Candidate Donald Trump did the seeming impossible: get elected president while speaking truths that shocked establishment policymakers. Such as criticizing the defense dole for South Korea, one of Washington, D.C.’s, most sacred sacred cows. However, as his swearing in nears, he is being strongly pressed to abandon his contrarian views. During the campaign Trump accurately diagnosed the problem of nominal allies becoming costly dependents. He declared: “We are better off frankly if South Korea is going to start protecting itself.” Of that there should be no doubt. He further explained: “We have 28,000 soldiers on the line in South Korea between the madman and them.” Also true. Moreover, “We get practically nothing compared to the cost of this.” He’s right: it doesn’t benefit America to pay for the defense of nations able to defend themselves. Alas, Trump fell short when discussing the solution. He argued: “They have to protect themselves or they have to pay us.” The U.S. shouldn’t hire out its military like a mercenary force. Rather, Washington should turn over defense responsibilities to one of the world’s wealthier nations. Serious, mature countries should protect their own people, rather than beg others to do so. However, after being elected Trump appeared to be going on his own apology tour, calling South Korean President Park Geun-hye to promise that America would be “steadfast and strong” with the Republic of Korea. Policy advisers Alexander Gray and Peter Navarro wrote that “Trump will simply pragmatically, and respectfully discuss with Tokyo and Seoul additional ways for those governments to support a presence all involved agree is vital.” If true, then the president-elect will be effectively declaring preemptive surrender. South Koreans interpreted the forgoing to mean that the good times will continue: no need to worry their own people by matching North Korea’s military efforts. Indeed, Seoul plans to do whatever is necessary to save its defense subsidies. Foreign Minister Yun Byung-se assured South Koreans that “the government will make various efforts so the South Korea-U.S. alliance that has successfully developed over the past 60 years will continue to move forward without faltering despite the change in the U.S. leadership.” If the ROK succeeds in its efforts, it will be apparent that The Donald is not nearly as tough as he likes to portray. “Draining the swamp” will take work, and nowhere is the swamp more impermeable than Washington’s foreign policy community. There is a convenient consensus from liberal interventionist to neoconservative that the U.S. must micro-manage the world, using force whenever necessary to impose America’s will even when the stakes are minimal. As a result American lives and wealth have been squandered around the globe. President Trump must take on this conventional wisdom, and the various factions which hold it—what President Barack Obama termed “the Blob” in Washington. South Korea would be a good place to start. The U.S. is in the South because it has always been in the South, or almost. American forces arrived in the Korean peninsula after Japan’s surrender […]
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