To the content

The weakest president since 1776: Donald Trump capitulates. Iran wins.

From Markus Somm

Anyone familiar with “Roger vs. Markus”—the weekly debate show I host with Roger Schawinski on Radio 1—knows that I’ve been saying for years that I think 82 percent of U.S. President Donald Trump’s policies are good in substance.

What Trump signed this week at the Palace of Versailles is one of the most embarrassing acts of surrender America has ever signed.

I actually think the end of the Vietnam War was less terrible—even though it was devastating—and even though the North Vietnamese communists, shortly afterward, failed to honor virtually any of the promises they had made in writing and through underhanded means. America threw South Vietnam to the wolves. Still, it was at least a withdrawal after waging war for eight years and losing some 58,000 soldiers in the process.

In a rush, frantically—if not desperately—he signed an agreement late at night, the imminent completion of which he had announced about 40 times over the past few weeks. That’s how the most powerful man in the world can, of course, make himself look like the weakest monkey on the planet.

No further details are known.

For once—considering Trump’s usual statements—this is a bit of an exaggeration. Note the irony.

“The Art of the Deal”? What the self-proclaimed chief negotiator of world history has conceded to one of the most brutal and illegitimate regimes of our time leaves one speechless—provided one takes the trouble to wade through the obsequious language of the treaty: Iran hardly has to make any concessions—essentially, these consist of ending the unlawful blockade of the Strait of Hormuz—

The devil is being paid for having really heated up hell.

Whether Iran will back down—at least on the issue of its nuclear program—in the next 60 days, as agreed, remains to be seen, but in Trump’s universe, Iran remains a potential nuclear power—and lately, he doesn’t seem to care.

Just a few weeks ago, Trump defiantly insisted that Iran must never, ever be allowed to possess a nuclear bomb.

Speechless: Israeli columnist Amit Segal, whom I have cited on numerous occasions, compares this “deal” to the end of World War II:

Donald Trump set out to make history. He’s likely to succeed. Unless he’s careful, he’ll go down in the history books as the weakest president since 1776.

The left has hated him for a long time; the right has just begun to despise him. I’m one of them.

Or, as Benjamin Franklin, one of America’s great Founding Fathers, put it: “It takes many good deeds to build a good reputation, and only one bad one to lose it.”

___________________________

Markus Somm is the editor of Nebelspalter.ch, where this commentary was published.

Have you discovered an error?

Report error

0/2000 Sign