Is a Trump doctrine already taking shape?
By: Rachel Marsden
TANGIER, Morocco -- As current and former presidents, ministers and members 
of various government administrations from all over the world gathered here last 
week for an annual conference near Africa's northernmost point, attendees 
repeatedly circled back to one individual in their comments and questions: U.S. 
President Donald Trump.
While speaking on a panel alongside a former longtime State Department official, 
I said that Trump believes he's in the driver's seat, but someone else is 
controlling the gas pedal, and yet another guy is pumping the breaks -- and 
those guys represent the unelected Washington bureaucracy.
I was stunned and saddened by how many of the young Moroccans in the audience 
nodded in agreement. I'm not sure if the Washington establishment understands 
what it conveys to citizens of monarchies such as Morocco, or to people in other 
countries ruled by leaders with absolute power, when it undermines a president 
who was chosen by the American people. The message is that American democracy 
isn't much different than a monarchy or a dictatorship, since there's an 
unelected bureaucracy capable of undermining the people's chosen representative 
and thus ignoring the will of the people.
Of course, every president faces partisan opposition. That's how democracy 
works. Trump, on the other hand, has faced a nonstop onslaught of obstruction 
from every angle, most problematically from within the institutions of 
government tasked with carrying out his agenda on behalf of those who elected 
him.
The former State Department official hit the double whammy, saying that Trump 
lacks a stable base of support despite having won the election, and claiming 
electoral interference by the Russian bogeyman. I replied that the constant 
whining about Russia is just an attempt to delegitimize Trump's presidency, and 
that he still won the election regardless of how the establishment feels about 
the strength of his "base."
Another American panelist expressed the desire to see America engaged everywhere 
in the world, since the U.S. appears to be ceding ground to Russia and China in 
the Middle East. He lamented that Trump was taking America in a more 
isolationist direction.
First off, why should we be concerned that Russia and China would be more 
engaged in the Middle East than America is? That's their neighborhood: Asia. If 
Chinese and Russian officials expressed concern that the U.S. was more 
politically engaged in Canada than they were, wouldn't we be indignant that they 
would question American involvement in North American affairs?
Yes, it's possible for America to stay engaged in the world in a way that's 
welcome. Unfortunately for the establishment, such a way would largely exclude 
them. If members of the establishment want to make themselves useful, how about 
lifting some politically motivated sanctions and not filtering every solution 
through a purely political prism?
America is the birthplace of capitalism and is full of capitalists capable of 
being its best global ambassadors. I'm not talking about the corporate welfare 
recipients on Wall Street, but rather the self-made entrepreneurs, who could 
venture across the globe in the interests of improving the American economy, 
relations with other countries and their own bottom line. But instead, these 
American businesspeople are hamstrung by politically motivated sanctions against 
the very countries with which America could stand to have more engagement in the 
interests of détente. One could argue that the establishment is taking a 
protectionist stance in order to justify its own existence, rather than ceding 
some of the diplomacy and engagement to American businesspeople.
There's no doubt that Trump's foreign policy strategy has strayed from the path 
favored by his predecessors. As Saudi Arabia and Iran vie for regional 
supremacy, Trump seems content to let them sort it out for themselves rather 
than jump into the fray. Likewise, he terminated the CIA's covert "rebel" 
train-and-equip operations in Syria, allowing Russian, Syrian and 
American-allied forces to get on with the business of exterminating the Islamic 
State and other terrorist groups.
Trump's actions suggest an attempt to take power away from unelected 
establishment "elites" who previously had been permitted to pratfall around the 
world, implementing policies as they saw fit rather than carrying out the plan 
of a president elected by the citizens of America. It's possible that a Trump 
foreign policy doctrine is already taking shape, characterized by a shift from 
political engagement to economic engagement, and a reduction in the unelected 
Washington establishment's influence.
COPYRIGHT 2017 RACHEL MARSDEN