Sunday, September 17, 2017

Trump is a Realist


Jonathan Sullivan

International Relations

Prof. Shirk

September 17, 2017

Trump Is A Realist Mentally

            President Trump thinks and speaks like a realist. The realist mentality is ‘every state for themselves’ and that is exactly what President Trump’s campaign was built on. His ‘Make America Great Again’ slogan is a realist point of view. This ideology was built on the thought that America was sending too much funds to other nations and helping others rather than helping themselves. This supports the realist ideology of everyone for themselves. Trump used disgruntled Americans who wanted a more realist thinker in the White House to win the election back in November. As opposed to previous regimes which used more of a liberalist view of the world Trump’s realist mentality has been prevalent in many of the speeches he has done and in the actions, he has threatened, such as leaving trade deals like NAFTA.

            A large part of a realist’s mentality is also one where militaristic power reigns. Trump has certainly not been shy in talking about the size of the United States’ military and how powerful it is. Just this morning Trump tweeted out, "Important meetings and calls scheduled for today. Military and economy are getting stronger by the day, and our enemies know it." Trump speaking out to how strong the military is a move that a realist would approve of. Former President Obama would never say anything along the lines of how strong the military is because he didn’t believe in the realist ideology of letting everyone know how strong your military is. Another example of Trump’s realist views is his talk about withdrawing the US from the trade deal NAFTA. This is because he views the deal as one where the United States is losing more than it is gaining to other North American countries like Mexico and Canada. Whereas a follower of liberalism can view this deal as good for all and one where all sides can gain, a realist sees the world as zero-sum. This means that if the United States is not in total control and the clear winner of the trade than they are losing the deal to another state. Trump threatening to withdraw from the deal because he views it as not being beneficial enough to the United States is the realist point of view. Trump has shown through his speeches that he clearly thinks with the mentality of a realist.

            President Trump thinks with a realist view of world. This has been prevalent since his campaign began in 2015. His ‘Make America Great Again’ slogan is built upon the realist ideology of every country for themselves. Since he was elected, many of his proclamations have had realist roots. Threatening to withdraw from NAFTA because the United States was losing the deal to other countries is a view a realist would have because of the zero-sum mentality realists attain. Why many will continue to criticize him for his speeches about making America first it is obvious that the thought process behind them is that of a realist. Trump will continue acting and speaking with the mentality of a realist because it was with this mentality that enabled him to win the election.







Sources

Trump, Donald J. “Important Meetings and Calls Scheduled for Today. Military and Economy Are Getting Stronger by the Day, and Our Enemies Know It. #MAGA.” Twitter, Twitter, 17 Sept. 2017, twitter.com/realDonaldTrump/status/909401572341370881.

Cassella, Megan, et al. “Trump’s Threat of NAFTA Withdrawal Loses Its Edge.” POLITICO, 23 Aug. 2017, www.politico.com/story/2017/08/23/trump-nafta-trade-withdrawal-threat-canada-mexico-241948.