June 29, 2016

Don't Scrap America's Alliances. Fix Them.

By Elbridge Colby

Does the United States benefit from having allies? In recent months, Donald Trump, the presumptive Republican presidential nominee, has voiced skepticism about the value of core American allies in Europe and East Asia. Trump argues that U.S. allies are free riding off the United States, and that their contributions to U.S. security are no longer sufficient to justify either the risks or the costs they impose on Americans. He is far from alone this election season. Surrogates for Bernie Sanders like Jeffrey Sachs have made similar arguments. Even President Obama himself expressed frustration about allies and partners that do not pull their weight in his recent Atlantic interview, as did former secretary of defense Robert Gates in his second memoir. In earlier years, politicians as diverse as President Dwight Eisenhower and the Democratic Senate majority leader Mike Mansfield issued similar complaints.

 

To read the full oped, visit the National Interest website.

  • Commentary
    • The National Interest
    • September 25, 2017
    The Problem with 'the Best of Intentions' Foreign Policy

    The nineteenth-century Germans focused so much on philosophy partly in order not to compete with the protean genius of Goethe, who had dominated all the other literary genres ...

    By Robert D. Kaplan

    • Commentary
    • The Wall Street Journal
    • August 24, 2016
    Australia’s Ambivalence Makes It Vulnerable

    With Washington’s rising focus on Asia, America’s close and longstanding alliance with Australia has taken on new significance. Australia today is boosting its military streng...

    By Richard Fontaine

    • Commentary
    • The Diplomat
    • July 27, 2016
    A Thaw in the US-New Zealand Nuclear Freeze

    The visit of a U.S. Navy warship to New Zealand in November will mark the close of a 30 year period of security estrangement between two democratic nations. Announced during V...

    By Richard Fontaine

    • Commentary
    • The Wall Street Journal
    • June 30, 2016
    How to Crash Putin’s Brexit Party

    For decades, NATO and the European Union have silently worked in unison. The former required a foundation of European unity, and the EU to a significant extent provided that, ...

    By Robert D. Kaplan

View All Reports View All Articles & Multimedia