Writing in the Washington Post, Fareed Zakaria explains how Trump has driven pivotal countries–like India, Brazil, and South Africa–into the embrace of our enemies: Russia, China, and North Korea. For his own bizarre and inexplicable reasons, Trump has tried to cozy up to the leaders of those countries, which have a common interest in opposing democratic countries. He has boasted about his close friendship with Putin, Xi, and Kim Jong Un, but they are laughing at him. Trump’s insane tariffs have been harsh towards our allies, which makes no sense at all.
Zakaria wrote:
Look at the pictures that dominated this week’s world news. They are vivid illustrations of the failures of President Donald Trump’s foreign policy.
The photographs that captured most attention were of China’s massive military parade and of Xi Jinping, Vladimir Putin and Kim Jong Un striding together. Those visuals were to be expected — a reminder that the West faces a determined set of adversaries who see it as their mission to destroy the Western-led international order.
What was surprising were the images from the days before, when the Shanghai Cooperation Organization hosted leaders from India, Turkey, Vietnam and Egypt, among others. All these regional powers were generally considered closer to Washington than Beijing. But a toxic combination of tariffs, hostile rhetoric and ideological demands is moving many of the world’s pivotal states away from the United States and toward China. It might be the greatest own goal in modern foreign policy.
Consider the BRICS, a grouping of countries originally meant to represent the big emerging markets of the future — Brazil, Russia, India, China and South Africa — along with several other members now, too. At meetings, three of the core countries, Brazil, India and South Africa, would generally resist the Russian and Chinese effort to turn the organization into an anti-American grouping. For decades, Washington has been building ties with these three countries, each a leader in its region, to ensure that as they grew in size and stature, they would be favorably inclined toward the United States.
But Trump has treated those pivotal states to some of his most vicious rhetoric and aggressive policies. He unleashed the highest tariff rate in the world against India. He punished Brazil with equally high tariffs and levied sanctions and visa bans against Brazilian officials. South Africa faces 30 percent tariffs, a total cutoff of foreign aid and potential sanctions against government officials.
The governments and people in these countries are outraged at their treatment. India used to be overwhelmingly pro-American. Now it is rapidly shifting toward a deep suspicion of Washington. In Brazil, President Luiz Inácio Lula da Silva’s sagging poll numbers have risen as he stands up to Trump’s bullying. In South Africa, President Cyril Ramaphosa gained stature when he politely responded to Trump’s Oval Office hectoring. It is worth remembering that other countries have nationalist sentiment, too!
There is no strategic rationale for these policy reversals. Trump is punishing Brazil because that country’s independent courts are holding accountable Trump’s ideological soulmate, Jair Bolsonaro, for his efforts to reject the results of free and fair elections. South Africa faces Trump’s ire because of a land reform law that is an attempt to address some of the vast disparities in landholding and wealth caused by decades of apartheid. These reasons have nothing to do with restoring America’s manufacturing base or reducing trade deficits. The U.S. actually runs a trade surplus with Brazil.
While Washington has been alienating these countries, China has been courting them. It has outlined a plan with Brazil for a transformative railway network connecting its Atlantic coast to Peru’s Pacific one. Xi managed to get Indian Prime Minister Narendra Modi to visit China for the first time in seven years. China has courted South Africa with trade and aid, and public sentiment in that country has moved to be quite favorably inclined toward Beijing.
We are often told that Trump likes to talk tough to get the best deal. But his policies are producing real pain and misery on the ground — people losing their jobs and many being pushed back into poverty. That’s why even if these deals are renegotiated and things settle on less brutal terms, the memories will linger. Countries will always know that Washington could treat them as it has and they will want to hedge their bets and keep strong ties with China and Russia, just in case.
American foreign policy these days is a collection of the random slights, insults and ideological obsessions of one man. In general, Trump likes smaller countries he can bully or ideological soulmates who cozy up to him. He doesn’t enjoy dealing with large, messy democracies with their own internal dynamics, pride and nationalism.
Thus, America under Trump has befriended a strange collection of strongmen, in El Salvador, Hungary, Pakistan and the Gulf monarchies. It is at odds with the democracies of India, Brazil, South Africa, Mexico, Canada and most of Europe. Does this make any sense?

I saw a story about an Arkansas farmer who was at his wit’s end over Trump’s tariffs. He explained that rising costs for seed, fuel, and fertilizer are squeezing him, while the tariffs have cut off crucial overseas markets, especially for soybeans. The end result is that he’s working just as hard, but his crops are selling for less, leaving little to no profit. What struck me most was his sense that the burden falls squarely on family farmers like him, while the supposed “benefits” of tariffs never reach them.
One of the farmers told his representatives, “I need to see the fruit of your love.” That’s a deeply biblical metaphor — in the Christian tradition, a person or a nation that bears no good fruit is seen as barren and deceptive, facing judgment unless there is true repentance and change.
I only hope these farmers come to realize they’ve been following a false prophet. Yet since so many seemed unconcerned about the harm done to others by Trump’s austerity, I doubt they truly grasp the heart of Christian philosophy, which is empathy.
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My former roommate just moved with his fiance to Arkansas because the fiance’s family lives there and they thought they could get a lot more bang for their buck in AR, since the cost of living has been so much lower there than it is here.
I suppose those lower costs there are not going to be lasting too much longer. If that’s the case across US farmlands, then a lot of MAGAts may begin to comprehend that what they bought into were a pack of lies, since they’re more likely to hear the message from their wallet than from their conscience.
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Well said, David!
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Smoot-Hawley anyone? The two approaches to tariffs may have differences in their details, but the principals are the same government sponsored interference in the Markets….
Err isn’t that a sort of Socialism. Under Small Government should not ‘The Markets’ be allowed to find their own levels?
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deteremineddespitewp: Very important points!
Unfortunately, too many people in DC today do not know history, have no idea what the consequences of Smoot-Hawley were, and seem to think they can manipulate markets any which way they want and everything will turn out just fine.
I’ll never understand how politicians can take drastic actions without considering what could happen if other countries turn around, do the same thing to us and say, “Right back atcha Bub!” I get shivers up my spine just thinking of it…
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They always make the same mistake of thinking that the narrative will play out the way which suits their outlook.
From 415 BCE when The City State of Athens attacked Syracuse on fairly flimsy evidence (familiar?) recorded history is littered with government actions which have blown back in their faces. Most of them have a military component but economic ones can be just as disastrous, as we learn from our woefully inadequate shortest Prime Minister Liz Truss.
In a geo-political sense all Trump is serving to do is make the USA even more unpopular while earning the quiet contempt of Putin, Xi Jinping, Modi to name but a few.
Not a place for incompetent amateurs or fantasists
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“incompetent amateur” and “fantasists”
Perfectly said
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So pleased to see you on this blog, determined. Really enjoy your wise posts.
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Thank you very much Bob.
Take care
Roger
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The bizarre thing is that the Republican Party, for much of the twentieth century, was adamantly opposed to tariffs and considered them an impediment to free markets.
Among the ancient Sumerians, there was a word, mes (pronounced MAYS), that denoted all cultural and political norms, collectively. Trump is trashing all our mes. The man is utterly ignorant and uncouth, a lout, a vandal.
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Under Donnie, the U.,S. is experiencing a significant decline in tourism to the country. According to Congress.gov, “The economic implications are staggering, with the U.S. tourism industry potentially losing between $12.5 billion and $21 billion in visitor spending in 2025 alone.“
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