Donald Trump acknowledges his diplomacy on Iran has been open to misinterpretation, delighting in a strategy that keeps his opponents guessing, both at home and abroad.
"Everyone was saying that I'm a warmonger and now they say I'm a dove," the U.S. president said last weekend after he called off airstrikes on Iran. But to Tehran, fresh sanctions on Supreme Leader Ayatollah Ali Khamenei are far from Trump's claimed commonsense approach. Rather, they mean the "permanent closure of the diplomatic path" with the U.S., a nation with which it has no formal ties.
The wrangling reflects Trump's blunt and at-times confusing approach to complex international problems, a tactic that's sure to play out at this week's Group of 20 summit in Japan on everything from Iran to Russia to his trade war with China.
The G-20 host is already smarting from Trump's tweet that nations dependent on fuel exports from the Middle East should defend their own ships rather than rely on the U.S. Then there's the president's musings – as reported exclusively by Jennifer Jacobs – about withdrawing from America's postwar defense treaty with key ally Japan, a pact he regards as too one-sided.
It's highly unlikely Trump would actually rip up the treaty. But given his prior criticisms of allies for not shouldering enough of their own defense burdens, even raising the prospect of it threatens lasting damage to U.S. ties around the world.
- Alan Crawford
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