http://thediplomat.com/2017/05/the-method-in-trumps-supposed
-madness/?utm_source=Sailthru&utm_medium=email&utm_campaign=
EBB%204.02.2017&utm_term=Editorial%20-%20Military%20-%20Early%20Bird%20Brief
The Method in Trump's Supposed Madness

While the mainstream media frets about Trump’s mixed messages, his style is
achieving results.

By Joseph Bosco for The Diplomat

May 01, 2017















Journalists, commentators, and national security specialists all seem to
agree: the Trump administration is sending confusing, potentially
dangerous, mixed messages in the area of America’s foreign policy. But are
they missing the big picture, not seeing the forest for the tweets?

Sometimes the perceived chaos takes the form of President Donald Trump
supposedly “undermining” his cabinet officers’ statements — as when he
speculates that we may be heading for “a major, major conflict with North
Korea” on the same day Secretary of State Rex Tillerson says the United
States is willing to talk with Pyongyang.

At other times, the head-scratching is based on Trump’s own words conveying
different emphases in different contexts. On one hand, he says all U.S.
options, including the use of force, are on the table against North Korea.
But, mindful of his own governing challenges, he also expresses empathy for
the young Kim Jong-un’s being suddenly thrust into power after his father’s
death.



For Asia hands, the favorite examples of the mixed message meme are his
apparent reversals on the “one China” policy and in labeling China as a
currency manipulator.

Yet one does not have to ascribe to the 45th president either the complex
intricacies of a Machiavellian mind or a Kissingerian strategic global
vision to recognize that (a) much of the criticism is somewhat shallow and
self-contradictory on its face, and (b) leavened by a superb senior
national security team, the president’s pragmatic, seemingly erratic style
manifests a shrewd transactional approach *that actually produces strategic
results.*

The controversy over Trump’s telephone call with Taiwan’s President Tsai
Ing-wen and questioning of the one China policy — at the time excoriated by
experts as perilous departures from mainstream American foreign policy —
instead got China’s attention while giving a modest boost to Taiwan’s
status and the promise of more to come.

The rapid-fire episodes (Trump’s Chinese shock and awe?) did *not*
indelibly sour U.S.-China relations. On the contrary, they set the stage
for Trump to entertain the Chinese leader and his wife and present a firm
message on North Korea: either Beijing applies its unique leverage over
Pyongyang on the nuclear and missile crisis, or America will use its own
special means to solve the problem.

The now-legendary Trump unpredictability has provided him the credibility
needed to convince China’s leaders to take him seriously and start cracking
down on North Korea. In the back of Xi’s mind, the seed has been planted:
there’s no telling what America’s Fifth Avenue cowboy might do next, on
either North Korea or Taiwan.

Beijing seems to understand, even if many Americans do not, that there is
no policy inconsistency between a U.S. willingness to talk with Pyongyang —
as Tillerson says, about denuclearization — and a warning that the
objective will be achieved one way or the other. Trump is comfortable —
even if it makes others less so — playing his own dual role of good cop/bad
cop.

The president and his team have made it abundantly clear to Beijing
publicly, and almost certainly in private — over chocolate cake for Xi and
cruise missiles for Syria — that they hold China accountable for the
existential threat North Korea’s nuclear and missile present to South
Korea, Japan, and the United States.

And if China doesn’t finally produce on North Korea? As the president said
recently on *Face the Nation*, “We’ll find out whether or not President Xi
is able to effect change.” Other presidents invested their hopes and wishes
on Beijing’s cooperation, but the consequences of Chinese inaction simply
faded into the diplomatic mists.

Trump instead is placing major *explicit expectations *on Xi’s shoulders —
even noting that Pyongyang’s failed missile test this week showed a lack of
respect for the Chinese leader. And he has left little doubt that
Washington will solve the problem if Beijing can’t or won’t, saying,“We
cannot allow what has been going on for a long period of time to continue.”
That sounds like policy coherence.

All in all, the president has turned the China-U.S. dynamic on its head.
Previous administrations have been reluctant to challenge China on human
rights, trade, or the South China Sea because Washington “needs” China on
North Korea. In fact, since the United States theoretically needs Chinese
cooperation on virtually everything, we challenged it on virtually nothing.

Trump has reversed the logic. Even before entering into serious talks, he
laid down a series of defiant markers to China: taking an unprecedented
call from Taiwan’s president, putting the viability of America’s one China
policy in doubt, and threatening to label China a currency manipulator.

Suddenly, it was Washington, not Beijing, that had the negotiating
leverage. Only after shaking Beijing into a recognition that the old status
quo is no longer acceptable has Trump been willing to soften his approach.

Thus, he first linked “one China” to trade and Xi came running, then he
pivoted and linked trade to a commitment on North Korea. Now he seems
willing to link another phone call with Taiwan’s Tsai to prior consultation
with Xi, at which time he will undoubtedly be checking on how the Chinese
mission to North Korea is proceeding.

For all the discomfiture Trump’s unorthodox negotiating style may bring to
the foreign policy establishment, it seems to be working. Who knows — after
Kim sees what a newly-motivated China and/or a fed-up United States can do
to his regime, he may be happy to trade his nukes for a hamburger at
Mar-a-Lago.



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