Among Senate Republicans, it’s probably fair to say no two members are more dissimilar on foreign policy than Sens. Lindsey Graham (R-S.C.) and Rand Paul (R-Ky.). The South Carolinian is a hawk who’s long demonstrated an eagerness to exercise the United States’ military might, while the Kentuckian is a libertarian who envisions a drastically reduced military presence abroad.
One would ordinarily expect a president, especially a Republican president, to side with one of these GOP lawmakers. Donald Trump, however, seems to vacillate between them, depending on the day.
I’m reminded of fictional characters, presented as having an angel on one shoulder and a demon on the other, each whispering in the protagonist’s ear — except in this case, it’s an amateur president, who has no consistent foreign policy vision of his own, and who apparently sees value in two opposing visions.
When Trump first announced a precipitous withdrawal of U.S. forces from Syria, no Republican was happier than Rand Paul, just as no Republican was as dissatisfied as Lindsey Graham. The president proudly tweeted praise from the Kentuckian, while condemning the South Carolinian’s motives.
Two weeks later, the president seemed to flip, abandoning his plan for a precipitous withdrawal. After a meeting with Trump, a relieved Graham told reporters that when it came to U.S. troops in Syria, the president agreed to a “pause situation.”
Nine days later, the “pause” apparently ended and U.S. troops started to withdraw. As Politico noted, now it’s Rand Paul who’s as pleased as Lindsey Graham was.









