If Trump moves to heal ties
with Russia, establishment will oppose him fiercely – Stephen Cohen
Published time: 11 Nov, 2016
08:27Edited time: 11 Nov, 2016 08:47
An outcome that no
mainstream media outlet predicted, a victory that the elites decried – the
people have voted to make Donald Trump the next US president. Millions of
Americans are tired of being ignored and want radical change. But can Trump
deliver on his promises? Regarded as an outsider in his own party – will he be
able to implement his foreign policy approach? We ask professor emeritus at
Princeton University, contributing editor at The Nation magazine, Stephen
Cohen.
Sophie Shevardnadze: Dr.
Stephen Cohen, professor emeritus at Princeton and New York University,
contributing editor at “The Nation”magazine, welcome to the show, it’s
always great to have you back. Now, the media backed Clinton, Hollywood backed
Clinton - but Trump had a stronger social media presence - his tweets to his 14
million followers made all the news - was that what made the difference in the
end? Do Americans not believe in traditional media anymore, do they find social
media more trustworthy?
Stephen Cohen: I have
no idea - I am not a social media person. I think, the media here has covered
this, that there was a profound disenchantment, I guess, anger, with many many
people, with the political establishment, both Republican and Democratic, and
Trump took on the establishment. I mean, plus, the very bad domestic situation
for many people, plus, I think, because he did something no other candidate had
done in many years: he ran as what we call “the candidate of detente”,
especially with Russia, and people are worried about all these wars, but
primarily it was driven by domestic pain, social pain.
SS: I’m sorry to
bring you back to social media, but I’m just saying, what analysts are saying,
I’m repeating: they’re saying the social media played a big role in this
outcome, so is the Internet now the future of election campaigns?
SC: Well, all the
analysts were wrong about Trump winning, so I think we should forget all the
other analysts. I mean, this was one of the great mis-analyses,
miscalculations, mis-prognosis in American political history. It was kind of
like Brexit - everybody said it wasn’t possible. And, by the way, he didn’t win
the electoral college just by a few votes - he won very substantially. I don’t know,
I can’t testify to this. Nonetheless, about 80% of Americans still get their
political news from television, so it’s what drives people’s opinions more than
the Internet. There’s a lot of chatter out there and I know Trump did a lot of
tweeting late at night - but so did the Clinton campaign. After all, it was
Obama who really started using social media as an election device, and it
helped him win. So, both campaigns knew about it, both campaigns were doing it.
I was getting emails every day from the Clinton campaign, I mean, two or three
times a day, so I assume that Trump was doing the same thing.
SS: As you say
all the pundits, papers, projected Trump victory near
impossible – some even giving Hillary up to a 98% chance of winning -
how could these predictions be so spectacularly wrong, do polls and pre-vote
analysis have no substance anymore, whatsoever?
SC: I would say that
all these people who told you that Trump had no chance, didn’t know the America
they lived in, and the reason is that the media, the opinion-makers, live in
New York and Washington, which is not the U.S. I come from Kentucky and
Indiana, what you would call “the provinces”, and I knew from my friends and
family down there that a lot of them were going to vote Donald Trump. So, it
was only a question of a couple electoral states that we weren’t sure he could
get and he got them. But a large part of the country was against Mrs. Clinton.
What we don’t know yet is if this was primarily vote for Trump or a primarily
vote against Mrs. Clinton.
SS: We saw Clinton
supporters crying in the streets, having breakdowns, and now protesting. Their
reaction has been very dramatic - why? Is this a sign that the nation is
extremely polarised right now?
SC: No, it’s not, and I
think their behaviour was very bad. I can tell you that the two schools here,
one a law school and one a lower level high school, said to their students, the
next day after the election, to all the parents, that “if your children are
distressed by the outcome of the election, we will counsel them” - this is
preposterous. I mean, I don’t ever recall this happening since 9/11. You recall
that before the election Clinton campaign said that Trump supporters would come
to the streets if Mrs. Clinton won, and they were using that to warn us against
voting for Trump - but in fact it was the Clinton supporters, or whoever these
people were, it was clearly organized - this is bad behaviour by American
standards. When we have a Democratic election, we’re supposed to accept
it, until, at least, the new President does something we don’t like - I mean,
the guy hasn’t even taken office! So, these protesters are silly and all this
weeping in the streets shows that we have a kind of infantile political culture
sometimes. After all, Trump is meeting with President Obama - President Obama
is not crying, Mrs. Clinton is not crying, at least in public - this is the
infantile wing of our political society.
SS: But is this the
first time this happens? Such protests, such drama, after the election? Because
I’m thinking, what’s the big deal? I mean, he’s going to be there for four
years and then you can re-elect a new president…
SC: Yeah. It’s been a
passionate, traumatic electoral process for many people. In my lifetime, which
is pretty long now, I don’t recall it happening. Normally it happens when the
president dies, then people cry, or when here’s a catastrophe, like the attacks
on the U.S. on 9/11 - here in my city, in New York, I saw a lot of people
crying, of course, but not when there’s a Presidential election. I mean, maybe,
Mrs. Clinton cried, I don’t know, and her supporters, privately, but I have not
seen this kind of public grief as though it’s a catastrophe. It’s no
catastrophe, it’s politics.
SS: So, once
again, the losing candidate has won the popular vote - Is it possible that the
country could do away with the current voting system –and go with the
popular vote count?
SC: You know, it’s possible
and a lot of people think that we should get rid of the Electoral College,
which was created when the Republic was founded, mainly to advantage
slave-holding states. The slaveholders wanted more say in a Presidential
election than they were entitled to, so they rigged up this system. But getting
rid of it requires a Constitutional Amendment, and that is really-really
difficult in this country. There will be some discussion of it, and maybe,
because it has happened twice now - you remember it happened with Gore and
Bush...
SS: Yeah.
SC: And then not so
long after again with Trump and Clinton - there might be serious discussion
about it, but to do it is really difficult.
SS: So, okay, the way
Trump won was largely because he was so different, he was so outspoken, so
outrageously outspoken, saying things that were so politically incorrect, so I
am asking… and he’s won, he has become the President of the U.S. - so, I’m
thinking, does this victory mean that mean centrist, moderate politics in
America is dead, because people are just fed up with niceness, because maybe
they see hypocrisy behind niceness? I’m thinking, do you have to be
antagonistic and radical now for them to believe you, because then what you see
is what you get?
SC: Well, you said one
thing that I think is interesting and possibly true - that this election was a
defeat for political correctness, and that may not be a bad thing, because
political correctness has become a kind of a form, sometimes, on some subjects,
of self-censorship. There has been reports about this, for example, on American
college campuses, where both professors and students don’t feel themselves as
free to be candid. I don’t mean it in a prejudicial way, but just to discuss
certain subjects. This may have to do with ethnicity, it may have to do with
gender - but I don’t know that Trump was all that outrageous, and I’m not sure
what “radical” means. I think the most radical campaign was actually run
by Bernie Sanders, who ran against Wall St. I think it was the motif of
the Sanders’ campaign that was radical in this sense, that if he had been
elected and he had pursued policies that would make Wall St. and economy less
corrupt - those would have been very far-reaching changes in this country, of
the kind we haven’t had since Franklin Roosevelt. Trump didn’t say anything in
this regard, outside the mainstream.
SS: Alright, so, I
agree that Sanders’ statements were an unusual derivation - but Trump
still stands… he’s completely the opposite for what Obama stands for. So,
Obama’s approval ratings right now are very high, probably the highest they
have ever been. So, I’m thinking, his presidency is nearing the end, why has
the country effectively voted against preserving his legacy?
SC: Well, you know,
“legacy”, Sophie, is in the hands of historians. I’m sure President Obama’s
feelings are badly hurt. He wanted Mrs. Clinton to be his third term, and
cement his legacy. But, there are a lot of things that Obama did in this legacy
that everybody agrees now have to be changed - for example, healthcare. What he
did just isn’t working. It worked for, maybe, 5%,10%,15% of the American
people, but it didn’t work well for others. So that is going to be reformed
even if Mrs. Clinton came to power. But let me disagree with you about one
thing - this election, as you know, and you must have been shocked, was also
about Russia. You said that Trump is the antithesis, the opposite of Obama, and
maybe, in the majority of ways, you’re absolutely right, but in one way, you
may not be right - for example, you’ll remember that about three months ago
President Obama and President Putin had a plan to work together in Syria, an
actual military alliance. And it was defeated in this country by the DoD, we
know that. But that has been one of Trump’s foreign policy proposals - I mean,
he doesn’t propose anything very coherently, but he has said repeatedly: “We
should work with Russia in Syria”. So in that sense, Trump as President may
pick up on what was originally an Obama proposal.
SS: The Republican
party has also won the House and Senate elections - but not all Republicans
supported Trump during the campaign - is Congress really in his hands now or do
you think he’ll have a hard time pushing through initiatives?
SC: What initiatives do
you have in mind - it all depends on the policy, I think. You’re right,
normally in American history, when you have a Republican President and a
Republican Congress, the Republicans can do anything they want.
SS: But he’s an
unusual Republican President, right?
SC: You see, that’s the
question we don’t know. In effect, I exaggerate only a little - Trump ran
against his own party establishment. They didn’t want him as the candidate,
they didn’t help him very much, and a lot of Republican senators and governors
said they wouldn't vote for him. This is extremely unusual. So, you had a man
who had the formal title of the Republican nominee, but who ran in many ways
against his own party - so what happens now when he’s President? Do we assume
the traditional American model - Republican President, Republican Congress
,Republicans get what they want? Or, is Trump going to find himself fighting
with his own Republican Congress? It will depend on the issue.
SS: Let’s take it
point by point, let’s have a listen to some of Trumps pre-election pledges:
Donald Trump:
“Taxes - we’re going to
provide massive tax relief to all working people!...”
“I’m going to renegotiate
NAFTA, one of the worst trade deals ever…”
“I will build a great, great
wall on our southern border and I will have Mexico pay for that wall.”
SS: Alright. So, I
don’t know how Senate is going to react to that but I want to know your opinion
- do you think he’s he planning on keeping any of those promises - or do you
expect Trump to tone down his rhetoric now - is it going to be a different
Trump in the White House?
SC: I don’t want to
turn this into a lecture on American politics, but the reality is that all of
these treaties that Trump says he wants to revise - you didn’t mention, for example,
the treaty with Iran, to limit Iran’s capacity to produce nuclear weapons -
these are multilateral treaties. Some of them have the support of the UN. The
President of the U.S. cannot unilaterally abrogate these treaties. So, Trump’s
real problem would not be with the Congress on treaties, but with the other
countries involved. On the wall - I don’t know. I think what he means when he
says “Mexico will pay for it” is that we have trade balances with Mexico and
that we just won’t pay Mexico what we owe them and we’ll take the cost of the
wall out of it. But I don’t expect this to be a big issue. One place where
Trump has made the commitment and he has Republican support, is getting rid of
a weak Obamacare, health insurance, and providing a better one. Now, all the
Republicans are in favor of that. The problem is, nobody has thought up a
better one yet. On the other hand, if you turn to foreign affairs, I think
Trump may run into a lot of opposition from his own Republican party if he
pursues the kind of foreign policy….
SS: Okay, let’s talk
about that, let’s talk about foreign policy - because he has no expertise in
it. He is not a career politician. Clinton’s foreign policy record raises
questions, but at least it's predictable. The woman has got experience, you’ve
got to give it to her. With Trump - there’s no telling what he’ll do next - is
this dangerous? Is America in for a wild ride?
SС: I don’t know how much
time we have, but let me step back for a minute, because we need the context.
One issue on which Trump was very different from Mrs. Clinton and from the
whole foreign policy establishment, was on our relationship with Russia. We now
- this is me speaking, not Trump - we are in a Cold War much more dangerous
than the 40-year long Cold War that we fought and ended. There are three places
where Russia and America could very easily suddenly be in a hot war. That’s the
Baltic regions, that’s Ukraine and that’s Syria. Trump has said that he wants
to do something about it to improve it. What he said is very fragmentary, but
very different from what other people have said. He says he wants to work with
President Putin, he said he thinks it would be great if Russia and the U.S.
united to fight terrorism in Syria. He hasn’t said anything about Ukraine. These
are pressing issues. If Trump were to move, and he shouldn’t do this publicly,
he should begin privately but if he were to move towards a detente, as we used
to call it, a reduction of conflict in a relationship with Russia and to open
cooperation, let’s say, in Syria - he will find himself opposed by a fierce and
powerful pro-Cold War coalition, Democratic and Republican, and including the
media, here in the U.S. He will have to fight very hard. The other side of that
story is, is that foreign policy is the one area where an American President
can do things pretty much on his own. He doesn’t need Congressional support
unless he wants a treaty. The question is, is Trump really going to do it, and
you might ask, if President Putin is ready for this - I think he is! Whether
Trump will now move - we’ll see.
SS: Let’s see what
he said so far about President Putin. Let’s take a listen.
Donald Trump: “And I
would get along with Russia, and I’ll get along with Putin, and he’s not going
to make us look bad anymore. But we’re going to get along!”
SS: So, Putin
congratulated Trump on his election success, and Trump even promised to pay
Putin a visit - even before the inauguration day. Can we expect a special
relationship to form between the two leaders? And when I say “special
relationship”, I mean based on personal trust.
SC: I have a somewhat
different view. Americans always want, if we’re going to have a good
relationship, a friend in the Kremlin. That was the whole thing about Clinton
and Yeltsin: “Ooh, good old Boris, he’s my friend” - that’s nonsense. Nations
operate on the basis of what they think are their national interests. What the
U.S needs, desperately - because the situation is so bad - is not a friend in
the Kremlin, but a partner in the Kremlin. That’s a very different thing. Now,
Trump brings to the Presidency a businessman's way of thinking. Businessmen
don’t go looking for friends, they go looking for partners, people who have the
same interests they have. In my opinion, there’s nothing except this Cold War
mania in the U.S., nothing objective, and the demonisation of Putin in the
U.S., which has become an institution - there’s no practical national interest
reason why Trump and Putin should not become national security partners. But
for that you need leadership. Trump has suggested he would provide that
leadership - but we can’t be sure yet. And let me repeat what I said to you
before, because don’t be naive - the opposition to any cooperation with Russia,
any cooperation, no matter how rational, is absolutely ferocious in the
American bi-partisan political establishment. They will fight Trump to the end,
if that happens. So, Trump has to be exceedingly clever if he does this.
Because, remember what else happened, Sophie, it’s very bad - on the one hand,
it was good, that there was a little discussion of Russia in our presidential
campaigns, but the discussion was terrible, it was poisonous. The Clinton
campaign indulged in neo-McCarthyism, they accused Trump and anybody who
thought Trump had a good idea about Russian policy, of being puppets of the
Kremlin. This is beyond disgusting. We went through this many years ago
in the U.S., it damaged our country very badly. I don’t know. The
poison is in our political bloodstream. Will it go away with Trump’s victory? I
doubt it. Therefore, Trump needs supporters in this country, who did not vote
for him - do you understand what I’m saying?
SS:Yep.
SC: It means, political
people who understand how dangerous this new Cold War is, did not vote for
Trump, but will support him if he pursues a policy of trying to find
cooperation with your President, President Putin. But will those people come
forward? They don’t want to be called names either. So this is a struggle in my
country. You’ve got struggles in your country. Our struggle here is that if
Trump does this, pursues what used to be called detente with Putin, we need to
support him.
SS: During the
campaign, Trump questioned the relevance of NATO - saying that he would pour a
lot less money into it, even calling it obsolete. Let’s take a listen:
Donald Trump: “NATO?
We’re talking about tremendous amounts of money that we put in, and we’re
defending countries, and we’re not getting reimbursed anywhere near the cost of
doing it. Either they pay up, including for past deficiencies, or they have to
get out. And if it breaks up NATO - it breaks up NATO.”
SS: Are we going to
see that actually happen, is America’s pillar of security policy going to be
reformed - or be cut of funding?
SC: No. In American
Presidential campaigns - ours are little more, how should I say, extravagant,
than yours. Candidates say all sorts of things, like “I’m going to reduce your
taxes” - and they never do. They don’t really act on them, but Trump said
something very important, and it wasn’t heretical - the media banged him
over the head with this NATO thing. President Obama has been complaining
for 8 years - President Obama - that all but about five NATO members are not
paying what they’re supposed to pay, which is something like 2% of their
GDP, and that the U.S. pays 75% of NATO’s cost. So Trump has said what Obama
has been saying. The only difference is, Trump kind of threatened these countries.
The U.S. is not going to leave NATO and nobody is going to get kicked out, but
we need a new NATO policy, and Trump did say something even more important, he
said: “What is the mission of NATO today?” - this has been debated in the U.S.
since the end of the Soviet Union almost 25 years ago. The only mission that
NATO seems to have today is moving its power to Russia’s borders, which is a
terrible idea, and pretending that’s the United Nations, when the U.S. cannot
get United Nation’s backing for attacking another country, like Iraq or Libya
or something like that, and they say “okay, we’ll do it with you”. This is
usually just a few NATO partners. Trump has said that we need to decide what is
NATO’s mission - for example, he said NATO doesn’t fight terrorism, and that
was true at the time. So, if his Presidency leads to a debate in this country,
and we have almost no debate about these issues - a debate about NATO’s role, I
think that would be a good thing. Debate is good, re-thinking is better.
SS:You know, the way you
rephrase his statements, they sound so logical and amazing, I think you should
consider running for Presidency in 4 years time. I’ll back you, Stephen. Thanks
a lot for this interview. It’s a great pleasure to talk to you, as usual. We’ve
been talking to Stephen Cohen, Princeton University professor emeritus, author
and contributing editor at“The Nation” magazine. We were talking about
Donald Trump’s victory in 2016 Presidential Race, and the new President is
going to bring to America and the world. That’s it for this edition of
SophieCo, I will see you next time.
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