Trump Uses Military Leaders and Close Associates for Major Global Talks
See how Donald Trump is using personal friends and military leaders, not diplomats, for major global talks on Iran and Ukraine. Who is affected?
#TrumpDiplomacy, #GlobalTalks, #MilitaryInDiplomacy, #IranNuclearDeal, #UkrainePeace
https://newsletter.tf/how-trump-uses-friends-and-generals-for-global-talks/
US is now using personal friends and military leaders for global talks, a big change from using trained diplomats.
#TrumpDiplomacy, #GlobalTalks, #MilitaryInDiplomacy, #IranNuclearDeal, #UkrainePeace
https://newsletter.tf/how-trump-uses-friends-and-generals-for-global-talks/
Trump says he had a 'positive' chat with Canadaâs PM after threatening to close their bridgeâproving once again his favorite form of diplomacy is hostage negotiation, whether itâs infrastructure, voter data, or just the definition of bipartisanship.
What's your take? đŹ
https://polititoons.com/?utm_source=mastodon&utm_medium=social&utm_campaign=polititoons_organic
#politics #satire #humor #politicalhumor #TrumpDiplomacy #BridgeNegotiation #DementiaJusticeTumbles
Trumpâs Landmark Asia Tour: Deals, Diplomacy, and a Reset with China
Trumpâs 2025 Asia Tour: Peace Deals, Trade Wins & Xi Summit in Malaysia, Japan, Korea
đđđ âŹ1/month â New Subscribers Only! Black Friday Halloween Deal ends Nov 7, 23:59 UTC.Subscribe đđđ
President Donald J. Trumpâs first major foreign excursion of his second term unfolded like a high-stakes poker game played on the worldâs most dynamic stage: Asia. Departing Washington on October 24, 2025, amid a lingering government shutdown and escalating trade frictions, Trump touched down in Kuala Lumpur, Malaysia, on October 26, launching a five-day odyssey through the heart of the Indo-Pacific. What followed was a masterclass in his signature dealmakingâblending bombastic showmanship with substantive negotiationsâthat yielded peace accords, tariff reductions, and a fragile framework for dĂ©tente with China. This tour wasnât just about photo ops and handshakes; it was a calculated bid to reassert American economic dominance, counter Beijingâs influence, and lock in commitments from allies wary of Washingtonâs unpredictability. As Air Force One sliced through Pacific skies, the region watched with a mix of hope, skepticism, and outright apprehension, knowing that Trumpâs whims could upend supply chains and alliances overnight.
The journey began in the sweltering humidity of Kuala Lumpur, host to the ASEAN summit, where Trump positioned himself as the indispensable broker in Southeast Asiaâs fractious neighborhood. Malaysia, with its bustling ports and strategic perch along vital sea lanes, served as the perfect opening act. Trump wasted no time, presiding over the signing of the Kuala Lumpur Peace Accords on his first full dayâa diplomatic coup that ended a simmering border dispute between Thailand and Cambodia. Clashes in July had claimed dozens of lives and displaced over 300,000 people, turning a long-festering territorial spat into a humanitarian flashpoint. Trump, ever the showman, took full credit, declaring in a packed summit hall that his administrationâs âunmatched leverageâ had forced the rivals to the table. âWeâre saving millions of lives here, folksâpeace through strength, thatâs the Trump way,â he boomed to a chorus of polite applause from ASEAN leaders. The accords, mediated in part by Malaysian officials but amplified by U.S. pressure, included demilitarized zones and joint economic development pacts along the disputed frontier. For Trump, it was a feather in his cap, echoing his brokered Abraham Accords in the Middle East and burnishing his image as a global peacemaker ahead of midterm elections.
But peace was merely the appetizer; trade was the main course. Southeast Asia, a $312 billion U.S. trade deficit headache for Trump, became ground zero for his reciprocal tariff crusade. Since July, heâd slapped 10-40% duties on imports from the region, prompting howls of protest from Hanoi to Jakarta. In Kuala Lumpur, Trump flipped the script, inking bilateral deals with Malaysia and Cambodia that slashed tariffs on American exports like soybeans, aircraft parts, and machinery. These pacts eliminated non-tariff barriersâthose sneaky regulations that had long hamstrung U.S. farmers and manufacturersâand opened floodgates for preferential access to Southeast Asian markets. âAmericaâs been ripped off for decades; not anymore,â Trump told reporters, flanked by beaming Malaysian Prime Minister Anwar Ibrahim. A memorandum with Thailand sweetened the pot, promising U.S. investments in critical minerals like lithium and cobalt, essential for electric vehicles and defense tech. These werenât just paper promises; they represented billions in diversified supply chains, weaning the U.S. off Chinese dominance in rare earths and bolstering national security.
Geopolitically, the Malaysia stop was a subtle jab at China. Trump met sidelined with Brazilian President Luiz InĂĄcio Lula da Silva, discussing Amazon conservation and biofuels, but the real subtext was encircling Beijing. ASEAN nations, caught in the U.S.-China crossfire, sought reassurances that Trumpâs âAmerica Firstâ wouldnât leave them high and dry. Vietnam and Thailand, in particular, inched closer to finalized deals from Trumpâs summer blitz, though details on Indonesia and the Philippines remained murkyâearlier White House fanfare had overstated progress, leading to quiet diplomatic footwork. Regional leaders, from Indonesiaâs Prabowo Subianto to the Philippinesâ Ferdinand Marcos Jr., attended the summit, voicing concerns over tariff volatility but praising Trumpâs decisiveness. âThe U.S. is back as a reliable partner,â Anwar Ibrahim said post-signing, though off-record whispers hinted at hedging bets with Beijingâs Belt and Road largesse.
As the sun set on Kuala Lumpur, Trump jetted to Tokyo, where cherry blossoms had long faded but economic tensions bloomed anew. Japan, Americaâs staunchest Asian ally, greeted him with imperial pompâa courtesy call on Emperor Naruhito at the Imperial Palace, followed by a sumptuous state dinner. But beneath the pageantry lay hardball negotiations with Japanâs new Prime Minister, Sanae Takaichi, the countryâs first female leader and a hawkish conservative who shared Trumpâs disdain for Chinaâs assertiveness. Their bilateral huddle at the prime ministerâs residence zeroed in on a July trade accord that had capped Japanese export tariffs at 15% in exchange for a staggering $550 billion investment pledge into the U.S. economy. Trump pressed for specifics: factories in the Rust Belt, tech transfers for semiconductors, and boosted purchases of American LNG to fuel Japanâs energy pivot from Russian gas.
Takaichi, navigating a fragile coalition, conceded ground. She committed to accelerating defense spending to 2% of GDP by spring 2026âmonths ahead of scheduleâto fund joint U.S.-Japan missile defenses against North Korean threats. âOur alliance is ironclad,â she affirmed in a joint presser, though Trump couldnât resist a dig: âJapan makes great cars, but theyâre killing our auto workersâuntil now.â The deal included tariff cuts on U.S. beef and pork, vital for Midwestern farmers battered by Chinese retaliations. Geopolitically, the talks veered to Taiwan and the South China Sea, with Trump floating âpeace through strengthâ incentives for Tokyo to host more U.S. troops. Takaichi nodded vigorously, but analysts noted Japanâs quiet diversification: billions funneled into ASEAN infrastructure to counter Chinaâs sway, a hedge against Trumpâs tariff tweets.
Trumpâs Tokyo whirlwind also touched on North Korea, though a Kim Jong-un summit remained a pipe dream. Past Trump-Kim bromances in Singapore and Hanoi had fizzled without denuclearization, and recent Pyongyang missile barragesâcoupled with troop deployments to Ukraineâhad soured the mood. âKimâs watching; heâll come around,â Trump quipped to reporters en route to Seoul, but intelligence briefings painted a grimmer picture: deeper North Korean ties to Moscow and Beijing, complicating sanctions enforcement.
The tour crescendoed in Gyeongju, South Korea, at the APEC summitâa glittering affair amid ancient Buddhist temples that masked modern anxieties. Host President Lee Jae-myung, a progressive navigating U.S. demands, rolled out the red carpet, but undercurrents of friction simmered. A recent ICE raid in Georgia had nabbed 300 South Korean nationals at a battery plant, straining ties and fueling domestic backlash in Seoul. Lee sought tariff relief on autosâfrom 25% down to 15%âto salvage his export-driven economy, while reaffirming a $350 billion U.S. investment package from July. Trump, sipping soju at a state banquet, obliged with a handshake deal, but not without extracting concessions: expanded U.S. base access and joint exercises to deter China and North Korea.
The real marquee event, however, was Trumpâs October 30 sit-down with Chinese President Xi Jinpingâtheir first face-to-face since Trumpâs return to the White House. Held on the summitâs fringes, the marathon session stretched four hours, delving into the trade war that had ravaged global markets. Trump entered bullish, touting his Southeast Asian wins as proof of U.S. leverage, while Xi, stoic in a dark suit, wielded Chinaâs rare earth monopoly like a velvet-gloved fist. The outcome: a framework agreement to pause escalation, with Beijing committing to ramp up U.S. soybean buys (easing farm belt woes), curb fentanyl precursor exports, and ease rare earth restrictions. In return, Trump deferred 100% tariffs on Chinese goods set for November, pending full ratification. TikTokâs fate hung in the balance too: ByteDance capped at 20% ownership in a U.S. entity, averting a ban but satisfying Trumpâs national security hawks.
Geopolitics loomed large. Trump pressed Xi on Russian sanctions, demanding cuts to Moscowâs oil importsâa nod to Ukraineâs plightâwhile Xi parried with calls for tech export leniency. Taiwan flickered in the shadows: Trump reiterated the âone Chinaâ policy but warned of âfire and furyâ if Beijing crossed the strait. Observers called it a tactical truce, not a thaw; U.S. industries hailed short-term relief, but economists fretted over enforcement. âDealmaking at its finestâChinaâs paying up,â Trump tweeted post-meeting, attaching a photo of the two leaders toasting with baijiu.
As Trump boarded Air Force One for the long haul home on October 30, reflections poured in. Allies like Japan and South Korea breathed easier with investment-locked pacts, but Southeast Asiaâs optimism tempered by tariff scars. Chinaâs framework buy-in signaled pragmatism, yet Xiâs domestic pressuresâeconomic slowdowns and youth unrestâmeant fragility. Trumpâs tour, clocking 20,000 miles and countless handshakes, netted tangible wins: $900 billion in combined pledges, resolved conflicts, and a tariff breather averting recession risks. Critics decried the showmanshipâa viral clip of Trump âkneelingâ in mock fealty to Takaichi drew memesâbut supporters saw vindication of his disruptive style.
In the broader canvas, this voyage underscored Asiaâs pivot: nations balancing U.S. muscle with Chinese gravity, supply chains rerouting from Shenzhen to Subic Bay. Trumpâs âAmerica Firstâ roared back, but sustainability hinged on follow-throughâratifying deals, stabilizing alliances, and taming tweet storms. As the sun rose over the Pacific, one thing crystallized: in Trumpâs world, diplomacy isnât diplomacy; itâs a deal, sealed with a flourish.
References:
đ Share your thoughts in the comments, and explore more insights on our Journal and Magazine. Please consider becoming a subscriber, thank you: https://dunapress.org/subscriptions â Follow J&M Duna Press on social media. Join the Oslo Meet by connecting experiences and uniting solutions: https://oslomeet.org
#AsiaTrade #TradeDeals #TrumpDiplomacy #TrumpAsiaTour #USChinaRelations