11 November 2024
Trump’s return to the White House—convincingly explained as due largely to post pandemic economic factors and an anti-incumbency bias that has culled several ruling parties around the world—is going to take time to digest. Much will depend on his picks for key posts in the new administration. However, it seems relatively clear there are going to be far-reaching implications for US foreign policy. And given that the world is now a much more dangerous and unpredictable place, these implications are potentially far more perilous than what flowed from his 2016 victory. A more erratic and transactional Washington is likely to strain longstanding US alliances and undercut Western support for Ukraine’s resistance to Russia’s invasion.
Read more in the attached pdf.
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nato_watch_briefing_120_trump_2.0.pdf | 210.82 KB |