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  • Reuters

    Factbox-Trump's foreign policy: rethink NATO, troops to Mexico, boost tariffs

    By Gram Slatter,

    13 hours ago
    https://img.particlenews.com/image.php?url=2VmmpO_0uU0IeBu00

    By Gram Slattery

    (Reuters) -Republican former President Donald Trump says he plans to fundamentally alter the U.S. relationship with NATO should he win a second four-year term in November.

    On the campaign trail, he has floated sending armed forces into Mexico to battle drug cartels and slapping expansive tariffs on friends and foes alike.

    Here is a look at the foreign policy proposals Trump has pledged to advance should he win the 2024 presidential election, having secured the party's nomination this week in Milwaukee:

    NATO, UKRAINE AND EUROPEAN ALLIES

    Trump has said that under his presidency, America would fundamentally rethink "NATO's purpose and NATO's mission." He has pledged to ask Europe to reimburse the United States for "almost $200 billion" in munitions sent to Ukraine, and he has yet to commit to sending further aid to the eastern European nation if elected.

    Trump cut defense funding to NATO toward the latter part of his time in office, and he has frequently complained America was paying more than its fair share.

    On the war in Ukraine, he has said he would resolve the conflict even before taking office in January. Though he has put forward few tangible policy proposals, he told Reuters in an interview last year that Ukraine may have to cede some territory to reach a peace agreement. Two Trump advisers told Reuters in June that they had presented a plan to end the war in Ukraine by conditioning any further weapons aid on Kyiv agreeing to sit down with Moscow for peace talks.

    While Trump signaled in early April that he would be open to sending additional aid to Ukraine in the form of a loan, he remained mostly silent on the issue during contentious congressional negotiations over a $61 billion aid package later that month.

    CHINA, TRADE AND TAIWAN

    Trump frequently threatens to impose major new tariffs or trade restrictions on China as well as on some European allies.

    His proposed Trump Reciprocal Trade Act would give him broad discretion to ramp up retaliatory tariffs on countries when they are determined to have put up trade barriers of their own. He has floated the idea of a 10% universal tariff, which could disrupt international markets, and at least a 50% tariff on China.

    Trump has called for an end to China's most favored nation status, a status that generally lowers trade barriers between nations. He has vowed to enact "aggressive new restrictions on Chinese ownership of any vital infrastructure in the United States," and the official Republican Party platform calls for banning Chinese ownership of American real estate.

    On Taiwan, Trump has declared that it should pay the United States for its defense as, he says, it does not give the U.S. anything and took "about 100% of our chip business," referring to semiconductors. He has repeatedly said that China would never dare to invade Taiwan if he were president.

    MEXICO AND NARCOTICS

    Trump has said he would designate drug cartels operating in Mexico as foreign terrorist organizations and order the Pentagon "to make appropriate use of special forces" to attack cartel leadership and infrastructure, an action that would be unlikely to get the blessing of the Mexican government.

    He has said he would deploy the U.S. Navy to enforce a blockade against the cartels and would invoke the Alien Enemies Act to deport drug dealers and gang members in the United States.

    Civil rights groups and Democratic senators have pushed for the repeal of that act, passed in 1798, which gives the president some authority to deport foreign nationals while the country is at war.

    The new Republican Party platform also calls for moving thousands of troops deployed overseas to the U.S.-Mexico border to battle illegal immigration.

    CONFLICT IN ISRAEL

    After first criticizing Israeli leadership in the days after its citizens were attacked on Oct. 7 by the Palestinian militant group Hamas, Trump has said Hamas must be "crushed." While his rhetoric has been bellicose, he has proposed few policy solutions, besides saying he would be tougher on Iran, which is closely linked to groups classified by the U.S. as terrorist organizations, including Hamas.

    Trump also says he would seek to deport all "resident aliens" who are Hamas sympathizers. "Resident alien" is a legal term used to describe U.S. permanent residents, also known as green card holders.

    CLIMATE

    Trump has repeatedly pledged to pull out of the Paris Agreement, an international accord meant to limit greenhouse gas emissions. He pulled out of it during his term in office, but the U.S. rejoined the accord under Democratic President Joe Biden in 2021.

    MISSILE DEFENSE

    Trump has pledged to build a state-of-the-art missile defense "force field" around the United States. He has not gone into detail, beyond saying that the Space Force, a military branch that his administration created, would play a leading role in the process.

    In the Republican Party platform, the force field is referred to as an "Iron Dome," reminiscent of Israel's missile defense system, which shares the same name.

    (Reporting by Gram Slattery; Additional reporting by Susan Heavey; Editing by Ross Colvin, Sandra Maler and Howard Goller)

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