President Trump has been so diplomatically disruptive that one is tempted to wonder if US allies will simply wait him out, banking on his successor to restore normalcy. It's not so simple, writes The German Marshall Fund's Bruce Stokes, pointing to deep schisms between Republicans and Democrats on the value of trade (and whether Europe plays fair), improving relations with allies, and climate change. America's European allies, then, need "to begin to prepare for a world in which the United States is not a dependable ally because there no longer exists in the country a bipartisan consensus on issues of importance to Europe," he writes. In other words, it's not just Trump, but American voters, who are forcing allies to handle the US differently. |
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