Archive for the ‘Donald Trump’ Category

Opinion | The Republican Search for Alternatives to Trump – The New York Times

To the Editor:

Re How to Make Trump Go Away, by Frank Luntz (Opinion guest essay, April 10):

Republicans are tying themselves in knots trying to come up with candidates who can appeal to Trump voters but who are not Donald Trump. The latest effort is this essay by the Republican strategist Frank Luntz.

I laughed and groaned when I read about the search for a candidate who champions Mr. Trumps agenda but with decency, civility and a commitment to personal responsibility and accountability. Really? How could such a thing be possible?

Mr. Trumps agenda if one can say he has an agenda other than himself is one of building a power base by stoking grievance, resentment and division. It is inherently based on indecency and incivility.

The last thing this country needs is a smoother, more effective version of Donald Trump. We need an agenda that brings us together to make America a better place for everyone, not just for some at the expense of others. We dont need an agenda that divides, debases and weakens us, whoever the candidate.

John MasonSanta Rosa, Calif.

To the Editor:

Frank Luntzs eight suggestions to the Republican leadership on how to dump Donald Trump are well considered and rational. But one other rational thought that he omitted is the threat that Mr. Trump would run as an independent if he isnt nominated for the 2024 presidential race. Even a small percentage of his hard-core base could crush the chances for a normal Republican candidate to win the general election.

Mr. Trump is irrational enough to spend the funds he has raised already plus some of his own in a vindictive, spoiler candidacy. Its not a mystery why Republican leaders dont know how to escape their dilemma.

Davis van BakergemSt. Louis

To the Editor:

As one of the steadily increasing body of independents, I read Frank Luntzs column avidly to see where there might be a case to be made on behalf of the Republicans. Unfortunately, there is an underlying premise that Donald Trump did a lot of good things for the country during his term.

I fail to see them.

True, the economy was in good shape before the coronavirus, but I ascribe that in large part to the hard work of the Obama years. The only program of note that Mr. Trump initiated was the tax cuts that sharply increased an already swollen deficit and that benefited our citizens who least needed the help. Far from helping the disenfranchised, he milked them for his personal benefit and widened the divide.

Internationally, he alienated our longstanding allies in Europe. We are left with his impact on the bureaucracy and judiciary. Mr. Luntz must mean rendering governance ineffectual through starvation and converting the judiciary into a political body.

Not my idea of a record to run on.

Tony PellBoston

To the Editor:

Thank you for this great piece. Everything Frank Luntz said resonated with me, a liberal residing among some very strong conservatives. He went the extra mile to really understand Trump voters and describe in great detail how a Republican candidate could succeed with them in a future election.

It was very thought-provoking, and helped me gain an even deeper insight into my neighbors and their concerns. I will remember what he wrote.

Mary HollenGreenbank, Wash.

To the Editor:

Frank Luntz offers messaging advice for Republican presidential candidates to attract MAGA voters away from Donald Trump: Listen and sympathize with Trump supporters, he says, emphasize decency, civility and personal responsibility. Acknowledge Mr. Trumps successes and offer the mildest criticisms of his presidential record and personal behavior. Make it more about the grandchildren because these mature right-wing voters care about the kids future.

No doubt there are disillusioned Trump voters who are ready for a different message, but how many? Racism, misogyny and apocalyptic nihilism are the hallmarks of Trumpism. Mr. Luntzs advice is not only risible adopt a liberal demeanor without the Enlightenment values but also paradoxical. It presumes an electorate yearning for a kinder, gentler fascism.

To the Editor:

Re After Shunning Assad for Years, the Arab World Changes Its Tune (news article, April 14):

It is troubling to see that several Arab nations have chosen to embrace President Bashar al-Assad of Syria, whose tenure has been marked by unspeakable atrocities and egregious human rights violations. His reign of tyranny and terror should result in ongoing condemnation, not the newfound credibility that is being bestowed upon him by Syrias Arab neighbors.

Mass killings and widespread violence that have forced millions of people to flee their homes cannot and should not be overlooked when assessing the strategic importance of re-establishing formal relations with Syria and its rogue leader.

Mr. al-Assad should be reviled, not recognized.

N. Aaron TroodlerBala Cynwyd, Pa.

To the Editor:

Thank you for A Better Alternative to Guardianship, by Emily Largent, Andrew Peterson and Jason Karlawish (Opinion guest essay, April 5).

As they note, the overuse of guardianship robs people of agency in their own lives. Those with guardians are left out of important conversations about their future, they dont develop the skills necessary to make life choices and they are prohibited from entering into legal agreements, managing their money or getting married without the guardians consent.

Because the individual has been deemed legally incompetent, the guardian signs any legally binding contracts, co-signs any disbursements and, depending on the state, may have to sign the marriage license.

For people with intellectual and developmental disabilities, families are all too often counseled when their family member leaves school to seek guardianship.

Nationwide data from the National Core Indicators indicates that among people with intellectual and developmental disabilities receiving services, a staggering 45 percent are under some form of guardianship. Supported decision-making, described in the essay, provides a much-needed alternative to this denial of rights and agency.

Valerie J. BradleyCambridge, Mass.The writer is president emerita of the Human Services Research Institute.

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Opinion | The Republican Search for Alternatives to Trump - The New York Times

Donald Trump Still Collects Six-Figure Pension from SAG-AFTRA: Report – Vanity Fair

There are many, many descriptions that come to mind when one says the name Donald Trump, but union man isnt usually one of them. However, as per a story in The Hollywood Reporter, the former President of the United States (the one that was arrested not long ago, remains under investigation by several other prosecutors, and who also represents a full 50 percent of all presidential impeachments in U.S. history), is still drawing a sizable pension from the Screen Actors GuildAmerican Federation of Television and Radio Artists (SAG-AFTRA).

This is notable because on February 4, 2021, Trump publicly quit the union. The organizations board members held an emergency session following the events of January 6, and voted to hold a disciplinary hearing which would determine if Trump should be removed from the guild. Before that could happen, though, the former host of The Apprentice, who had also made appearances in movies and television shows like Home Alone 2: Lost in New York, Zoolander, The Nanny, and Spin City, sent a letter of resignation.

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And what a letter! SAG-AFTRAs official site still hosts a copy of it, and it really is a quintessential sample of our 45th presidents rhetorical style. I write to you today, it opens, regarding the so-called Disciplinary Committee hearing aimed at revoking my union membership. Who cares!

Before concluding I no longer wish to be associated with your union and officially resigning, Trump accused the group of making a blatant attempt at free media attention to distract from your dismal record and added that [y]our organization has done little for its members, and nothing for mebesides collecting dues and promoting dangerous un-American policies and ideas.

THRs article disproves the notion that the union did nothing for Trump's bottom line. According to financial disclosure forms he released late Friday, Trump took a pension from SAG valued at between $100,000-$1 million in 2022 and a pension from AFTRA valued at between $15,000-$50,000. These pensions predate the merger of the two groups in 1992.

V.F. has reached out to a representative from SAG-AFTRA for comment, but did not immediately hear back.

The report also noted that he still receives money as a producer on the hit NBC show The Apprentice, which ran for 15 seasons, to the tune of $100,000-$1 million.

Trump has 31 acting credits on the IMDb. While some of these are very much on the fringe (the list includes narrating the audio to his 2007 tome Think BIG and Kick Ass in Business and Life, which boasted two tickets to The Learning Annexs Wealth Expo on its cover), Trump did, one must confess, work with some impressive people over the years while making cameo appearances.

Here he is (with his middle wife, Marla Maples) opposite Oscar-winner Will Smith on The Fresh Prince of Bel-Air.

Here he is doing a little schtick with three-time Emmy-winner and two-time Oscar-nominee Judy Davis in four-time Oscar-winner Woody Allens film Celebrity.

And, weirdly, note that he had brief moments in two 1996 vehicles for Oscar-winner Whoopi Goldberg: the NBA romp Eddie and the business comedy The Associate, which also starred Dianne Wiest, Bebe Neuwirth, Austin Pendleton, Tim Daly, Eli Wallach (!), and Lainie Kazan (!!)

None of this, however, holds a candle to Ronald Reagan in Bedtime for Bonzo.

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Donald Trump Still Collects Six-Figure Pension from SAG-AFTRA: Report - Vanity Fair

Donald Trump’s Indictment: Here Is What You Need to Know – The Greyhound

During its investigation of the circumstances surrounding Stormy Daniels hush money payment in 2016, a New York grand jury voted to indict Donald Trump, making him the first former president to be indicted. Although the indictment was sealed, some charges were related to payments made during the 2016 presidential campaign to silence claims of an extramarital affair. These charges are a remarkable development following years of investigations into Trumps business, political, and personal ties.

Jim Trusty, one of Donald Trumps lawyers, described the Manhattan grand jurys decision to indict the former president as political persecution. Trusty complained that the former president should not have to mount a defense now to criminal charges that have yet to be filed. He said Friday on CNN that he expects the former presidents legal team in the hush money case to seek to dismiss the charges.

Trusty said, I would think in very short order, youll see a motion to dismiss or several motions to dismiss. I expect pre-trial motions to dismiss in days.

Joe Tacopina, Trumps lawyer, said on Friday in an interview with NBCs TODAY that there are zero chances he will take a plea deal instead of going to trial. He suggested the former president would surrender. In this case, Trump will not plead guilty, He insists.

Tacopina said, President Trump will not take a plea deal on this case; its not gonna happen. Theres no crime, I dont know if its gonna make it to trial because we have substantial legal challenges.

Trumps indictment was met with mixed reactions on social media, with many of his supporters calling it unfair. Former Vice President Mike Pence described the Manhattan grand jurys decision to indict former President Trump as an outrage.

The unprecedented indictment of a former president of the United States on a campaign finance issue is an outrage, Pence said on CNN. It appears to millions of Americans to be nothing more than a political prosecution thats driven by a prosecutor who literally ran for office on a pledge to indict the former president.

On The Rachel Maddow Show, Rep. Adam Schiff said that the indictment marked a sad and sobering historic day in our country. As Schiff stated, everyone, regardless of social status or power, should be held accountable for their actions.

He said, It is also I think a vindication of the rule of law and the principle that people should be held accountable whether theyre rich and powerful, whether theyre presidents or former presidents, or whether theyre ordinary citizens.

The former chairman of the Jan. 6 committee, Bennie Thompson, took to Twitter and wrote that no one is above the law to express his approval of Trumps indictment. He insists that the president must be held accountable in his released statement. His statement aligns with Shiffs.

He said, A presidential indictment is a stain on our democracy. Trump must be held accountable.

Trumps indictment also drew mixed reactions from students on campus. Maya Lindsay 24 said she was a bit shocked but not too surprised after learning about his indictment. She expressed being surprised that a former president would commit such crimes.

She said, My original thought on Trumps indictment was that I was a bit surprised but also not at the same time. It was shocking to see someone who was once in a higher position, such as the president of our country, commits these crimes.

Lindsay says the charges filed against him illustrate the corruption that occurs in our government. She hopes that justice will also prevail.

This represents our government and how corrupt its people can actually be. I only hope that justice can be served, that he receives a fitting punishment for what hes done, and that it wont just be another case of a privileged man getting a slap on the wrist.

Some new outlets have qualified Trumps indictment as a historical moment. Jake Taylor 25, the President of the Loyola Republican Club, explains why he agrees that Trumps indictment qualifies as a historic moment.

He said, My initial reaction was shock, as I did not believe they were going to go through with it due to the Manhattan DAs office calling it off a few times. I do believe that his indictment is a historical moment, as it has never been the case before that a former president has been brought on criminal charges.

Taylor says that whatever case the Manhattan DAs office has against Trump has got to be rock-solid. He shares how the last thing that individuals want is partisan, politically charged prosecutors to bring charges against every president that leaves office.

He said, We have Republican prosecutors who are talking about bringing up charges against President Biden as soon as he leaves office for some of his dealings and his sons laptops. I believe that we are in uncharted and dangerous waters about how we handle a political prosecution in this country.

Pre-law advisor and political science professor Dr. Matt Beverlin discussed what such an indictment might mean for the courts. He adds that the indictment might further undermine the courts support system.

He said, Historically, the courts support system is low, my hope is that faith in the court system isnt further damaged as were dealing with this case. I saw that he attacked the judge and even brought up his daughter, and that sort of thing and case cant help the countrys universal confidence in the courts.

Beverlin said its plausible there is a political dynamic to this prosecution. He affirms that if the charging decision is a political calculation, it doesnt appear to be a very good one.

He said, I think this will rally Trumps base and allow him to portray himself as a victim. At least one conservative commentator has suggested this was done by Democrats to ensure Trumps primary victory because they prefer him to be the GOP nominee.

He adds that the conservative commentators claim seems a bit far-fetched. He suggested that Trumps indictment is due to his lengthy criminal investigation.

I think the more likely explanation is the simplest one. His indictment is the culmination of a lengthy criminal investigation and the prosecutor is doing a good job, Beverlin said.

During an interview with ABC News, former President Donald Trump called the indictment an attack on our country. He disapproved of Manhattan district attorney Alvin Bragg, who resurrected the case against him. On Thursday, Trump, in a statement, called himself a completely innocent person facing an act of blatant election interference as a result of what he called political persecution.

He said, Our Movement, and our Party united and strong will first defeat Alvin Bragg, and then we will defeat Joe Biden, and we are going to throw every last one of these Crooked Democrats out of office so we can make America great again!

On April 4, Trump appeared in court in lower Manhattan to face 34 felony counts, including falsifying business records and making alleged hush payments to Stormy Daniels. He pleaded not guilty. His next court appearance is scheduled for Dec. 4.

Originally posted here:
Donald Trump's Indictment: Here Is What You Need to Know - The Greyhound

Art Industry News: Government Filings Show Donald Trump Made $1 Million From Selling His NFTs + Other Stories – artnet News

Art World

Plus, former Chicago Art Institute staffer pleads guilty to theft and billionaire collector Mitchell Rales enters the field to buy the Washington Commanders.

Art Industry News is a daily digest of the most consequential developments coming out of the art world and art market. Heres what you need to know on this Monday, April 17.

EmRata on Art in Her Life Growing up surrounded by the art created by her father, the painter and sculptor John David Ratajkowski, Emily Ratajkowski, now a mother herself, sits down with him to talk about her own art practice, and how art becomes key to her parenting philosophy. Fortunately, you were and are so good at encouraging and nurturing creative impulses, she tells her father. So much of making art or having opinions about arteven having tasterequires risk. You have to put yourself out there. (Cultured)

Former Art Institute Chicago Staffer Pleads Guilty to Theft Michael Maurello, a former payroll manager at the Chicago-based institution pleaded guilty to misappropriating some $2 million in museum funds. Maurello will be sentenced on September 14, where he faces up to 20 years in prison and finds up to $250,000. (Chicago Tribune)

Trump Made $1 Million in NFT Sales The former U.S. President has earned as much as $1 million from selling the 45,000 digital collectibles featuring his likeness, according to government filings. The NFTs were released in December and sold out within a day. (CoinDesk)

Conservationist Warns of Over-Restoration Schemes Buyers of antiques have been warned of possible tricks from unethical dealers, who might make over-restoring furniture with modern additions look older than they are and put on a much higher price tag. (Observer)

Mitchell Rales Will Buy the Washington Commanders The billionaire art collector is reportedly part of a group led by billionaire private equity investor Josh Harris to acquire the NFL franchise Washington Commanders from owner Dan Snyder for a record $6 billion. Former NBA star Magic Johnson is also part of this group. (ARTnews)

Kunsthalle Wien Gets New Director British curator Michelle Cotton, currently program director at MUDAM in Luxembourg, has been named the new director of the Austrian institution and will take over in summer 2024. Croatia-based curatorial collective What, How & for Whom, which has been leading Kunsthalle Wien as directors since 2019, was ousted in 2022. (ArtReview)

MOCA Appoints Jos Luis Blondet As Senior Curator Jos Luis Blondet will join the Museum of Contemporary Art as senior curator beginning on May 1. Blondet previously served as the curator of special initiatives at the Los Angeles County Museum of Art from 2015. (Press release)

Jerry Saltz Teaches Comedian to Do Art Criticism Gianmarco Soresi showed off his art critic potential with the help from the Pulitzer Prize-winning art critic. You dont have to tell us if you like it or not. Thats the key. What I am interested in is what you see and how you see it, Saltz told the comedian. Soresi was then handed over an image of Katherine Bernhardts Swimming with Sharks (2015) and began his art critique debut. Soresis remarks definitely impressed the renowned art critic. That is one of the most beautiful reviews of Katherine Bernhardt that Ive heard, Saltz noted.(YouTube)

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Art Industry News: Government Filings Show Donald Trump Made $1 Million From Selling His NFTs + Other Stories - artnet News

Elbridge Colby Wants to Finish What Donald Trump Started – POLITICO

Elbridge Colby surrounded by Tucker Carlson, J.D. Vance, Josh Hawley, Laura Ingraham and Marco Rubio. | POLITICO illustration/Photos by U.S. Army, Getty Images, AP

By Jacob Heilbrunn

04/11/2023 04:30 AM EDT

Jacob Heilbrunn is editor of the National Interest and a non-resident senior fellow at the Atlantic Councils Eurasia Center.

Elbridge Bridge Colby is, as Donald Trump might say, straight out of central casting for a member of D.C.s foreign policy elite. He has degrees from Harvard and Yale, a membership to Washingtons Metropolitan Club and the kind of coiffed hair and clipped accent that youd expect from an American blue-blood. So pristine is his pedigree his grandfather was head of the CIA that a lightly fictionalized version of him appears in the New York Times columnist Ross Douthats memoir of his undergraduate years at Harvard, titled Privilege.

But Colby, far from being a deep state darling, is the intellectual leader and rising star of an insurgent wing in the Republican Party rebelling against decades of dominant interventionist and Reaganite thinking.

For years, Colby has held that China is the principal threat abroad, and that the United States should focus on Asia to the near-exclusion of everywhere else including Russia and Ukraine. If Trump began the partys realignment away from the neoconservatives who want the U.S. to serve as the worlds policeman, Colby, who worked for Trump as a Defense Department official, is now looking to make that shift permanent. Especially since Russian President Vladimir Putins brutal invasion of Ukraine has drawn fresh eyes and resources toward confronting Russia, more in the GOP are coming around to Colbys point of view.

When Ron DeSantis in March dismissed Russias war on Ukraine as a mere territorial dispute and argued for a greater focus on the China threat, youd forgive Colby if he did a victory dance. Sure, the Florida governor and likely 2024 presidential hopeful walked back the statement slightly a few days later, but it was the latest sign that in the ongoing battle for the future of the Republican Party, Colbys views are advancing with lightning speed.

I would have a hard time identifying a single person in my time in Washington who has had a bigger impact in moving the needle of the debate on Ukraine and China, said A. Wess Mitchell, an assistant secretary of State in the Trump administration. Mitchell, who started a new think tank called the Marathon Initiative with Colby, is more hawkish on backing Ukraine than his co-founder.

Missouri Sen. Josh Hawley, one of the vocal new populists and Ukraine skeptics in the GOP, added, Nowhere is Bridges leadership clearer than in the current debate over tradeoffs between aiding Ukraine and deterring China.

Colbys foreign policy influence is more than just another installment in the long-running fight between isolationists and hawks in the GOP. Its part of the mounting revival of the Asia First doctrine that the party championed in the aftermath of World War II, when the Nationalist forces of Chiang Kai-shek, a hero to American conservatives, fled to Taiwan in December 1949 as Maos communist forces won the civil war. The result was the rise of a vocal and highly influential China Lobby on the political right that demanded that Harry S. Truman withhold recognition of Red China and support Taiwan. Indeed, in 1951, Sen. Robert A. Taft, who was known as Mr. Republican, published a book called A Foreign Policy For Americans decrying Western Europeans for failing to pay for their own defense and warning that China was enemy number one.

Today, a new China Lobby is forming in the GOP, and Colby is one of its leaders. It espouses a self-consciously realist approach to foreign affairs, seeking to split the difference between the MAGA isolationists and the neoconservative hawks by arguing that China not Russia poses a dire threat to American national security, and that excessive support for Ukraine is jeopardizing it. It holds above all that American military planning and resources should be directed toward planning for a conflict with China over Taiwan.

When I spoke with Colby, he explained, Ukraine should not be the focus. The best way to avoid war with China is to be manifestly prepared such that Beijing recognizes that an attack on Taiwan is likely to fail. We need to be a hawk to get to a place where we can be a dove. Its about a balance of power.

Talk like this has won Colby admirers among those surfing the rights new populist wave. That includes Tucker Carlson, who has proved to be an influential voice in pushing the GOP to jettison Ukraine. When Colby appeared on Carlsons show last year and blasted the Biden administrations moral posturing on Saudi Arabia and elsewhere in the world, the Fox News host declared, Elbridge Colby, I wish you were running the State Department. This March, Colby went on Foxs Ingraham Angle to warn that the ties between China and Russia were a massive danger. The notion that America needed to aid Ukraine first was a delusion and had led to it becoming bogged down in Europe.

Colby is also making appearances in more private, if no less influential, settings. He was recently invited to Capitol Hill to discuss foreign policy by the Republican Senate Steering Committee, where he addressed some 40 GOP senators.

Hes particularly allied himself with the new generation of GOP foreign policy realists (many of whom are also products of the Ivy League) such as Hawley and J.D. Vance of Ohio. His advocacy for a return to a realistic approach to U.S. interests is exactly what the foreign policy establishment doesnt want, but it is exactly what our nation needs, Hawley said.

And on the question of U.S. support for Ukraine, theres no doubt the GOPs skeptical faction has momentum. As one GOP Senate aide, granted anonymity because he wasnt cleared to speak publicly, told me, Bridge is far and away leading the charge and even pulling more historically hawkish senators such as Sen. Marco Rubio (R-Fla.) along with him. In a recent essay in the American Conservative titled American Renewal, Rubio complained that Europe isnt pulling its weight on defense and that the polite caretakers of American decline bend over backwards to appease Chinas communist regime.

Colby is also close to Heritage Foundation president Kevin Roberts, who helped lead opposition to legislation last year that provided $40 billion in military and humanitarian aid to Ukraine. Nearly 60 House Republicans voted against it, a sizeable minority, and its far from certain that Congress would pass another one today. Roberts and Colby recently co-authored a piece in Time asserting that our concentration on Ukraine has undermined our ability to address the worsening military situation in Asia, especially around Taiwan.

Ultimately, the 2024 Republican presidential nominee will largely drive the partys agenda. Its no surprise, then, that DeSantis immediately faced harsh criticism from some corners following his initial statement on Ukraine; with the GOP increasingly ideologically unmoored, the infighting to steer the party is more intense than ever.

When I asked Colby about his ties to any presidential campaigns, he punted by responding that its all very embryonic when it comes to the specific foreign policy stands of the Republican aspirants. He worked for Trump once before. But DeSantis is on his radar, too: Colby praised DeSantis remarks on Ukraine on Twitter, and the Florida governors new aide and New Right wunderkind Nate Hochman immediately retweeted him.

For all his professed desire to bridge the gap between the partys hawks and isolationists, Colbys career has represented a long march against the neocons who he believes continue to dominate debate in Washington.

Like his grandfather, William Colby, who disclosed the CIAs secrets about assassinations and other schemes to the Senate Church Committee in 1975 and later supported a nuclear freeze, Colby has always had a maverick streak. After he graduated from Harvard in 2002, Colby worked in the George W. Bush State Department. In a 2021 column about the post-9/11 era, his friend Ross Douthat recalled that Colby was the only member of his circle who got the second Iraq War right: Nightly in our unkempt apartments he argued with the hawks which is to say all of us channeling the realist foreign policy thinkers he admired, predicting quagmire, destabilization and defeat.

Colby explains his own intellectual odyssey by noting that he recoiled against the Bush-Cheney belief that foreign policy realism was dead and that America could create its own reality, intervening unilaterally wherever and wherever it chose without suffering any blowback.

It may seem remarkable but the neocon old guard still has a dominant influence in many quarters, he says. That foreign policy was disastrous 20 years ago and would be calamitous today. We could actually lose a great power war for the first time in our history. Ukraine is not the source of the problem but Ukraine has exacerbated it.

Colbys prescience about Iraq did not serve him well in the GOP. The Wall Street Journal reported in 2015 that Colby, then a fellow at the Center for a New American Security, was being seriously considered for a top job in the Jeb Bush presidential campaign, but that prominent, interventionist neoconservatives objected to him and ensured that he was axed.

It wasnt until Trump became president that Colby received a political lifeline, joining the Defense Department in May 2017 as deputy assistant secretary of defense for strategy and force development. Trumps rejection of the Iraq War and its supporters, along with his antagonism toward China, mixed well with Colbys views. Soon Colby took the lead in crafting the Trump administrations 2018 National Defense Strategy, which focused on China as the principal great power threat to America. He encountered a good deal of bureaucratic infighting, including from the U.S. Central Command and the Joint Staff which resisted change, but ended up prevailing in his emphasis on China, partly with the support of the Navy and Air Force.

After he exited government in 2018, Colby started up the Marathon Initiative to develop strategies for the U.S. to compete with its global rivals and wrote a book expanding upon his views called The Strategy of Denial: American Defense in an Age of Great Power Conflict. Speaking like a true realist, Colby says that his own position represents a natural equilibrium between the messianic Wilsonianism of Bush 43 and the head-in-sand isolationists.

But is China truly the frighteningly powerful empire that Colby discerns? Or is it beginning to falter under the weight of its own internal problems? There are more than a few who dissent from Colbys narrative throughout Republican ranks, even among Trump supporters and realists.

Dan Caldwell, a vice president at the Trumpist Center for Renewing America, observed on March 22 in Foreign Affairs, Conservatives should not act as though a war with China is preordained, lest they wind up unintentionally sparking one. William Ruger, another prominent foreign policy realist and former Trump nominee for ambassador to Afghanistan, agreed. He said, A cold war approach would harm American economic interests that could best be handled by a Goldilocks strategy.

Matthew Kroenig, a vice president at the Atlantic Council and a hawk, said the contention that anything going to Ukraine is taking away from China doesnt make sense. Addressing the Asia First argument that U.S. troops should be moved out of Europe, he wondered, Where would you put brigades from Europe to Asia? Meanwhile, senior GOP officials such as Senate Minority Leader Mitch McConnell vehemently support Ukraines battle against Russia.

Colby maintains that Europe can step up to the challenge of meeting the Russian threat without too much U.S. help and pooh-poohs the notion that China views Ukraine as a test case for Western will in resisting tyranny. He suggests that its interventionist intellectuals and writers such as the Washington Posts Max Boot who are going soft on opposing tyranny in Asia because of their avidity to keep defending Ukraine. In a column that took a swipe at Colby, Boot warned that the return of so many Republicans to a quasi-isolationist, Asia First foreign policy is an ominous development.

Colby is having none of it. For those who argue that its wrong to appease Vladimir Putin with a peace settlement, as some powers tried with Hitler, Colby turns the metaphor around.

If theres a Munich, Colby says, its because were appeasing China. A real Neville Chamberlain move would be to give up Taiwan.

The question hovering over this patrician and pugilist is whether he can create regime change in the GOP itself.

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Elbridge Colby Wants to Finish What Donald Trump Started - POLITICO