http://edition.cnn.com/2017/04/12/politics/trump-russia-china-nato-syria/

Trump's stunning u-turns on NATO, China, Russia and Syria

By Stephen Collinson, CNN
Updated 1554 GMT (2354 HKT) April 13, 2017

Story highlights
President Donald Trump has reversed course on several high-profile
foreign policy issues
This includes his positions on NATO, China, Syria and Russia

Washington (CNN)Within a few hours of extraordinary political
shape-shifting, President Donald Trump abandoned stances that were at
the bedrock of his establishment-bashing campaign.

NATO, he said, is "no longer obsolete."

[podcast]

He backed down a threat to brand China a currency manipulator.

How Trump came to love NATO
In another reversal, Trump praised Federal Reserve Chair Janet Yellen,
whom he had previously pledged to replace when her term expires, and
once accused of holding interest rates low as a political boost for
former President Barack Obama.

It was not clear whether Trump's sudden policy flips were the product
of a new outlook and worldview. But previous presidents have often
remarked that the world looks a lot different from the Oval Office
than from a campaign rally.

Trump says NATO no longer 'obsolete'
Trump says NATO no longer 'obsolete'

But Trump's political gymnastics didn't stop there.

Days after his administration had seemed to accept an ultra-realist
approach that would allow Syrian President Bashar al-Assad to remain
in control of his shattered nation, Trump decried him as a "butcher"
over chemical weapons attacks on civilians -- fueling speculation he
now advocates regime change.

That position, sure to antagonize Russia, came as the President
adopted the most skeptical view he has yet displayed on the
possibility of improving relations with the Kremlin, a position he
once advanced as a candidate and that flew in the face of geopolitical
realities and universal elite opinion in Washington.

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"Right now we are not getting along with Russia at all. We may be at
an all-time low in terms of relationship with Russia," Trump said at a
White House news conference, in stark tones at odds with his former
vows to ease the new chill in ties with the US nuclear foe.
By contrast, Trump was full of praise for Xi Jinping -- whom he met in
Florida last week -- saying that he believed the Chinese President was
sincere in helping defuse the US showdown with nuclear North Korea.

Trump made castigating China a staple of his presidential campaign,
saying the communist giant was guilty of "rape" against the US economy
and promising it would be branded a currency manipulator on his first
day in the Oval Office.

North Korea issues warning as US strike group heads to Korean Peninsula
North Korea issues warning as US strike group heads to Korean Peninsula

It was almost as if Trump's outsider presidential campaign never
happened as he rushed to embrace mainstream political and national
security positions he once publicly abhorred.
"Circumstances change," White House press secretary Sean Spicer told
CNN's Jim Acosta Wednesday when asked about the apparent reversals.

On China, Spicer cautioned the administration's report is not complete
on whether to label China a currency manipulator. But he said the
Chinese have made some improvements on currency in recent months. The
administration has to make its assessment on where China stands now,
not where it was during the campaign, Spicer said.

On NATO, Spicer pointed to the Secretary General's interview with
CNN's Wolf Blitzer on "The Situation Room" where he indicated that
NATO countries have been performing better in terms of their financial
commitments. That changed Trump's view of the group, Spicer said.

It may not be a coincidence that Trump's adoption of conventional
political positions came the day after a stunning interview with the
New York Post in which he publicly criticized his political guru
Stephen Bannon, his insurgent, populist political conscience.

Trump diminishes, but does not dismiss, Bannon
Bannon was dumped from the National Security Council last week in a
move that was seen as a triumph for officials who represent a more
traditional, globalist foreign policy worldview.

His demotion was seen as another sign that the more moderate,
establishment-oriented influences in his administration epitomized by
his son-in-law Jared Kushner, Trump's daughter, Ivanka, and chief
economic adviser Gary Cohn were rising to the detriment of Bannon and
his anti-establishment cohort Stephen Miller.

Of course, one day of policy adjustments does not necessarily mean
that Trump's unique political persona and methodology are suddenly
going to change. After all, the President has spent most of his first
100 days in office torching conventional political practice, trading
in untruths and exaggerations, and pouring oil on political
controversies on Twitter -- including accusations that his campaign
had links to the Kremlin at a time when Moscow was being accused of
interfering in the US election.

There is no sign, for instance, that Trump is pulling back from other
controversial positions -- including doubling down on border
enforcement and expulsions of undocumented immigrants.

Still, the new tone on Russia, NATO, Yellen and Bannon amounted to too
much of a sample of modified political behavior to represent a mere
coincidence.

Trump: NATO no longer obsolete 00:57
NATO

Perhaps the most striking 180-degree reversal by Trump on Wednesday
came on NATO. While he was a candidate, Trump sent shockwaves through
Europe by declaring that the most successful military alliance in
history was "obsolete."

Side-by-side with NATO Secretary General Jens Stoltenberg on Wednesday
at an East Room news conference, Trump took the opposite tack.

"The Secretary General and I had a productive discussion about what
more NATO can do in the fight against terrorism," Trump said. "I
complained about that a long time ago and they made a change, and now
they do fight terrorism. I said it was obsolete; it's no longer
obsolete."

Trump's claims that NATO has suddenly adopted an anti-terrorism
mandate because of his efforts is highly debatable. The Western
alliance spent years fighting in Afghanistan in a war that was first
launched to rout out al-Qaeda and its Taliban protectors after the
September 11 attacks in 2001.

But Trump's comments allowed the President a graceful way of walking
back a position that had once threatened to undermine the very
rationale of transatlantic defense relations.
Stoltenberg offered a subtle reminder that NATO nations are hardly
novices when it comes to fighting terrorism. He noted that the only
time NATO invoked its common defense clause, Article Five, was after
9/11. And he spoke about the sacrifices of more than 1,000 European
and Canadian soldiers killed in the Afghanistan war.

Still, Trump's comments on Wednesday, paving the way for his visit to
NATO headquarters in Brussels in May, will likely send a sigh of
relief through Europe.

Are the US and Russia entering a new Cold War? 04:16
Russia

The President's modified rhetoric on Russia is also likely to reassure
the American allies that had been deeply disturbed by his apparent
desire to pursue a rapprochement with Moscow -- perhaps at the expense
of Western allies.

"I'll also see about Putin over a period of time. It would be a
fantastic thing if we got along with Putin, and if we got along with
Russia. And that could happen, and it may not happen, it may be just
the opposite," Trump said.

Trump's comments came with Secretary of State Rex Tillerson in Moscow
for frosty talks with Putin -- and could reflect a new perspective on
the Russian leader from Trump as he contemplates the Kremlin's support
for Assad and the horrific aftermath on chemical weapons attacks on
civilians that prompted the President to launch cruise missile attacks
last week.

"Everybody in this room saw it all too many times over the last three
or four days -- young children dying, babies dying, fathers holding
children in their arms that were dead," Trump said. "Dead children --
there can't be a worse sight, and it shouldn't be allowed. That's a
butcher. That's a butcher."

Trump: Syria attacks the work of a butcher 00:45
China

If Trump was downbeat on Putin, he was surprisingly gushing about Xi,
following their summit at his Mar-a-Lago resort last week.

"I don't know Putin, but I do know this gentleman -- I've spent a lot
of time with him over the last two days, and he is the President of
China," Trump said during the news conference.

"President Xi wants to do the right thing. We had a very good bonding.
I think we had a very good chemistry together. I think he wants to
help us with North Korea. We talked trade. We talked a lot of things,"
he added. "And I said, the way you're going to make a good trade deal
is to help us with North Korea; otherwise we're just going to go it
alone."

While there is no guarantee that China sees its interests as aligned
with those of the United States over the North Korea question, or
elsewhere in Asia, Trump's position did represent a complete overhaul
of rhetorical tone towards Beijing.

Soon after his election, he warned Chinese leaders in a tweet that he
might use the issue of US relations with Taiwan and adherence to the
"One China" policy on the table as a bargaining chip. Had he pursued
that plan, he could have put policies that underpinned 40 years of
Sino-US relations at risk.

In an interview with the Wall Street Journal on Wednesday, the
President also gave notice that he would not penalize Beijing as a
currency manipulator, as he had promised to do during the campaign.

"They're not currency manipulators," Trump said.

The President repeatedly took the opposite stance during his campaign
-- even though experts say China has not been artificially suppressing
the value of the yuan for years, and has actually been doing the exact
opposite.

The President also gave a hint of flexibility on his demands for China
to reverse the trade imbalance with the United States -- another
bedrock of his campaign.

He suggested that if China helped to defuse the threat to the US from
its ally North Korea, he might settle for a less advantageous trade
deal.

Trump and the Fed: Rewriting the script 02:26
Yellen's Fed

Trump also offered an olive branch to Yellen in the Wall Street
Journal interview.
"I like her, I respect her," Trump said, and referring to his
prediction that he would not renominate her when her term ends in
2018, he said "It's very early."

In yet another ditching of a campaign position, Trump expressed
support for the US Export-Import Bank, a bête noire of some of the
anti-Washington voters that helped him reach the White House, which
has been left in limbo with two open seats on its board.
"Actually, it's a very good thing. And it actually makes money, it
could make a lot of money," Trump told the Journal.


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