Over the course of a NATO summit that spanned just two days, Donald Trump managed to offend and frighten many key allies of the United States, leaving foreign leaders convinced that he’s not a “very stable genius,” his latest claims to the contrary notwithstanding.
After the American president departed Brussels — in order to create new international incidents in the U.K. — it fell to others to help clean up Trump’s latest mess. NBC News reported this morning:
Hours after President Donald Trump departed NATO headquarters Thursday, U.S. military leaders embarked on a full-scale “damage control” operation with calls to their counterparts across Europe to reassure them that America will abide by its defense commitments in the region.
The outreach, directed by the Pentagon leadership, came after Trump threatened to reassess those commitments during a gathering with NATO allies in Brussels, according to multiple current and former diplomatic and military officials familiar with the calls.
The overall message from senior military officials in a series of phone calls to members of the North Atlantic Treaty Organization has been that U.S. military bases in their countries will remain open and American troop levels in the region will not be reduced.
In other words, the message from U.S. officials to our international partners is effectively, “Don’t pay too much attention to what the Leader of the Free World has to say.”
It’s remarkable that such “damage control” is necessary — ideally, an American president should be able to attend a NATO summit and earn the respect of his or her counterparts — but what’s especially depressing about reports like these is often we’re confronted with circumstances in which U.S. officials urge international colleagues to ignore Trump.
Remember this Washington Post report from February?









