President Trump, it must be deduced, is an isolationist.
There is no big picture foreign policy of the United States (or none that Crunchicrant can discern), other than to reduce involvement in, and commitment to, foreign ventures (where there has been limited success – but we are still ‘in’ Afghanistan and Iraq and pretty much every other place we have had a past presence).
The administration has been active as regards
Other ‘hot spots’ – Afghanistan; China-Taiwan/Xingxiang; Iraq; Korean peninsular; Syria; Tigre; Ukraine/Crimea; Venezuela; Yemen – little activity, apparently.
President Trump has stated that he does want security and strong defenses. But he has made strong defense synonymous with big defense spend and a big military- army and national guard force numbers, marine battalion numbers, naval ship and air force aircraft number targets were promised: these are surely the wrong metrics in this age.
Our (expensive) security resources [Defense spend], in particular our military, have been built to support an active foreign policy that faced down communism and guaranteed free flow of oil from the middle east. These are receding concerns.
Absent from the story of the administration is new thinking about defense and security, rising threats and appropriate responses: Crunchicrant worries about unconventional and asymmetric attacks and does not see resourcing to counter them.
One such threat (the COVID pandemic) hit us from left field, early this year.
A part of the inward turn has been a desire to secure our borders and curb undocumented immigration: a policy to be achieved by building the US-Mexico “wall”. The flow of undocumented immigrants into the US may have slowed significantly, but in what part this is due to Trump administration policy, and what part to the effects of COVID-19, is not known.
Crunchicrant grades based on clarity of strategy – whether there is clarity about the US’s role in the world and whether the foreign and defense/security strategies are joined up and make sense: our role in the world is unclear, foreign strategy is not well founded, defense/security strategy is (therefore) adrift. Meanwhile policy towards controlling the border looks muscular but is not smart.