Showing posts with label great powers. Show all posts
Showing posts with label great powers. Show all posts

Friday, May 15, 2026

Trump is a gambler, not a dealmaker

 

Trump is a gambler, not a dealmaker

Goes for ‘winner take all’

 

Gordon L. Weil

“The Art of the Deal,” the Trump bible, supposedly shows that the president is the unsurpassed master of negotiations.

In fact, it reveals that Trump is not a negotiator, but a gambler.  Trying to force Ukraine President Volodimir Zelenskyy to accept Russian territorial demands, he said that Putin “holds all the cards.”  In his war against Iran, he said the U.S. “holds all the cards.”  That’s the talk of the poker table, not dealmaking.

His book’s 11-point principles focus on how to behave more like a high-stakes gambler than a negotiator seeking to arrive at a deal.

Negotiating means working to reach a bargain between parties seeking to make a deal that is at least acceptable to each.   Both parties want to maximize their gains, but understand that cannot mean a “winner-take-all” outcome.

Trump’s priority is to defeat the other side.  His idea of a deal would yield control not compromise.

These days, Trump tries to combine the power of his personality with American military power, making every deal into his “winner-take-all.”  To achieve his goal, he has developed a distinctly personal negotiating style.

In typical negotiations, each side has an opening position, and they see if they can find a workable balance of interests.  Of course, one side may have greater power, but it’s hard to find a situation in which one side had “all the cards.”  If it did, there would be no need for negotiations.  But Trump doesn’t negotiate.  There are few talks; he issues ultimatums.

Without any attempt at negotiations, he raised tariffs on all other countries.  He expected them to ask him to lower increases in return for their reducing any trade deficit with the U.S.  Most did, even when the preexisting trade was fair.  The net result was an increase in prices almost worldwide.  Plus, considerable discomfort or even animosity among other countries.

In its trade war on the world, the U.S. caused nations to retreat, except China and Canada.  It has led other countries to take steps to reduce their trade with the U.S.  Canada’s Carney has pushed the idea of “middle powers” working together to increase their trade and shared development, and it’s working.

Trump applied much the same approach with Iran, though he has depended mainly on the threat of American force.   Having seen Venezuelan resistance fold, he thought the U.S. would have a similar effect on Iran.  He failed to understand the difference between the two countries.  Iran has resisted, exploiting its dominance of the Strait of Hormuz.

In its effort to force Iran to accept Trump’s demands, the U.S. has had to deplete its weaponry.  It has transferred naval vessels to the Middle East, leaving international Asian waterways open to China’s claims of sovereignty.   Despite major increases in military spending, it has accepted defensive help by Ukrainian drones, deployed in Arab countries.

Trump looks for public plaudits for his dealmaking. But his Israel-Gaza deal never got beyond Israel getting its hostages back.  His Board of Peace, designed to rebuild Gaza and replace the U.N., has almost disappeared.  He briefly got the spotlight, but his Gaza plans died, possibly from an overdose of ego.

His charm offensive with Kim Jung-un in North Korea, produced nothing, and the country has sent troops to aid the Russians, who now aid Kim.  Despite his self-promotion, the Nobel Peace Prize remains elusive.

Trump may be learning that winner-take-all only works in world affairs when one side is hugely more powerful than the other.  Recent events have shown there are now no great powers. 

The U.S. had to back down on Greenland and can’t prevail in Iran. 

Russia, supposedly the major threat to Western Europe, can’t take over Ukraine, which it thought would fall in days.   

China seemingly wants superpower benefits, mostly economic, without the responsibilities of leadership.

At home, Trump devotes little attention to much beyond retaliating against his critics. He doesn’t make deals.  He does not devise common plans with the GOP leaders of the House and Senate.  He seldom sits down with his own legislators, but often threatens them.  He never talks with the Democrats.

Conference committees formerly negotiated gaps between the two houses, but they have disappeared.   Trump obviously prefers congressional inaction that gives him the scope to act independently, but his executive orders frequently become tangled in court proceedings.  As grandstanding that may work, but there’s no sign of deals, much less artistry.

The great gambler is proving not to be great at government, a different game.  He has promised that his negotiating skills would bring quick results on Ukraine and inflation.  But the record-setting government shutdown and the prolonged Iran war lead his loyalists and others to understand that he can’t make deals or keep many of his high-priority promises.


Sunday, March 22, 2026

Drone revolution: great powers waning


Drone revolution: great powers waning

Europe resists U.S.

 

Gordon L. Weil

Domination of world affairs by the great powers is waning.

A great power might be defined as a country that can influence other countries, wherever they are located, but cannot be dominated by any other nation.  Great Britain was once such a power as was the Soviet Union.  More than a century ago, the U.S. succeeded Britain and more recently so has China, occupying the USSR’s slot.

Conventional wisdom says the world will be subject to the dictates of the United States and China.   Russia, once thought to be a member of the great power elite, has weakened and become dependent on China.

The U.S. and China have the two largest economies and armed forces.  They have vast territories, and many nations may depend on their protection.   It looks like they will be rivals for ultimate control and will engage in competition, if not outright conflict, for years to come.  But do they now meet the definition of a great power? 

President Trump translates America First into both pre-eminent domination and the expectation of ready acceptance by Europe, Latin America and others.  But countries resist and are aided by technology that empowers smaller states to evade or deny great power domination.

The drone revolution has changed the nature of war and the role of great powers.  Medium-state brains in the lab beat great power boots on the ground.

Ukraine may be the leader in undermining the notion of great power status.  At first, Washington believed that Russia, which it saw as a great power, could easily overrun its weak neighbor.  Last year, Trump, thinking in great power terms, said that Russia had all the cards, while Ukraine had none. 

Ukraine lost an estimated 99 percent of U.S. support last year.  It developed its own attack drones, that have effectively blunted Russian advances.    A Ukrainian drone costs about $50,000 or less as opposed to a comparable U.S. Patriot missile costing $2 million.  Some drones are reused.

Last August, Ukraine offered to assist the U.S. with its drones, but was dismissed as a client state, seeking attention.   Last week, the U.S. asked for Ukraine’s help with drones.  So much for not having any cards; the great power needed the smaller nation.

Trump has also alienated allies.  He wants Europe’s military to help in his war against Iran, though he had not consulted them in advance.  While they help to the extent it serves their interests, they have declined some of his demands.

Greenland rankles with them.  When Trump raised the possibility of a military takeover there, Europe resisted.  It has been revealed that Denmark, France and Germany sent troops there to blow up its airfields to block a U.S. invasion.

Europe supposedly avoids a deeper break with the U.S. because of American troops there and its nuclear umbrella.  But does Europe really depend on American protection and, if so, from what country?   Russia is the historic NATO threat, but it cannot even defeat Ukraine.  Its ace card is nuclear arms, but France and the U.K. have them as well.  That can affect U.S. power.

Trump called the Europeans “cowards” for not backing his war, but they have found the courage to resist him.  America’s influence as a great power declines.

Ukraine also indirectly reduced China’s clout.  Its major goal is to take Taiwan.  To achieve this goal, it would have to invade the island, more difficult than Russia attempted with neighboring Ukraine.  Having potential access to Ukraine’s drones may allow Taiwan to force a change in China’s calculations and, at the same time, make it less dependent on the U.S. for protection. 

Middle powers have an increased ability to affect world affairs.   Technology levels the field.  AI is increasingly available, adding to the ability to tamper with foreign government software.  The size of ground forces may matter less than the ability to deliver hits through remote technology.  Last week, drones flew unchecked over the residences of key cabinet secretaries. 

More nations can develop their own nuclear weapons.  The EU has announced an aggressive effort to promote regional energy resources, renewables and nuclear.  These moves reduce the power of the world’s giants.

Canadian Prime Minister Mark Carney warned that if a country is not at the table, it is on the menu.  When Trump attacked Iran, expecting Europe to play a supporting role, that’s what happened.  Though it had no influence on his strategy, Europe must pay the higher price of oil and deploy its air forces to support the U.S.

In his second term, Trump has lost other nations’ trust, which depends on reliability and cooperation.   They now seek increased self-reliance, and are forming new inter-regional relationships to escape U.S. influence.

Whatever the beliefs about a coming bipolar world, many countries, especially the middle powers, want to ensure it won’t happen.