While Biden attempts to lock in policy priorities with partners, Mar-a-Lago is becoming a magnet for foreign leaders eager to win Trump’s good graces.
The State Department has been shut out of Donald Trump's calls with world leaders, raising concerns about confusion over U.S. foreign policy.
Republican President-elect Donald Trump says he plans to fundamentally alter the U.S. relationship with NATO during his second four-year term and rapidly bring the war in Ukraine to a close. On the campaign trail,
Former diplomat and Obama White House staffer Brett Bruen told USA Today: “We’re entering a dangerous territory of telephone games, where Trump is going to have private chats with foreign leaders, and they’re going to tell their teams one thing, and Trump is going to tell our national security team another.”
President-elect Donald Trump railed against President Joe Biden's foreign policy, but as he enters the White House, Trump may end up agreeing more than he thinks. The New York Times outlined some of the ways that Trump has claimed he and Biden differ,
U.S. President-elect, Donald Trump has filled out his list for core cabinet positions, including key names that will help push forward his vision for U.S. Click to read.
What will foreign policy be like under the next presidential administration as a result of the 2024 elections?
The U.S. can use its oil and gas capabilities as carrot and stick, Carolyn Kissane writes in a guest commentary.
Aaron David Miller is a senior fellow at the Carnegie Endowment for International Peace and a former U.S. State Department Middle East analyst and negotiator in Republican and Democratic administrations. He is the author of The End of Greatness: Why America Can’t Have (and Doesn’t Want) Another Great President. X: @aarondmiller2
Wednesday on the RealClearPolitics radio show -- weeknights at 6:00 p.m. on SiriusXM's POTUS Channel 124 and then on Apple, Spotify, and here on our website -- Andrew Walworth, Carl Cannon, and Tom Bevan discuss the history of Thanksgiving in America and what we're thankful for following the 2024 election.
The problem isn't that Donald Trump is talking to foreign leaders. The problem is that he's having private chats without coordinating with the State Department.
Joe Biden stepped foot Monday on sub-Saharan African soil for the first time as president, but U.S. foreign policy increasingly runs through Donald Trump’s Mar-a-Lago estate as world leaders brace for the return of his combative isolationist approach.