Canadian Prime Minister Justin Trudeau was asked by a reporter yesterday to comment on Donald Trump’s threat to use military force against American protesters. Trudeau, who’s taken great care to avoid direct public criticisms of his U.S. counterpart, paused and stood silently for 21 seconds.
“We all watch in horror and consternation at what is going on in the United States,” the prime minister eventually said, after lengthy consideration.
I long ago lost count of how many times Donald Trump, pointing to evidence that exists only in his imagination, boasted to his followers that the United States is finally “respected again” around the globe. As we’ve discussed, the Republican has convinced himself that we were an international laughingstock before he took office, but thanks to his awesomeness, the world once again reveres and celebrates our country.
Long before 2020, international surveys pointed in the opposite direction. In many countries, including longtime U.S. allies, global support for the American president collapsed after Obama left office, and opposition to Trump has soured our reputation overall.
But this year has changed the nature of the United States’ standing in ways that would’ve been difficult to even imagine in the recent past.
The New York Times reported in April that many are looking at “the richest and most powerful nation in the world with disbelief” as the United States struggled with the coronavirus crisis. The report added that the pandemic is “perhaps the first global crisis in more than a century where no one is even looking for Washington to lead.”
When Trump broached the subject of disinfectant injections, he became an immediate global punch-line to a disheartening joke.
And with social unrest unfolding in so many American communities, the nation’s Trump-era international standing appears to have gone from bad to worse. The New York Times reported today:
With American cities burning and the coronavirus still raging, killing more people than in any other country, President Trump also has growing problems overseas. He has never before been so isolated and ignored, even mocked. In Europe, after years of snubs and American unilateralism, America’s traditional allies have stopped looking to him for leadership, no longer trust that this president will offer them much, and are turning their backs on him.
NBC News had a related report today, which quoted Ziya Meral, a senior associate fellow at the Royal United Services Institute, a London-based think tank. “With all of its shortcomings, the U.S. has stood for many ideals we dearly share,” he said. “Now we are witnessing an America spiraling down into chaos, poor governance, social friction, poor policing and poor leadership.”
He added, “The city on a hill no longer inspires or shines.”








