The Trump administration’s National Security Strategy of the United States of America, published last week, presents itself as a decisive break from the bipartisan foreign policy consensus that has shaped Washington’s posture since the end of the Cold War. In some respects, it is exactly that. The document repeatedly denounces the “laundry lists of wishes” and vague universalism of earlier strategies and takes aim at what it calls the “fundamentally undesirable and impossible goal” of permanent American global dominance. It argues instead for a narrower, interest-driven agenda grounded in...
















