For his part, Trump already has shown disdain for international law by authorizing military strikes inside Yemen and Syria. In other words, if not for the fear of provoking American anger, many of the world's diplomats might have responded with a barrage of catcalls toward Trump for his blatant hypocrisy. Without doubt, the United States is the preeminent violator of sovereignty and international law in the world today, yet Trump wagged his finger at others, including Russia (over Ukraine) and China (over the South China Sea).
He declared: "We must reject threats to sovereignty, from the Ukraine to the South China Sea. We must uphold respect for law, respect for borders, and respect for culture, and the peaceful engagement these allow."
Then, with a seeming blindness to how much of the world sees the United States as a law onto itself, Trump added: "The scourge of our planet today is a small group of rogue regimes that violate every principle on which the United Nations is based."
Of course, in the U.S. mainstream media's commentary that followed, Trump's hypocrisy went undetected. That's because across the American political/media establishment, the U.S. right to act violently around the world is simply accepted as the way things are supposed to be. International law is for the other guy; not for the "indispensible nation," not for the "sole remaining superpower."
On Bibi's Leash
Despite some of his "America First" rhetoric -- tossed in as red meat to his "base" -- Trump revealed a global outlook that differed from the Bush-Obama neoconservative/liberal-interventionist approach in words only. In substance, Trump appears to be just the latest American poodle on Bibi Netanyahu's leash.

Israeli Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu making opening remarks at a joint White House press conference with President Donald Trump on Feb. 15, 2017.
(Image by (Screenshot from White House video)) Details DMCA
For instance, Trump bragged about attacking Syria over a dubious chemical-weapons claim while ignoring the role of the Saudi/Israeli tandem in assisting Al Qaeda and its Syrian affiliate; Trump threatened the international nuclear agreement with Iran while calling for regime change in Tehran, two of Netanyahu's top priorities; and Trump warned that he would "totally destroy North Korea" over its nuclear and missile programs while making no mention of Israel's rogue nuclear arsenal and sophisticated delivery capabilities.
Ignoring Saudi Arabia's ties to terrorism, Trump touted his ludicrous summit in Riyadh in which he danced with swords and let King Salman and other corrupt Persian Gulf monarchs, who have long winked and nodded at ideological and logistical support going to Al Qaeda and other Islamic terror groups, pretend their governments were joining an anti-terror coalition.
Exploding the myth that he is at least a street-smart operator who can't be easily conned, Trump added, "In Saudi Arabia early last year, I was greatly honored to address the leaders of more than 50 Arab and Muslim nations. We agreed that all responsible nations must work together to confront terrorists and the Islamist extremism that inspires them."
No wonder Netanyahu seemed so pleased with Trump's speech. The Israeli prime minister could have written it himself while allowing Trump to add a few crude flourishes, like calling North Korean leader Kim Jong Un "Rocket Man ... on a suicide mission"; referring to "the loser terrorists"; and declaring that many parts of the world are "going to hell."
Trump also tossed in a plug for his "new strategy for victory" in Afghanistan and threw in some interventionist talk regarding the Western Hemisphere with more threats to Cuba and Venezuela about escalating sanctions and other activities to achieve more "regime change" solutions.
So, what Trump made clear in his U.N. address is that his "America First" and "pro-sovereignty" rhetoric is simply cover for a set of policies that are indistinguishable from those pushed by the neocons of the Bush administration or the liberal interventionists of the Obama administration. The rationalizations may change but the endless wars and "regime change" machinations continue.
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