Foreign policy chaos puts America behind in the global influence race
By: Rachel Marsden
VANCOUVER, British Columbia — A new 150-page Pentagon white paper asks why 
Russia is winning the race for global influence. A better question: Why is 
America losing that race? It might have something to do with a lack of 
discipline, evident in a freewheeling foreign policy vulnerable to special 
interests and self-serving grifters looking to make a quick buck from the chaos.
It’s the same foreign policy responsible for the fact that Iran is back to 
aggressively enriching uranium. And really, who can blame the Iranians? Nuclear 
power gets respect — and photo ops like the one last week between U.S. President 
Donald Trump and North Korean leader Kim Jong Un.
Even the CIA had confirmed that Iran was holding up its end of the bargain and 
not enriching uranium under the nuclear deal struck between Iran, the European 
Union and the members of the U.N. Security Council (plus Germany). The Trump 
administration reneged on the agreement anyway and then made it a burden for 
other nations to uphold their part, lest their multinationals end up criminally 
charged for violating Trump’s reimposed sanctions.
U.S. Secretary of State Mike Pompeo says Iran’s uranium enrichment is 
unacceptable.
“The United States is committed to negotiating a new and comprehensive deal with 
the Iranian regime to resolve its threats to international peace and security,” 
Pompeo said.
Seriously? You HAD that. Why would Iran, or any other country, have any interest 
in good-faith negotiations with the U.S. when it has already demonstrated a 
propensity to shred agreements whenever the mood strikes?
Trump has criticized the Iran agreement as “defective at its core.” His 
administration balked at the lifting of sanctions, which allowed Iran access to 
billions of dollars in frozen assets. The anti-Iran hawks in Washington have 
fever dreams about that money ending up in the hands of their sworn enemies. 
Instead of dreaming up hypothetical scenarios, why not focus on how the weapons 
America has sold to its allies have made the world a more dangerous place?
The New York Times reported last week that markings on four American anti-tank 
Javelin missiles found at a compound controlled by the leader of a Libyan rebel 
group indicate that they had been sold by the U.S. to the United Arab Emirates. 
The UAE is the primary supporter of U.S. citizen Khalifa Haftar’s coup attempt 
against the internationally recognized government in Libya — which itself was 
installed after a U.S.-backed coup that resulted in the death of Muammar 
Gaddafi.
Chaos attracts profiteers — not only the kind who have defense-contractor 
relationships with the Pentagon, but also two-bit chancers.
There have been reports of private citizens trying to sell the Trump 
administration on letting them take over the war in Afghanistan, or help 
overthrow Venezuelan President Nicolas Maduro. One can only imagine the pitches 
these guys are dreaming up for Iran.
Even Rex Tillerson, Trump’s former secretary of state, was reportedly shocked by 
how untethered foreign-policy freewheeling is from government control. 
Testifying before the House Foreign Affairs Committee earlier this year, 
Tillerson said he was angry when he learned that White House advisers Steve 
Bannon and Jared Kushner had a private dinner with leaders of Saudi Arabia and 
the UAE, discussing plans to blockade Qatar without input from the State 
Department. The meeting took place just weeks after Kushner had sought a 
business loan from Qatar and was denied.
Tillerson also told the committee about walking into a Washington, D.C.-area 
restaurant and seeing the Mexican foreign secretary dining with Kushner:
“And I could see the color go out of the face of the foreign secretary of Mexico 
as I very — I smiled big, and I said: ‘Welcome to Washington.’ And I said: ‘I 
don’t want to interrupt what y’all are doing.’ I said: ‘Give me a call next time 
you’re coming to town.’ And I left it at that.
“As it turned out later, the foreign secretary was operating on the assumption 
that everything he was talking to Mr. Kushner about had been run through the 
State Department and that I was fully on board with it. And he was rather 
shocked to find out that when he started telling me all these things that were 
news to me, I told him this is the first time I’m hearing of it.”
Does anyone think that the Russian foreign minister would walk into a Moscow 
restaurant and see Vladimir Putin’s son-in-law holding a meeting with another 
nation’s foreign minister without his knowledge?
Big government may be a drag, but foreign-policy anarchy clearly isn’t a good 
alternative, either.
COPYRIGHT 2019 RACHEL MARSDEN