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Johan's avatar

What you’re describing is exactly what happens when a country abandons its own strategic architecture.

The National Security Strategy is supposed to be the anchor document for every agency in foreign policy. It’s the Bible. It tells the entire system how to align power, diplomacy, and resources. When that document becomes incoherent, performative and openly self‑destructive, the rest of the system collapses with it.

And we’re watching that collapse in real time. Nearly 30 career diplomats and ambassadors are being recalled from posts around the world. That isn’t a routine rotation. It’s a purge of institutional memory at the exact moment the United States needs more diplomatic presence, not less.

Meanwhile, China has deployed roughly three times as many ambassadors globally, building influence while the U.S. hollows out its own corps. It’s hard to project strength when you’re not even showing up.

This is America unrepresented, America uncoordinated, America strategically absent.

A national security strategy that once guided the entire foreign policy apparatus has been reduced to a self‑destruction note. And the world can see it.

—Johan

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Jack Jordan's avatar

David, thank you for your efforts to highlight how Trump's "course of action" will "gravely damage the US," as will all "Trump’s assaults on the nation he was elected to lead." But much of the fault lies with "the nation" and the way we assume presidents are "elected to lead."

The president isn't elected to lead the nation. Our Constitution (prescribing the president's oath), and the president's own words when he is inaugurated expressly emphasize that he is elected not to lead, but to serve. Article II emphasizes that "Before" the President may even begin "the Execution of his Office, he" must "take the following Oath or Affirmation:– I do solemnly swear (or affirm) that I will faithfully execute the Office of President of the United States, and will to the best of my Ability, preserve, protect and defend the Constitution of the United States."

Our Constitution begins by emphasizing that "We the People" did "ordain and establish [our] Constitution" to "secure the Blessings of Liberty to ourselves." Article VI emphasized that We the People established "the supreme Law of the Land" and the foremost and constant duty of all our public servants (including all legislators and "all executive and judicial Officers, both of the United States and of [all] States") is "to support [our] Constitution."

The constant, overarching duty of the President is to "preserve, protect and defend [our] Constitution." It is not merely to lead us where he wants.

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