Trump’s
Security Strategy Focuses on Profit, Not Spreading Democracy
President
Trump’s new National Security Strategy describes a country that is focused on
doing business and reducing migration while avoiding passing judgment on
authoritarians.
Anton
Troianovski
By Anton
Troianovski
Reporting
from Washington
https://www.nytimes.com/2025/12/05/us/politics/trump-national-security-strategy.html
Dec. 5,
2025
Latin
American countries must grant no-bid contracts to U.S. companies. Taiwan’s
significance boils down to semiconductors and shipping lanes. Washington’s
“hectoring” of the wealthy Gulf monarchies needs to stop.
The world
as seen from the White House is a place where America can use its vast powers
to make money.
President
Trump has shown all year that his second term would make it a priority to
squeeze less powerful countries to benefit American companies. But late
Thursday, his administration made that profit-driven approach a core element of
its official foreign policy, publishing its long-anticipated update to U.S.
national security aims around the world.
The
document, known as the National Security Strategy, describes a world in which
American interests are far narrower than how prior administrations — even in
Mr. Trump’s first term — had portrayed them. Gone is the long-familiar picture
of the United States as a global force for freedom, replaced by a country that
is focused on reducing migration while avoiding passing judgment on
authoritarians, instead seeing them as sources of cash.
“We seek
good relations and peaceful commercial relations with the nations of the
world,” it says, “without imposing on them democratic or other social change
that differs widely from their traditions and histories.”
The
National Security Strategy of Mr. Trump’s first term, by contrast, cast the
world as a contest “between those who favor repressive systems and those who
favor free societies.”
The
National Security Strategy has no binding force, and some analysts cautioned
against reading too much into it as a guide to future actions given Mr. Trump’s
mercurial nature.
But the
release of the strategy, which recent presidents have generally updated just
once in every term, did carry significance as a snapshot in time. Amid the
debates swirling among Republicans over American policy toward the Middle East,
Russia, China and elsewhere, the document showed how the administration has
appeared to coalesce around a commitment to avoid military entanglements and
promote commerce.
In an
interview, Dan Caldwell, a former senior adviser to Defense Secretary Pete
Hegseth who argues in favor of American military restraint, hailed the new
strategy as a “true break from the failed bipartisan post-Cold War foreign
policy consensus.”
“For too
long, delusion undergirded our foreign policy — delusion about America’s role
in the world, delusion about our interests and delusion about what we can
achieve through military force,” Mr. Caldwell said. “This is a reality-based
document in that regard.”
The
document codifies Mr. Trump’s well-established aversion to Europe’s liberal
governments and his readiness to overlook human rights abuses, as with his
“things happen” remark last month about the murder and dismemberment of a Saudi
Washington Post columnist in 2018. Representative Gregory W. Meeks of New York,
the top Democrat on the House Foreign Affairs Committee, said it “discards
decades of values-based U.S. leadership in favor of a craven, unprincipled
worldview.”
The
strategy depicts Europe as facing “civilizational erasure” at the hands of
immigrants and its mainstream leaders. It says the United States will cultivate
“resistance” to Europe’s mainstream leaders, and asserts that many of their
governments “trample on basic principles of democracy to suppress opposition.”
That
stance provoked an outcry from European politicians, echoing the shock when
Vice President JD Vance castigated German officials in February for trying to
blunt the rise of the country’s far-right party. Carl Bildt, a former Swedish
prime minister, posted on social media that the National Security Strategy
“places itself to the right of the extreme right in Europe.”
Outside
Europe, departing from decades of precedent in U.S. foreign policy, the 33-page
document does not characterize democracy as a value to be defended. Israel and
Taiwan — two democracies whose security the United States has long sought to
support — are described in the context of their regions’ economic significance,
not their connection to American values.
The
Middle East, it says, is “a source and destination of international
investment.” The document calls for “dropping America’s misguided experiment
with hectoring these nations — especially the Gulf monarchies — into abandoning
their traditions and historic forms of government.”
In Latin
America, the document says, the United States will “reassert and enforce the
Monroe Doctrine to restore American pre-eminence in the Western Hemisphere.”
Along the way, American diplomats are to hunt for “major business opportunities
in their country, especially major government contracts.”
“The
terms of our agreements, especially with those countries that depend on us most
and therefore over which we have the most leverage, must be sole-source
contracts for our companies,” the document says.
The
strategy offers little insight into the Trump administration’s deliberations
about a possible attack on Venezuela. While it says the United States should
have a “predisposition to non-interventionism,” it also says that American
military force is to be redeployed to Latin America from elsewhere “to address
urgent threats in our hemisphere.”
Mr.
Caldwell, the former adviser to Mr. Hegseth, said that many in Mr. Trump’s
“America First” movement “have concerns about a regime change war in
Venezuela.”
“But that
said, what happens in Venezuela and our own hemisphere deserves more focus than
who controls the Donbas,” he added, referring to the region of eastern Ukraine
that Russia is demanding in peace talks.
The
National Security Strategy takes a far more restrained view of geopolitical
competition than prior administrations did. Gone is any reference to the
worldview laid out in Mr. Trump’s 2017 National Security Strategy: “China and
Russia want to shape a world antithetical to U.S. values and interests.”
Without
describing Russia as an adversary, the new document says that “an expeditious
cessation of hostilities in Ukraine” is a “core interest of the United States.”
The goal of such a peace deal, it says, would be both to “re-establish
strategic stability with Russia” and to enable Ukraine’s “survival as a viable
state.”
China is
cast as a competitor, but mainly in the familiar commercial terms often
repeated by Mr. Trump. The document says a war over Taiwan needs to be deterred
because of what would be its “major implications for the U.S. economy.” It
calls for “a genuinely mutually advantageous economic relationship with
Beijing,” echoing the conciliation of the trade truce that Mr. Trump and Xi
Jinping, the Chinese leader, announced in October.
Jonathan
Czin, a director for China on the National Security Council under President
Joseph R. Biden Jr., said the new strategy carried “a happier message for
Beijing” than the versions published under Mr. Biden or in Mr. Trump’s first
term. Among other things, he said, the document’s focus on Latin America should
be welcome news for China.
“I think
it would be viewed with some relief,” said Mr. Czin, now a fellow at the
Brookings Institution.
Megan
Mineiro contributed reporting from Washington.
Anton
Troianovski writes about American foreign policy and national security for The
Times from Washington. He was previously a foreign correspondent based in
Moscow and Berlin.


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