Washington – U.S. Foreign Policy Veteran Warns Trump Would Make World Less Stable

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    FILE - Former US Secretary of State James Baker speaks during the Act of State held for late German foreign minister Hans-Dietrich Genscher in the former plenary hall of the German parliament in Bonn, Germany, 17 April 2016. EPAWashington – Former Secretary of State James Baker told a U.S. Senate hearing that Donald Trump’s foreign policy proposals would make the world a less stable place on Thursday, just as the Republican presidential candidate met with party congressional leaders.

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    Under questioning from Republican Senator Marco Rubio, a former Trump rival in the presidential race, Baker said the world “would be far less stable” with a weaker NATO or if more countries had nuclear weapons as has been proposed by Trump.

    “We’ve a got a lot of problems today, but we’d have a hell of a lot more if that were the case,” Baker told a Senate Foreign Relations Committee hearing, adding that U.S. commitments around the world “promote U.S. security.”

    The hearing, on “America’s Role in the World,” was called by the committee’s Republican chairman, Senator Bob Corker. Corker praised a foreign policy speech Trump gave in Washington last month. Some U.S. allies worried after Trump’s remarks that his invocation of an “America first” agenda is a threat to retreat from the world.

    Without naming Trump, Rubio referred to the businessman-turned-candidate’s suggestions that the United States should rethink the North Atlantic Treaty Organization (NATO) and that Japan and South Korea should consider getting nuclear weapons to defend themselves.

    “Some have suggested ‘why don’t you just let Japan and South Korea get their own nuclear weapons and let them defend themselves?'” Rubio asked.

    “The more countries that acquire nuclear weapons, the more instability there is going to be in the world, in my opinion,” Baker said.

    Tom Donilon, Democratic President Barack Obama’s former National Security Adviser, called Rubio’s question an “important thought experiment,” as he backed Baker’s comments about the importance of NATO.

    “It’s not just a thought experiment, it’s actually been proposed,” Rubio said.

    As the hearing took place, Trump was on Capitol Hill meeting with Republican congressional leaders on how to heal divisions within the party, including those between establishment figures like Baker and the insurgent candidate.

    Baker, a Republican who was Secretary of State under President George Bush and Treasury Secretary under President Ronald Reagan, testified alongside Donilon.

    Former Presidents Bush and George W. Bush do not plan to endorse Trump, or any candidate, in this year’s White House race.


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    3 Comments
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    7 years ago

    Yeah James baker y’s the virulent anti Semite….as if his word should be trusted.

    cyrano
    cyrano
    7 years ago

    Consider the source. According to John Loftus’s monumental tome, “The Secret War Against the Jews”, James Baker is quoted as saying, “”**** the Jews. they don’t vote for us anyway.”.

    It seems to me that James Baker is “far less stable”, than a world with a weaker NATO.

    Liepa
    Liepa
    7 years ago

    I don’t subscribe to James Baker and his ilk, so whatever he says holds no sway!