: Jeff Chandler

‘Pause before speaking’?

You mean like Obama?

https://youtu.be/GcuuaG6Vvj0


5 posted on 07/20/2018 1:52:45 PM PDT by Lent
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To: Yo-Yo

With POTUS, there are no “blunders”, per se, just streams of thought, some of which cause apoplexy among the media and their RINO allies. But as usual it’s what he DOES that matters and not what he says. This is the new paradigm, and I for one think it makes more sense than the old paradigm of bluster and dueling prepared statements.


6 posted on 07/20/2018 1:55:29 PM PDT by scottinoc
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To: Yo-Yo

We are already in a war. But not Cold War and no nukes necessary!

It is a *hybrid* war and not just against Russia, but China on cyber fronts, economics and trade, spheres of cultural influence, space race, tech and innovation, etc...


7 posted on 07/20/2018 1:56:52 PM PDT by CondoleezzaProtege
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To: Jeff Chandler

That is just another way of saying that you want him to parse his words. To speak only things that soothe, to become PC like Obammy.

He speaks his mind, that is called honesty and I love it.


8 posted on 07/20/2018 1:57:04 PM PDT by Glad2bnuts (If Republicans are not prepared to carry on the Revolution of 1776, prepare for a communist takeover)
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To: Jeff Chandler

POTUS sure has you snowed.


9 posted on 07/20/2018 1:57:20 PM PDT by JayGalt (You can't teach a donkey how to tap dance.)
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To: Jeff Chandler

Let Trump be Trump.


10 posted on 07/20/2018 2:01:02 PM PDT by Jim Robinson (Resistance to tyrants is obedience to God!)
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To: Jim Robinson
It's not everyday I get a bump from JimRob himself! $20 to the Free Republic kitty!

DONATE HERE

11 posted on 07/20/2018 2:08:57 PM PDT by Yo-Yo (Is the /sarc tag really necessary?)
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To: Yo-Yo

I also hope that even as America puts ourselves first again to MAGA (Make America Great Again) — we do not completely discount our prior role in the world as a mistake! Even as troops pull out of places like S. Korea or even Germany...it was for the better that we did what we did. And much of the world should appreciate America for how it’s helped sustain freedom and prosperity for so many. The historical narrative matters.

We need to learn from our mistakes in places like the Middle East, but not completely place doubt in everything that we have accomplished and built up to this point! America-Israel alliance for example is one of the most consequential in the annals of history.


12 posted on 07/20/2018 2:10:23 PM PDT by CondoleezzaProtege
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To: Jeff Chandler

Trump said what he said because he doesn’t trust the deep state intel and doj agencies. And for good reason. They’ve been politicized and weaponized, not only against him, but against constitutional government, ie, against America. I think he had to back off a tad, because the congress and the people are not yet ready to handle the truth. He doesn’t have enough support in the congress right now to withstand a constitutional crisis. But it’s boiling to a head. I suspect the fireworks will start in 2019 after the new congress is seated.


13 posted on 07/20/2018 2:15:12 PM PDT by Jim Robinson (Resistance to tyrants is obedience to God!)
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To: Yo-Yo

Thank you very much, Yo-Yo!! And kitty thanks you too.


14 posted on 07/20/2018 2:25:21 PM PDT by Jim Robinson (Resistance to tyrants is obedience to God!)
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To: Glad2bnuts
That is just another way of saying that you want him to parse his words.

No, just think strategically before speaking, the way Reagan did.

15 posted on 07/20/2018 3:45:04 PM PDT by Jeff Chandler (President Trump divides Americans . . . from anti-Americans.)
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To: JayGalt
POTUS sure has you snowed.

Now that's just silly.

16 posted on 07/20/2018 3:45:31 PM PDT by Jeff Chandler (President Trump divides Americans . . . from anti-Americans.)
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To: Jim Robinson

Let Chandler be Chandler.


17 posted on 07/20/2018 3:46:26 PM PDT by Jeff Chandler (President Trump divides Americans . . . from anti-Americans.)
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To: Jeff Chandler
Not to trade silly accusations I will just say your statement:

But I believe he would be more effective if he paused before speaking.

suggests you do not understand POTUS operating style.

There is no off the cuff going on. The statements which seem a little over the top are meant to, for many reasons: to get people talking about the topic, to get people thinking and to break up the frozen, socially acceptable consensus so that problems can be defined and solutions found. In short President Trump is using spelling mistakes, exaggerations for effect, and shock value to get the public dialog going and going where he wants it to go.

President Trump is in many ways a practitioner of the Art of the Deal. He has no reluctance to look a little stupid if that puts the other side off guard and gets him leverage. He is using the whole schtik to get the deep state & MSM tied up & exposed, to educate the public, to distract so that he can get legislation & judges in place. Don't be fooled into thinking that he is brash and slapdash. He has been planning how to win this battle against a crowded field of America's enemies (internal & external) for 30 years.

18 posted on 07/20/2018 4:40:27 PM PDT by JayGalt (You can't teach a donkey how to tap dance.)
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To: Yo-Yo

There are some really popular paints available for many years that you can spray right on rusty metal and make it look real pretty for a while. Most come in red or blue.

Problem is that your most valued asset continues to rot from the inside no matter how much it shines on the outside.

The real fix starts when the grinder hits it, sparks fly, the worst gets cut out and replaced and it can get real ugly. Paint people scream and whine, but people who understand what hard work and sweat can accomplish just look forward to the strong, beautiful product its builders produced.

Trump is a grinder!


19 posted on 07/20/2018 5:28:11 PM PDT by Hillbilly sage
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To: JayGalt

“Don’t be fooled into thinking that he is brash and slapdash. He has been planning how to win this battle against a crowded field of America’s enemies (internal & external) for 30 years.”

Very true.
President Trump reminds me of General George Patton.
While most men were training to be officers Patton was training to be a warrior. He would often offer thoughts that others thought flippant or brash. Truth was Patton has studied war all his life. The books in his home library, all about war, battles and leaders, were liberally sprinkled with handwritten notes on the margins.
He didn’t have to think or study once battle was joined, he knew the answers from his study of the history of war.

Donald Trump didn’t just study business, he learned the ins and outs of business. The macro and micro and what effects policies have downstream.
He also knows how to handle people, how to get them off their game.
He has been around enough politicians to know what venal and shallow people most of them are.
His entire life has led him to this point.


20 posted on 07/20/2018 5:58:27 PM PDT by oldvirginian (Imagine, if you can.......a world without islam.)
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