National Review Online
Saturday, November 12, 2016
And just like that Donald Trump needs to govern. The
outsider who shocked the world with his upsets in the primaries and the general
election will have to arrive in Washington and take control of a vast and often
hostile bureaucracy. With allies nervous and a challenge from adversaries
abroad likely to materialize quickly, the choice of secretary of state is his
most important appointment.
Naturally, names have already been mentioned in the press
as possibilities, and none is better suited to the job than former U.N.
ambassador John Bolton.
First, the other possibilities: Newt Gingrich is a
brilliant thinker and glib talker who would always be one slip of the tongue
away from creating an international crisis; Senator Bob Corker of Tennessee was
last seen facilitating President Obama’s Iran-deal path through Congress, in
one of the prime exhibits of GOP fecklessness in recent years; Rudy Giuliani
has done yeoman’s work for Trump, but doesn’t have extensive foreign policy
experience, to put it mildly.
Bolton has the advantage of being an experienced,
straight-talking yet nuanced foreign-policy hand, who also fits the Trump
sensibility on national security. Bolton is an American internationalist who believes in the importance of
American power. He is a hard-headed
realist whose focus is always the national interest. He negotiated the creation
of the Proliferation Security Initiative, for instance, a global effort to
counter illicit trafficking in weapons and materials of mass destruction. It
was, and is, a diplomatic rarity—“an activity, not an organization,” as one
U.K. diplomat put it. United Nations, take note.
Bolton has been around the block—starting his career as a
protégé of James A. Baker III—but has never become an establishmentarian or
lost his edge. He would understand that he is the president’s emissary to the
State Department, not the other way around, and avoid getting captured by Foggy
Bottom’s bureaucrats the way, say, a Colin Powell did, or others with less
experience likely would.
He is a scourge of international institutions and
treaties that threaten our interests or sovereignty. In the George W. Bush
administration, he removed America’s signature from the treaty creating the
International Criminal Court, and negotiated over 100 bilateral agreements to
prevent Americans from being delivered into the ICC’s custody. And he
negotiated America’s withdrawal from the 1972 ABM Treaty so President Bush
could launch a national missile-defense program to protect America from the
likes of rogue states such as Iran and North Korea.
He believes that diplomacy and negotiations should be
directed not to reach agreement at any price, but to advance American
interests. It is his view, correctly, that the process of negotiation is not,
as too many in the State Department see it, an end in itself but simply a means
to achieve larger objectives, and always from a position of American strength.
On top of all this, Bolton, who endorsed Trump soon after
he clinched the Republican nomination in the spring, is respected by all
factions of the party. (He is a long-time friend of this magazine and serves on
the board of the National Review Institute.)
In short, John Bolton is an ideal pick, and his
appointment would be a sign that the Trump administration intends to get off to
a strong start.
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