
The Foreign Affairs Interview The Fear and Weakness at the Heart of Trump’s Strategy
23 snips
Dec 11, 2025 Kori Schake, a senior fellow and defense policy expert, critiques Trump's National Security Strategy, calling it a mix of solipsism and fear. She highlights its failures in assessing global allies and rivals, accusing it of undermining U.S. power while focusing too much on cultural politics. Schake explains how the administration’s actions, like controversial military strikes, demonstrate a misunderstanding of American power dynamics. She warns that politicizing the military risks damaging public trust and professional norms.
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Start Strategy With Environmental Assessment
- A strategy must start with an accurate assessment of the environment before connecting ends and means.
- Kori Schake says skipping that step yields plans that stipulate goals without showing how to achieve them.
Allies' Voluntary Assistance Is Earned
- The Trump NSS assumes the U.S. can be a bad ally yet still get voluntary help from others.
- Schake argues that voluntary assistance arises from how the U.S. exercises power, not coercion or unilateralism.
Allies Are Hedging Against U.S. Unpredictability
- Allies are hedging against U.S. unreliability in trade, defense, and intelligence.
- Schake cites Japan, South Korea, Europe, Britain, and the Netherlands as concrete examples of that hedging.



