Friday, December 6

Opinion: If we weren’t laughing at Trump we’d be crying


 

 

For the rest of the world, President Donald Trump’s America is a laughingstock, not a leader. That was the takeaway from Trump’s speech to the 2018 United Nations General Assembly.

Trump opened his speech the same way he opens his campaign rallies, TV interviews, and probably conversations with every visitor he meets: In less than two years, my administration has accomplished more than almost any administration in the history of our country.

The response from the leaders assembled in the room? Laughter. The entire world literally laughed at the US president and they weren’t laughing with him. Even Trump himself was taken aback: I did not expect that reaction.

And while reporters and foreign policy experts could not recall another leader ever before drawing derisive laughter at a UN speech, it did not end there. When Trump made another claim Germany will become totally dependent on Russian energy the cameras revealed the German delegation laughing and snickering to one another.

With Trump’s own behavior and policies as a backdrop, the substance of Trump’s speech merited laughter it was an incomprehensible joke.

The main theme of Trump’s speech was protecting US sovereignty and he said that all countries should do likewise. He claimed: The United States will not tell you how to live, work or worship. We only ask that you honor our sovereignty in return. But shortly thereafter Trump spent portions of his speech telling Iran and Venezuela what to do at home.

Unfortunately, the consequences of the policies embedded within Trump’s speech are no joke. They can inflict lasting damage.

On Iran, Trump outlined policies that portend only more conflict. As America’s allies France, Germany, and the United Kingdom work with Russia, China and Iran to preserve the restrictions on Iran’s nuclear program that are now in jeopardy because of America’s withdrawal and sanctions, Trump is stoking a regional Sunni-Shia conflict and imposing more sanctions on Iran.

The nuclear deal made conflict with Iran less likely; Trump’s actions are making violence and war more likely.

It’s why Trump closes America’s doors to refugees, rips children from their parents when crossing the US border and attempts to restrict legal immigration. It’s why, even as the world grapples with the worst crisis of displaced people since World War II, Trump repeatedly attempts to slash US funding for humanitarian assistance and withdraws America’s role as a leader in trying to address crises from Syria to Myanmar.

And it’s why Trump ignored the warnings of his own State Department that ending Temporary Protected Status (TPS) for hundreds of thousands of people from countries like Honduras and El Salvador would destabilize those countries and actually exacerbate unauthorized migration towards the United States.

Perhaps most telling was the list of countries that Trump highlighted at the end of his speech as those embodying the dreams of the kind of nations our children will inherit. Trump praised Saudi Arabia, a brutally repressive dictatorship where women have few rights, and which is fighting a war in Yemen that is creating a humanitarian catastrophe.

He praised Poland, a Nato ally where democratic institutions are under assault from its own government. And he praised Israel, a US ally that runs a military occupation of the Palestinian people in the West Bank.

If these countries are Trump’s idea of the future we want to leave for our children, Trump’s vision of the world he wants to build is quite dark.

Perhaps the laughter in the room during Trump’s speech was a tinged with a sense of anxiety and dread. Perhaps it was the response that comes from those who recognize they are listening to a reckless, dangerous vision from the leader of the world’s most powerful country. And all one can do is muster is a despondent chuckle.