Tuesday, December 19th., 2017
US President Donald Trump Unveils ‘America First’ Security Strategy
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AP Photo/ Evan Vucci
https://youtu.be/nHBucq4YNho
The four pillars of the strategy are protecting the US populace and
the homeland; promoting US prosperity; preserving "peace
through strength" and a strong military; and increasing US influence
abroad, according to a draft of the NSS document shared with multiple
news outlets.
The strategy is based on "realism," Trump said, and while the US will pursue a "great partnership" with China and Russia, the administration will do so "in a manner that always protects our national security." He used as an example the help the CIA provided Russia over the weekend in foiling a terror plot in St. Petersburg that could have killed "perhaps thousands," and for which Russian President Vladimir Putin called over the weekend to express thanks.
"Strengthening our sovereignty — the first duty of a government is to serve the interests of its own people — is a necessary condition for protecting those four national interests," the NSS document reads. The written strategy takes aim at "the revisionist powers of China and Russia; the rogue states of Iran and North Korea; and transnational threat organizations, particularly jihadist terrorist groups," as its main challenges.
An official involved in preparing the document told Axios, "[it's] hard to say the document is cohesive… The doc doesn't reflect a lot of input from" the State Department and intelligence community, but instead "fits a domestic political narrative."
Chinese Foreign Ministry spokeswoman Hua Chunying told reporters
in China Monday that while she would only be able to comment on the
document after it was made public, in principle she said US-China trade
is a win-win situation for both parties.
While Trump’s National Security Strategy document frames China as a strategic and economic rival to the US, Beijing is “willing to work hard with the US side to dedicate ourselves to building a robust, stable and healthy trade and economic relationship,” the foreign ministry spokeswoman noted.
The strategy is based on "realism," Trump said, and while the US will pursue a "great partnership" with China and Russia, the administration will do so "in a manner that always protects our national security." He used as an example the help the CIA provided Russia over the weekend in foiling a terror plot in St. Petersburg that could have killed "perhaps thousands," and for which Russian President Vladimir Putin called over the weekend to express thanks.

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Sputnik/ Evgeniya Novozhenova
US "weakness" is coming to an end, Trump said. "Unrivaled power is the most certain means of defense."
The president also spoke about "economic security" as a vital element
to national security strategy. Partnerships will be based on
"cooperation and reciprocity" moving forward, the president said, and
less tethered to ideology. America won't seek to export its values
abroad, he said, but it will champion them "without apology.""Strengthening our sovereignty — the first duty of a government is to serve the interests of its own people — is a necessary condition for protecting those four national interests," the NSS document reads. The written strategy takes aim at "the revisionist powers of China and Russia; the rogue states of Iran and North Korea; and transnational threat organizations, particularly jihadist terrorist groups," as its main challenges.
An official involved in preparing the document told Axios, "[it's] hard to say the document is cohesive… The doc doesn't reflect a lot of input from" the State Department and intelligence community, but instead "fits a domestic political narrative."
In addition to discussing upcoming tax cuts,
Trump touched on job growth, the "disastrous" trade deals of prior
administrations and the need to strengthen borders. He also demanded
that Congress end the "damaging defense sequester," which limits the US
Defense Department's budget. "We're going to get rid of that," Trump
said about the spending caps.
Trump frequently blasted China on the campaign trail for alleged
unfair trading practices, such as artificial currency devaluation. Since
becoming president, though, Trump has softened his stance
toward Beijing in an effort to secure more assistance on issue areas
relating to the Korean Peninsula.
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REUTERS/ Jonathan Ernst
While Trump’s National Security Strategy document frames China as a strategic and economic rival to the US, Beijing is “willing to work hard with the US side to dedicate ourselves to building a robust, stable and healthy trade and economic relationship,” the foreign ministry spokeswoman noted.
