The presidents of United of States of America, more so from
John Fitzgerald Kennedy to Barak Obama, have tended to impact history more for
the brilliance of their public remarks than the perspicacity of their policies
and actions. And political analysts have variously observed that mastery of the
spoken word has more than its conventional significance on the fate of US
presidential candidates. But the current holder of that all-powerful office,
Donald Trump, promises to be the exception that would prove that rule.
President Trump would not, by any standard, pass as a brilliant public speaker,
but the proven efficacy of his policies and actions in less than 24 months in
office dwarf the full-term achievements of most of his predecessors. In most
instances Trump has succeeded with seeming ease in international situations which
his predecessors had considered impossible.
For example, in over sixty years since the Korean war, the
western world could not tame the military adventurism of North Korea. But Trump
somehow not only managed to get the North Koreans to resume communications with
their estranged southern brethren, but he also succeeded in making the North
Korean leadership see reason in commencing negotiation talks on dismantling its
nuclear armament programme. He has also put a measure of effective check on
Bashar al-Assad genocidal excesses in Syria’s protracted civil war. Next, Trump
looked China (US leading trading competitor) in the face and accused her of
cheating through currency manipulations; and consequently imposed tariffs on
imports from China. Trump’s immigration proposals have been just as audacious.
He proposes to wall-off illegal immigrants from one of his southern neighbours,
Mexico; just as he enacted a novel ban on would-be visitors from select
terrorists-infected countries. The effects of these actions and policies have
been phenomenal; US economic indicators have since headed northwards. But reactionaries
are fanning the embers of counterproductive-Nativism against the president;
with some members of Congress lobbying for impeachment proceedings on Trump, on
the allegation that he colluded with the Russians in meddling with the US 2016
presidential election that brought him to power. That controversy rages on.
President Trump’s just-concluded European official tour was
no less unconventionally bold, if controversial. In Brussels, Trump openly
railed against fellow North Atlantic Treaty Organization (NATO) member-nations
for failing to meet the 2% of Gross Domestic Product (GDP) target set for the organization’s
annual budget. The US would altogether opt out of its obligations to NATO if
other member-nations continued to come short, the US president threatened. The
defaulters immediately retorted by labeling him “a disruptor” of international
bodies. Trump was acting out a Russian script, the defaulters alleged, since
NATO was essentially set up to check the expansionist excesses of the Russian
Federation. Trump was dauntless; he would stir up even more stinging
controversy in the United Kingdom, even amid growing protests against his
visit. When a journalist at his joint news conference with the British prime
minister, Theresa May, asked about his views of the Russian president, Vladimir
Putin; Trump unequivocally said, “Putin is not my enemy; he is my competitor. I
don’t know him that well; he is not my friend either; we could be… But he is
not my enemy.” The statement expectedly elicited strong emotional reactions
across the western world. How could a US president publically deny that Russia
is an adversary of the west? Most of the western world has been asking.
Whilst that question yet buzzed Trump gave a practical effect
of sorts to his unexpected remarks in the UK at his Helsinki summit with the
Russian president. In a seeming subtle attempt to create a room for Trump to
assuage the perceived emotional injuries of his surprise remarks, a US reporter
asked his president to elaborate on his relationship with Putin. “We have all
been foolish in dealing with each other over the years…a lot of mistakes were
made in the past. It is time to correct those mistakes. Putin is not my enemy;
he is a competitor…and I say that as a compliment…”, Trump responded in part,
reiterating the point he had made just before departing the UK. Conservative
America is now loudly calling for Trump’s head in all but words.
This has been the intractable challenge of mankind almost
from creation: the inability of the human mind to evolve from a traditional
position. Trump didn’t say anything new in Helsinki. He hadn’t minced words
throughout his 2015 campaign in commenting about the Russian leader. He even
went as far as wistfully stating that he looked forward to being friends with
Putin, because according to his reading of history, “the world would be a much
better place if the US and Russia got along well”. All true pacifists would
agree on this. A conciliatory relationship between the two global superpowers
would certainly signal the beginning of a nuclear-arms-free world, a much
coveted phase of human evolution. That envisaged conflicts-free phase of human
evolution has actually been within grasp since the world unanimously condemned
the proliferation of weapons of mass destruction, under the auspices of the
United Nations Security Council, decades previously. But few world powers,
notoriously the US, have had the greatest challenge abiding by the spirit and
letter of the non-WMD-proliferation UN Charter. This was the genesis of the
destabilizing arms race between the US and Russia – otherwise dubbed the Cold
War. The ongoing reductionist outrage against Trump’s Helsinki-summit
performance is a confirmation that, indeed, the Cold War still rages in the
minds of many in both America and the Russian Federation. My “Buying the same horse twice” article
made the point on these pages, and it is pertinent to quote relevant section of
the piece in extenso:
“But, as the proxy wars
in Afghanistan, Iraq, Libya, Somalia, Sudan, Syria and other places have since
demonstrated, Perestroika and Glasnost didn’t stop the cold war. The western
and eastern doctrines have since resumed their ego-centric struggle, albeit in
a modified form as decreed by dialectics. Russian President Vladimir Putin’s
every action points nostalgically to a ‘reformed Union of Soviet Socialist
Republics’ while US President Donald Trump talks just as nostalgically of a
‘great native America’. Let us hope that the two modern leaders will be humble
enough to connect the dots leading to the twenty-first century synthesis: a
more equitable world order. That depends on if the two can trust each other.
Even the lead actors of Perestroika and Glasnost, US president Ronald Reagan
and Comrade Mikhail Gorbachev, had expressly recognized this when they agreed
to ‘trust but verify’ each other. It was therefore a good pointer to hear
presidential candidate, Donald Trump, rhetorically ask his supporters,
‘Wouldn’t it be nice if Putin and I get to like (read trust) each other?’”
Indeed, the emerging reality of climate change and rapidly
declining global resources enjoins cooperative relationship between all nations,
going forward. So, by all means, nations should compete among themselves for
excellence; but that excellence should not be for the vainglorious purpose of
national aggrandizement and bullying weaker nations as has been the case. Rather,
nations should compete to excel in promoting the wellbeing of the human race;
for, as all the Holy Writs make clear, all knowledge is for the sole service of
mankind to the eternal glory of the Magnificent Creator. This should be the
global response to the post-Helsinki summit Cold War echoes from the western
world.
Afam
Nkemdiche is an engineering
consultant
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