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by Garrett M. Graff
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HERE
WIRED STAFF; GETTY IMAGES Greenland, Minneapolis, and Venezuela, a foreign enemy could not invent a better chain of events to wreck the standing of the United States.
Your explicit geopolitical goal is to undermine trust in the United States on the world stage.
You want to destroy the Western rules-based order that has preserved peace and security for 80 years, which allowed the US to triumph as an economic superpower and beacon of hope and innovation for the world.
Nothing... In fact, the split-screen juxtaposition of three events this week:
...might someday be seen as heralding the official end of the grand experiment in a rules-based international order that has kept watch since World War II.
Trump's interest in Greenland is as inexplicable and personal as ever a presidential side quest was.
Seeking control from the Danes of a territory holding just 57,000 people and land mostly covered by mile-thick ice,
None of that - quite
the opposite...
The US already has a military base there - and, in fact, once had far more military bases there and has chosen to wind them down over the years.
Sure, it may have some valuable rare earths and its access routes to the melting Arctic might help trade move more easily in the future, but even all of that would have been accessible to any of the dreamy plutocrats who hoped to access its riches given that Denmark was, until just hours ago, among our nation's closest and most reliable allies.
Just about anyone who ever wanted to move to
Greenland has already done so.
To put that in context:
Nor is Donald Trump's new-found imperial ambition coming at some rambunctious peak of popular and political support. His approval rating has fallen steadily since returning to office.
He is underwater dramatically in support for his signature immigration efforts. News headlines are filled with how he appeared, for a time, to be incredibly close friends with the world's most notorious pedophile.
Democrats are winning and picking up seats and offices with dramatic vote percentages.
And the Republican majority in the House hinges on such a narrow margin now that Speaker Mike Johnson's control of the chamber relies on the vagaries of such things as car accidents in Indiana.
Nor has Trump rallied the nation to some grand patriotic cause; in fact, he can barely articulate whatever vision he's pursuing - Wednesday in Davos, he referred to "Iceland" multiple times when he meant "Greenland."
Hours later, he announced he'd come to "the framework of a future deal" with the secretary-general of NATO regarding Greenland and the Arctic, but even if such a deal emerges in the future, the damage is done and the path of the world's future has been rewritten.
Asked about,
It is Donald Trump fully embracing as president the worldview he most succinctly expressed in his infamous Access Hollywood tape:
And indeed nothing he has experienced in a decade on the world stage has disavowed him of that belief, as he has repeatedly beaten and outfoxed the system and become the first convicted felon elected to the White House.
It is hard, in fact, to find any geopolitical parallel.
Countries and leaders have certainly made choices and mistakes that ended in ruin - there's Napoleon setting out to invade Russia or the actions of the Austro-Hungarian empire at the start of World War I - but it's impossible to think of a single moment when a country so thoroughly set about consciously dismantling its core sources of national strength and influence.
All five of those pillars helped firm up and underpin another equally critical pillar:
This made US Treasury bonds the savings bank for the entire world - for democracies and authoritarian regimes alike! - and made US banking networks and capital markets the place to be for any company looking for access to investors.
But even then, Nixon understood how the pillars reinforced one another and pointed the way to a future still led calmly and steadily by the United States.
And, yes, surely due to a combination of missteps, from the disastrous imperialist adventures in Iraq to the 2008 financial collapse to miscalculating the rise of China, US power had already ebbed from its moral standing and unipolarity that it held at 8:46 am on Tuesday, September 11, 2001.
But a quarter century after that peak, day-in and day-out, the US still served as the anchor and foundation of world peace, power, and global institutions.
(It's worth noting, too, that after those 9/11 attacks, NATO rallied to America's side, invoking its "Article 5" protections for the first and only time in its history, and Denmark was such a staunch partner that the tiny Nordic country suffered the third-highest per capita death toll fighting alongside the US in Afghanistan and Iraq.)
To be clear,
But scratch at almost any titanic achievement of humanity across the last 80 years in human history and you'll see the traces of America's six foundational policies, from the astounding achievements in human health and well-being to the decline of world poverty to the very invention of the internet.
Pick almost any measure of business success and I can show you how that six-part recipe applied.
To choose just one:
And yet systematically over the last year - in ways that Putin or Xi couldn't have dreamed we would do to ourselves - Donald Trump has undermined all six pillars.
In recent weeks specifically, he has done lasting and irreparable damage to the rule of law, global alliances, and the independence of US monetary policy.
But it's the international friendships where one can most clearly see the costs mounting in real time.
Just look at the statements coming from that mountain redoubt of global capitalism at Davos:
This is the 'end of the world' as we have known it for 80 years - all for reasons that will confound future political scientists and historians.
There is no strategy behind this exercise in superpower suicide other than the president's own narcissism, greed, and his general frustration at never being respected by the elites whose favor he desires more than anything.
But chief among these institutional collapses is the sheer cowardice of that narrow Republican Congress, which has failed the founders' fundamental belief and trust that the legislative branch would protect its own powers and authorities from the executive branch and would act first to follow their oath of office to the Constitution and not as members of a president's own party.
Through much of his first presidential term, conspiracy theorists wondered and tweeted that Trump must be a Russian agent.
In this second term, we've come to an even more horrifying conclusion - one more embarrassing for the American voter and more damning for Trump in history's final judgment:
Historian
Barbara Tuchman once famously pointed to the May
1910 grand funeral of England's Edward VII - a fabulously colorful
parade of mourning that brought together nine kings, seven queens,
and 40 more imperial and royal highnesses - as the high point and
last gasp of that grand era of wealth and geopolitical dominance
that had been 19th century Europe, before it destroyed
itself in the First World War and ceded control of the world to that
upstart America across the pond.
Nor will they ever be able to contemplate what
the United States once meant to the world beyond.
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