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'We' in Europe are not really confident about what (who) the US elections next 
November will bring, for 'us' especially ...

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Trump’s return: Are we ready?

A second Trump presidency could tip an already destabilised world over the 
edge. Our former ambassador to Washington says the UK is running out of time to 
prepare
By Kim Darroch
Prospect Magazine, February 28, 2024 (to be printed in the April issue)

Those of us who are horror film fans know that it can be a lonely pursuit, 
involving late nights in front of the television while the rest of the 
household retreats. The genre includes a lot of repetitive dross, but, at its 
best, it can be real art, as richly creative as anything in cinema. And when I 
saw the acres of newsprint that followed Donald Trump’s crushing victory in the 
Iowa caucus in January, much of it on the agitated side of overwrought, I was 
irresistibly reminded of the words of Pennywise, the malevolent, 
shape-shifting, reality-bending clown in the 1990 film of Stephen King’s novel 
It: “I’m every nightmare you’ve ever had. I am your worst dream come true.”

So will Trump’s Second Coming really take him all the way back to the White 
House? My answer would be somewhere between possible and likely. He has the 
Republican nomination nailed down, barring a personal catastrophe. For what it 
is worth at this early stage, he is ahead of Biden in the opinion polls in the 
marginal states. There are some media reports suggesting that young voters, a 
demographic that previously shunned Trump, are flocking to his banner. Well, 
perhaps. But there are also reasons why Trump may come up short. Here, briefly, 
are some of them.

First, Trump is the most divisive politician in America. He attracts 
extraordinary loyalty; he is less a politician than a cult leader, with 
followers rather than supporters. But that fanatical base is not enough. Trump 
also turbocharges the Democrat turnout; Biden secured more votes in his 2020 
victory than any candidate in history, beating his opponent in the popular vote 
by no less than seven million. In particular, Biden won “independents”—voters 
not affiliated to either of the two main parties. And while the top line from 
the recent New Hampshire Republican primary was Trump’s 11-point victory over 
Nikki Haley, the underlying message was that he remains unpopular outside his 
base: Haley won independents by 58 per cent to 39 per cent. Add to this a Trump 
campaign largely based on greatest hits and grievances rather than the future, 
and it’s not obvious which new voters he will win over to turn 2020’s defeat 
into victory.

Then there are Trump’s legal troubles. He’s just been fined $450m and banned 
from doing business in New York for three years for falsifying his business 
accounts. Next in the pipeline are four major criminal cases, amounting to 91 
separate indictments. These comprise the “New York hush money” allegations 
about undisclosed payments to adult film star Stormy Daniels in violation of 
campaign finance law; the classified documents case about hundreds of papers 
found at Trump’s Mar-a-Lago resort; the 6th January case about Trump’s efforts 
to overturn the 2020 election result; and the Georgia allegations about Trump 
personally pressuring the chief election officer in that state to “find” him 
11,780 votes. The Trump legal team will try to delay all of these beyond the 
election. But two of the trials are currently set for March and one for May. At 
the very least, Trump will spend much of the next few months in court. At 
worst, one of the trials will end in a conviction before the Republican 
Convention in July. Trump will of course appeal. But polls suggest that a 
significant number of his own supporters—24 per cent, according to one recent 
New York Times poll—will not vote for Trump if he is handed a conviction. This 
is essentially why Haley is staying in the race: it’s the “something might turn 
up” strategy.

Third, Biden might start to do better. His personal ratings are underwater 
essentially for two reasons: voter disappointment with the US economy, and 
worries about his age. There is nothing much he can do about the latter, unless 
one of the Silicon Valley technocrats invents a fountain of youth. But on the 
economy, the US is doing much better than the market analysts had been 
predicting: Europeans would be dancing in the streets if they were matching US 
figures. US GDP grew at a 3.3 per cent annual rate in the final quarter of 
2023. Inflation is dropping, manufacturing investment is up, consumer spending 
is solid and predictions of recession in 2024 are being rewritten as fast as 
analysts can get to their keyboards. Indeed Jerome Powell, chair of the Federal 
Reserve, said in February that the US job market and economy were strong and 
that interest rates might be cut three times through 2024. If the key to 
election victory is, as Bill Clinton’s strategist James Carville said, “the 
economy, stupid”, then the cavalry may be appearing.


The risk of terrorist attacks on European soil would rise

And finally, Trump is showing his age, too. In 2016 his energy levels were 
inexhaustible, his campaigning relentless and his resilience unquenchable. This 
time round, he looks heavier, his voice has aged, and his energy levels have 
dropped. And, like the other candidates in this presidential race, he is 
showing signs of “cognitive decline”. He sometimes forgets where he is, or 
muddles names. In one recent speech he tore into Haley for supposed security 
failings during the 6th January attack on the Capitol. He meant Nancy Pelosi.

That said, perhaps Trump is beyond this kind of analysis. This is an individual 
who, thanks to his multi-annual starring role in The Apprentice, occupies a 
unique position in the Venn diagram of popular culture; the place where the 
three circles of politics, business and celebrity intersect. This is the 
president who suggested people should inject disinfectant to combat Covid; who 
wanted to buy Greenland; who reportedly proposed using nuclear weapons to 
deflect hurricanes; and who reacted to losing the 2020 election by trying to 
subvert American democracy. That ought to be enough counts against anyone. But 
there is a Terminator-like indestructibility to Trump; it feels as though he is 
always going to be with us. And to repeat, he could, may even be likely to, win 
this election.

So what would a Trump 2.0 look like? On domestic policy, if Trump’s campaign 
speeches and videos are an accurate guide, it will be four years of mayhem. 
Revenge will be taken, grievances will be settled, the government bureaucracy 
will be heavily politicised, the US Army will be despatched to stop illegal 
immigration across the southern border, and oil and gas drilling will be 
expanded. But the focus here in Europe will be on foreign policy, and in 
particular on a handful of questions: what will a Trump administration do about 
Ukraine, about Gaza, about relations with China, about climate change, about 
Nato and about relations with the UK and Europe? 

On Ukraine, Trump has said that he would stop the war “in 24 hours”. The 
details of how he would accomplish this are yet to be described. But the plan 
seems to amount to ending US military supplies to Ukraine, compelling Zelensky 
to strike a deal, any deal, with Putin. 

If this is right, the only deal imaginable is one in which Russia would keep at 
least all of the land it has captured since the invasion, more than 15 per cent 
of Ukrainian territory: it is inconceivable that Putin would settle for less. 
This would be bad enough. But it would only mark a pause in the conflict, not 
the end. Putin would use the time to replenish Russian forces and prepare to 
take Kyiv and install a client government there. This, after all, has always 
been Putin’s objective, as his original invasion plan demonstrated, and as his 
ally, former president Dmitry Medvedev, has recently reaffirmed. So ending 
military supplies to Ukraine would likely lead to a devastating defeat for the 
west: Putin would have profited from his invasion by grabbing a significant 
chunk of Ukraine, and would be poised to threaten other parts of Europe. And 
that’s without factoring in the signal that this outcome would send to China in 
relation to its ambitions for Taiwan.

What about the conflict in Gaza? During his presidency, Trump recognised 
Israeli sovereignty over Jerusalem and the Golan Heights; he moved the US 
Embassy from Tel Aviv to Jerusalem; he announced that Israeli settlements in 
the West Bank did not contravene international law; he triggered a break in 
relations with the Palestinian Authority; he halted US funding for UNRWA, the 
UN agency responsible for Palestinian refugees; and he closed down the 
Palestinian Representation in Washington. 

Against this background, and if the Israeli ground operation in Gaza were still 
under way at the start of 2025, it is a stretch to imagine a Trump 
administration pressing Israel to minimise civilian casualties in Gaza, or to 
end the ground operation quickly. It is, moreover, equally difficult to see 
Trump pressing Israel to commit to a new process to negotiate a two-state 
solution. And in the absence of consistent US pressure, it is improbable that 
Israel, deeply divided and traumatised by the events of 7th October, would 
launch such a process itself.

This points to a continuing tense deadlock in Gaza and the West Bank, with the 
two million Palestinians displaced from their homes in Gaza living in camps, 
supported by aid agencies, and renewed conflict possible at any moment. The 
west would continue to face a torrent of criticism from the Arab world and the 
Global South for its failure to improve the situation or resolve the 
Palestinian issue. Iran would carry on exploiting the situation, and might step 
up its support for extremism across the region. The Houthis would go on 
harassing international shipping in the Red Sea, prompting much of it to take 
the long way round. Hezbollah would keep making trouble on the Israel-Lebanon 
border. And the risk of terrorist attacks on European soil would rise.

On China, Trump has said relatively little since he started campaigning. There 
are, however, clues from his first term. In 2018, he launched a trade war with 
China which, combined with wider protectionism, amounted to an $80bn tax 
increase on $380bn worth of exports to the US. It is arguable whether the 
policy delivered. Some authoritative US economists argue that such tariffs are 
effectively paid by US consumers through higher prices and US businesses 
through higher costs. A study published in January 2021 by the US-China 
Business Council concluded that the US economy shed 245,000 jobs as a result of 
the policy. Nevertheless, the Trump campaign team is suggesting that, if Trump 
wins, tariffs of 60 per cent plus will be imposed on China.

Trump’s views on Taiwan are more of a mystery. Chinese premier Xi Jinping has 
said that China’s reunification with Taiwan is “inevitable”, and habitually 
declines to rule out using force. When Trump was asked on Fox News last July 
whether, as president, he would come to Taiwan’s aid in the event of a Chinese 
attack, he declined to answer. Though he added somewhat bizarrely that “Taiwan 
did take all of our chip business… we should have tariffed them.”

Some respected analysts think Trump is simply indifferent to Taiwan. “During 
the majority of the Trump administration,” said Evan Medeiros, a senior member 
of the National Security Council staff under Barack Obama, “one of the worst 
kept secrets in Washington was that Trump didn’t care about Taiwan.” John 
Bolton, Trump’s national security adviser for 17 months, recalls in his memoir 
one incident in the Oval Office when Trump made clear just how little 
importance he attached to the smaller nation. He pointed to the tip of his 
favoured Sharpie pen and said, “This is Taiwan,” then pointed to the famous 
presidential desk and said, “This is China.” And the Chinese regime has 
noticed. One of its spokesmen said recently that “the US will always pursue 
America First and Taiwan can change from a chess piece to a discarded chess 
piece at any time.”

So what does this mean for a second Trump term? A renewed trade war with China 
looks likely, however ineffective and damaging to the US economy it might be. 
That would have a wider disruptive effect on global trade. But on Taiwan, Xi 
may see an opportunity. A full invasion isn’t likely; it would be high risk, 
the Chinese military is not up to it (yet), and the inevitable western 
sanctions would do considerable damage to China’s export-led economy, which is 
recovering from a period of disappointing growth. But other forms of Chinese 
pressure—such as a naval blockade—are conceivable. We could see a ramping up of 
military incursions into Taiwanese waters and airspace alongside ever louder 
public threats
 and intimidation.

Why would this matter to the rest of the world? Taiwan is a crucial part of 
global supply chains. A single Taiwanese company, the Taiwan Semiconductor 
Manufacturing Company, makes more than half of the world’s silicon chips, and 
90 per cent of the most advanced types. These chips power everything from 
mobile phones to aircraft control systems to supercomputers. The world needs 
more than a trillion chips a year: imagine the damage to the global economy if 
supply was disrupted.

Trump intends to impose a 10 per cent tariff on all imports—potentially leading 
to a global trade war

On climate change, Trump has form. During his first term he took the US out of 
the Paris agreement, appointed fossil fuel lobbyists to environmental agencies 
and predicted that global warming would soon spontaneously reverse. On the 
campaign trail for 2024, he has promised to let fossil fuel production rip; to 
“drill, drill, drill”. And he would presumably again take the US out of the 
Paris deal (Biden having rejoined it in 2021). 

The US is second only to China as a contributor to global CO2 levels, so an 
American president championing large-scale fossil fuel production would in 
itself be damaging. But perhaps the greatest impact would be psychological. To 
reach net zero in greenhouse gas emissions by 2050, emissions need to be 
reduced by 45 per cent by 2030. Notwithstanding the efforts made at successive 
COP conferences, the international community is well short of this target: on 
present trajectories, emissions will have actually increased by almost 9 per 
cent between 2010 and 2030. Getting to where we need to be will require a 
genuinely global effort and real sacrifices, especially among the largest 
polluters like China, India and the EU. The chances of this happening if the US 
has opted out of the system are much reduced, perhaps even non-existent.

As for Nato, Trump has previously described it as “obsolete”, calling its 
members who aren’t spending 2 per cent of GDP on defence “delinquents” and 
hinting that he doesn’t accept Article 5 of the Nato treaty—the principle that 
an attack on one is an attack on all. And in a campaign rally in South Carolina 
on 10th February, he said that, as president, he would encourage Russia “to do 
whatever the hell they want” to any Nato country that didn’t meet the spending 
guidelines—a comment the White House described as “unhinged”. Added to this, 
the French EU commissioner Thierry Breton revealed in January that, in a 
private meeting with president of the European Commission Ursula von der Leyen 
in 2020, Trump said: “You need to understand that if Europe is under attack we 
will never come to help you and support you.” He continued by saying: “By the 
way, Nato is dead and we will leave.” Bolton himself has said in an interview 
that he is “convinced [Trump] will withdraw from Nato”.

In the face of this, some commentators have taken comfort from the fact that 
senators added a bipartisan provision to the defence bill they passed in 
December 2023, asserting that no president could take the US out of Nato 
without approval from the Senate. But this is to misunderstand the essence of 
Nato, which is the commitment to collective defence. As Ivo Daalder, a former 
US ambassador to Nato, has pointed out, no one, not even Congress, can force an 
American president to defend another nation with the full might of the US 
military. And if there isn’t complete confidence in the US commitment to 
Article 5, Nato becomes less a military alliance, more an exercise in bluster. 
In these circumstances, and in a future world where Putin had already annexed 
even more of Ukraine thanks to the ending of US military support, it is not a 
stretch to imagine Putin looking at the Baltic states as the next phase in his 
re-­creation of the Soviet Union.

So for Europe, the future of the US in Nato will be the dominant preoccupation 
in the event of a second Trump term. But it won’t be the only story. Trump is 
no admirer of the EU, once describing it as “worse than China” in its treatment 
of the US. He is, moreover, essentially a believer in protectionism: in his 
first term, apart from launching a trade war with China, he imposed a 25 per 
cent tariff on US steel imports and a 10 per cent tariff on aluminium imports. 
Should he win in 2024, Trump intends to impose a 10 per cent tariff on all 
imports, including those from Europe, with the supposed objective of 
incentivising American domestic production. This proposition has been 
underreported in Europe, but would be profoundly disruptive. There would almost 
certainly be EU, and wider, retaliation, potentially leading to a global trade 
war. Some respected US economists believe the policy and its fallout would 
reduce the size of the US economy by 1 per cent, while smaller, more vulnerable 
economies around the world might shrink by far more.

As for the UK, there is no evidence from Trump’s first term that we would 
receive any sort of special treatment, whichever party captures Number 10 in 
the next election; Trump is not sentimental about the “special relationship”. 
And whatever the recent positive noises about a UK-US free trade deal during a 
Trump 2.0 presidency, there should be no illusions about the price the US would 
demand for this: virtually unfettered access for US industrial farming products 
to the UK market, hormone-treated beef included. Try asking the National 
Farmers’ Union what they’d think about this. So we are likely to face the same 
challenges as the rest of Europe—though without the retaliatory capability 
provided by being a member of the world’s largest trading bloc. Come January 
2025, we might just feel rather isolated.

All of which leads to the question: what should we be doing to prepare for a 
second Trump presidency? Here are some ideas.

Ukraine is the likeliest first transatlantic crisis of a Trump return to the 
White House. Whatever the uncertainties about Trump’s attitude towards Nato, 
few doubt that he would stop US military aid to Ukraine. Indeed, Maga 
Republicans in Congress, egged on publicly by Trump, are already blocking the 
next consignment. So the objective is to use the next 10 months to get Ukraine 
in the best possible shape to survive, whatever 2025 brings. At the moment, the 
largest military donor to Ukraine by far is the US. If it pulls back, Europe is 
unlikely to be able to fill in for everything, but it should be able to do much 
more than at present. The first priority will be ramping up European production 
capacity. This will mean approaching Europe’s military industries and asking 
them to prepare for substantially increased production, especially of basics 
like shells and ammunition. This needs to start now. 

Second, on the assumption that the Biden administration can overcome the 
deadlock in Congress, we should encourage the US to pre-position and stockpile 
supplies for Ukraine in central European Nato member states: once the supplies 
are there, they are unlikely to be taken back, whatever the election outcome.

Third, there should be something for Ukraine at the Nato summit in Washington 
this coming  July. It isn’t going to be an accelerated path to membership: 
there is substantial opposition to this around the Nato table, led by Germany. 
But it could be an offer of practical assistance in the work that Ukraine has 
to do to meet the criteria for membership. 

Fourth, European ministers should be visiting Congress whenever they are in the 
US and making the case for continuing military support for Ukraine. There is, 
ultimately, a cross-aisle majority in Congress for this.

On Gaza, the reality is that the UK has little to no influence over Israeli 
actions or policy. Nor do other European nations. The only country with real 
influence is the US. Even here there are limits: ultimately, Netanyahu feels 
able to defy American pressure when he chooses, as his current positioning 
demonstrates.

Ursula von der Leyen, president of the European Commission; Alexander De Croo, 
prime minister of Belgium Ursula von der Leyen, president of the European 
Commission; Alexander De Croo, prime minister of Belgium—both know the risks of 
a second Trump term. Image: Thierry Monasse/Getty Images

Nevertheless, the priority here has to be around making things happen before 
the US election, on the basis that after it, if Trump has won, all pressure on 
Israel might disappear. So the UK should be supporting the Americans in 
pressing for a quick end to the ground operation in Gaza. We should be planning 
for the aftermath: how do we encourage a new Palestinian leadership, because it 
cannot be Hamas; who will govern Gaza and oversee reconstruction; is there a 
security role for the international community, whether on Israel’s borders or 
in Gaza? And we should, in coordination with Washington, be talking to our Arab 
friends about the parameters of a two-state solution, how to get negotiations 
restarted, and in particular, what incentives and assurances Arab countries 
might be able to offer to draw Israel into negotiations. Normalisation of 
relations between Saudi Arabia and Israel, on which the Americans are already 
working, is one of the elements here.

On China, the main risk is of being pulled in two opposing directions. We have 
our own commercial and economic interests with China. We also have our own 
criticisms of Chinese policies and behaviour. But we are not in perfect 
alignment with the US, even with the Biden administration. The gap will be 
bigger with Trump in the White House. We will come under pressure to join in 
American policies, whether imposing tariffs, or excluding Chinese firms from 
participation in our infrastructure projects, or limiting the number of Chinese 
students in our universities. There will be some difficult choices, which carry 
costs whatever we decide. We will need to have thought through where our 
balance of interests lies. In short, we need a strategy. 

On climate change, I suggest there are three priorities in a Trump presidency. 
The first is to stick to our own net zero plan and resist the temptation to use 
US backsliding to weaken our commitments. The second is, as far as possible, to 
ensure that the rest of the world sticks to the commitments they have made at 
successive COP conferences, whatever the Americans are doing. And the third is 
to work with individual US states on climate change, as we have done in the 
past. Under the US federal system, states have the powers to pursue green 
policies whatever the position at federal level, and some are big enough to 
make a difference. California, for example, if a country, would be the fifth 
largest in the world in terms of nominal GDP, ahead of India.

On Nato, the picture that Trump 2.0 would inherit is very different from the 
2016 landscape. Back then only five member states were spending 2 per cent of 
GDP on defence. By the end of 2024, notwithstanding Trump’s recent tirade on 
countries’ underspending, Nato insiders estimate that 20 member states should 
have reached the figure. Some of this is down to war in Europe. But it has to 
be recognised that some of it is down to the pressure that Trump applied during 
his first term. 

At the core of this is Germany. At their first meeting in 2017, Trump 
reportedly presented former German chancellor Angela Merkel with an invoice for 
hundreds of billions of dollars, supposedly representing the amount the US had 
spent over the decades protecting Germany. Both sides denied the story, but 
relations between Merkel and Trump were clearly frosty. By contrast, Germany 
has now overtaken the UK as the second-biggest defence spender in Nato. 

In the light of this, if I were advising Jens Stoltenberg, the secretary 
general of Nato who developed a reputation as a Trump-whisperer during Trump’s 
first term, I would be urging him to open up a private channel to the 
president’s team—perhaps to the man personally—in order to get across three 
messages. 

The objective is to get Ukraine in the best possible shape to survive—whatever 
2025 brings

First, things have changed dramatically in terms of European defence spending. 
This opens the way to Trump asserting a personal triumph at the first Nato 
summit of his second term, claiming that his leadership has brought about the 
biggest transformation in defence spending in a generation, even if he would 
still like Nato allies to go further. The Europeans should agree publicly that 
this spending was down to Trump. 

Second, Stoltenberg should try to persuade Trump that there is simply no 
benefit for Trump personally in being drawn into public comment on the 
principle of collective defence—whether the US would always, sometimes, or 
never come to the support of a Nato member under attack. The relevant treaty 
article is actually ambiguous on what exactly allies are obliged to do in terms 
of support: that ambiguity should be left intact. 

Third, Stoltenberg should remind Trump that the US defence industry earned 
$120bn from defence sales to Nato allies through 2022 and 2023. Those sales 
would go elsewhere if the US opted for isolationism. And meanwhile, if I were 
an official in any prime minister’s office around Europe, I would be 
commissioning the experts in government to start doing some contingency 
thinking about how a Nato without the United States would look and 
function—just in case.

There are two further, broader, lessons for us in this. The first is that, 
despite Brexit, if Trump is back in the White House in 2025, we will need to 
get closer to Europe—because there won’t be an American wing under which to 
shelter. Trump doesn’t see the world in terms of alliances and friendships. To 
the extent that he has a worldview, it is one of big power relationships; the 
world should be sorted out through deals between him, Putin and Xi.

Alexander De Croo, the prime minister of Belgium, recently expressed the 
problem with a minimum of diplomacy but admirable clarity: “If 2024 brings us 
America First again, it will be more than ever Europe on its own… [Europe must 
become] stronger, more sovereign, more self-reliant.” And if we are to avoid 
lonely mid-Atlantic isolation, we will need to have developed the structures 
and relationships through which we can consult, coordinate and—where 
necessary—act with Europe, whether it is retaliating to trade tariffs or 
sharing the burden in supporting Ukraine or working together to save the 
international response to climate change. This may not sit easily with the 
aspirations of Brexit, but the world will have moved on.

Second, it feels as if European governments have been taken by surprise by the 
possibility of Trump returning to the White House; a sudden lurch from 
complacency to panic. It shouldn’t be like this. It was clear from the day 
after he lost that Trump would run again. It was equally clear that his 
fanatical base would not move on. History tells us that the US periodically 
detaches itself from the world: the non-interventionism of the 19th century, 
the isolationism of the 1930s. And every serious foreign ministry has a team 
focused on anticipating and planning for future problems. We should have seen 
this coming, and been contingency planning all this time rather than scrambling 
in election year. One more from the horror film lexicon, this time from Freddy 
Krueger: “You shouldn’t have buried me. I’m not dead.”

Kim Darroch was British ambassador to the US from 2016 to 2019, and British 
ambassador to the EU from 2007 to 2011




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