[Many past US Presidents were internationally hated figures.

As regards George W Bush, Chavez, from the UNGA podium, had thus referred
to him: Yesterday, the devil was here. Right here, and it still smells of
sulfur.

Obama, Trump's immediate predecessor whom he loves to hate, was a
remarkable exception.
During his first term, he was a sort of rock star, outside the US.
His speech at Prague (on his first outing as the POTUS?) putting forward a
vision of a "world without nuclear weapons" became kind of historic.
Soon afterwards, he'd be awarded the Nobel Peace Prize.
Of course, it'd attract some controversy.
After relinquishing office, he, as a private citizen, was invited to South
Africa, to deliver the Nelson Mandela memorial lecture on his hundredth
birth anniversary. The speech would go viral worldwide.

Even Bill Clinton was  sort of popular.

But, Trump must have won the distinction of becoming the first US President
to be openly laughed at, at this world body.
What a distinction!]

https://www.theguardian.com/us-news/2018/sep/25/donald-trump-united-nation-speech-globalism-analysis

Donald Trump is unlikely to forgive the laughter of the UN
The US president is accustomed to addressing diehard supporters, so the
derision of his fellow leaders came as a surprise

Julian Borger at the United Nations

Wed 26 Sep 2018 08.53 BST First published on Tue 25 Sep 2018 20.37 BST

0:32
 World leaders laugh at Donald Trump as he brags about his achievements –
video

Donald Trump is accustomed to addressing diehard supporters at rallies. His
press conferences are rare and tightly controlled. So the open derision of
his fellow leaders at the UN general assembly clearly came as a surprise.

He insisted he was “OK” with the mirthful reaction to his claims of
historic achievements, but he was clearly not OK. Trump is said never to
forgive or forget those who laugh at him, so this second outing at the UN
podium is unlikely to end well for his administration’s already ambivalent
relations with the global body.

Trump made an entrance – nearly half an hour later than his allotted time –
determined to trash everything the UN stands for. The president explicitly
rejected “the ideology of globalism” in globalism’s high temple and
proposed in its place the “doctrine of patriotism”.

While most leaders have used their time on the UN stage to list the
agreements they have made, the protocols agreed and treaties signed, Trump
clearly delighted in telling the world how many such pieces of paper he had
ripped up.

The lead writer of the speech was reportedly Stephen Miller, now the
primary bridge between the White House and the American far right. It
showed. The address was a manifesto for nativism.

Any remaining pretense of altruism was stripped away from this vision of US
foreign policy, and in its place was a strong tinge of resentment and
self-pity.

Trump observed that the US was the world’s biggest aid donor, “but few give
anything to us”.

“Moving forward, we are only going to give foreign aid to those who respect
us and, frankly, are our friends,” he warned.

Trump read out a list of friends, and it was an unusual assortment,
reflecting his personal relationships of the moment, rather than
longstanding US alliances.

Saudi Arabia and the United Arab Emirates, who have also cultivated Trump
and his immediate family since before he took office, were also lauded for
their contributions to the aid funds for Yemen. Their role in the bombing
of Yemeni cities and their human rights records at home went unremarked.

The only European ally to merit praise was Poland, whose president, Andrzej
Duda, had this month visited Trump at the White House and showered him with
praise, even offering to name a future US military base on Polish soil
“Fort Trump”.

The central villain of Trump’s narrative was Iran and its government, which
he depicted as the principal architect of the Syrian war. But even in the
case of Tehran, the president left open a door to redemption, tweeting in
the dawn hours before his UN appearance that he was sure that the Iranian
president, Hassan Rouhani, was in fact “an absolutely lovely man”.

The clear message was that if Rouhani was to follow the path taken by Kim,
to meet and pay homage to Trump, Iran could escape the isolation the US
administration is now trying to reimpose.

The approach reflected a misunderstanding of the deep differences between
North Korea and Iran, a far less monolithic system with genuinely
democratic elements where Rouhani is not even the most powerful figure.

However, Trump’s speech was not aimed at coherence. His message was an
appeal to the gut. The “doctrine of patriotism” was a misty-eyed paean to
national chauvinism. It presented the nation state as the “only vehicle
where freedom has ever survived, democracy has ever endured or peace has
ever prospered”. And it was nationalist passion alone that inspired
“scientific breakthroughs, and magnificent works of art”.

His fellow leaders may have chuckled, but Trump’s words were intended for
another audience: his core supporters who despise the UN and all it
represents. They are as determined as their hero to wipe the smiles off the
faces of the “globalist” enemy.
-- 
Peace Is Doable

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