By Law, Not Words (Continued)

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White House · War and Security · Ukraine · Climate Policy · politics

Pulling out of global climate frameworks wasn’t a protest against regulation; it was a gift to competitors. While Trump mocked windmills and hugged coal, China and Europe consolidated control over batteries, electric vehicles, grid technology, and clean manufacturing — the industrial backbone of the next century.

Climate leadership is not charity. It is leverage. Walking away from it wasn’t “America First.” It was America stepping aside.

The fix is alignment. Tie U.S. manufacturing, European standards, and allied supply chains together so clean-energy dominance becomes shared, profitable, and politically durable. Make climate cooperation something that creates jobs people will defend — and treaties future presidents will hesitate to sabotage.

Trade policy will need the same adult supervision. Tariffs can be strategic in narrow, carefully targeted cases. Trump’s were not. They antagonized allies, raised costs for American manufacturers, and made everything from appliances to military equipment more expensive. Tariffs became a substitute for thinking.

The correction will not be naïve free trade. It will be disciplined industrial policy, done with allies rather than against them — protecting real chokepoints, coordinating export controls, and refusing to turn national security into a shakedown.

Ukraine is where credibility will either come back or it won’t. Trump treated the war like a nuisance he could browbeat into submission. That thrilled Moscow and terrified Europe. The post-2028 approach will have to be disciplined and, yes, boring in exactly the right ways: ceasefires tied to verification, sanctions relief tied to compliance, and security guarantees anchored in institutions rather than personalities. Existing tools — coordinated sanctions regimes, international monitoring bodies, and multilateral enforcement mechanisms — already show how this can work when used consistently. No secret freelancing. No reality-show diplomacy. Peace only holds when breaking it costs more than keeping it.

Then there is humanitarian power — the quiet muscle Trump mocked and dismantled. Slashing aid didn’t just save money; it created instability. USAID programs were never feel-good charity. They reduced refugee flows, fought disease, stabilized fragile regions, and kept extremists from filling vacuums. Destroying them was one of the cheapest own goals in modern American history.

Rebuilding them won’t just save lives. It will restore influence where bombs and tariffs fail.

Nowhere will American moral authority have been more visibly damaged than in the Middle East. Trump tolerated civilian starvation, blocked meaningful pressure for humanitarian access, and insisted on unconditional support even as aid corridors collapsed. Reversing that will not mean abandoning allies. It will mean restoring enforceable standards — humanitarian access tied to arms transfers, civilian-harm benchmarks independently monitored, and consequences when those standards are violated. Without that, America forfeits the right to lecture anyone else.

Corruption will matter more than most voters are told. When Trump paused anti-bribery enforcement and treated foreign influence as a business opportunity, he didn’t just enrich bad actors. He taught the world that American rules could be bought. Kleptocrats thrive in that environment. Democracies do not.

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