Opinion
Guest Essay
Hillary
Clinton: How Much Dumber Will This Get?
March 28,
2025
By Hillary
Clinton
https://www.nytimes.com/2025/03/28/opinion/trump-hegseth-signal-chat.html
Mrs. Clinton
is a former secretary of state and United States senator and was the Democratic
nominee for president in 2016.
It’s not the
hypocrisy that bothers me; it’s the stupidity. We’re all shocked — shocked! —
that President Trump and his team don’t actually care about protecting
classified information or federal record retention laws. But we knew that
already. What’s much worse is that top Trump administration officials put our
troops in jeopardy by sharing military plans on a commercial messaging app and
unwittingly invited a journalist into the chat. That’s dangerous. And it’s just
dumb.
This is the
latest in a string of self-inflicted wounds by the new administration that are
squandering America’s strength and threatening our national security. Firing
hundreds of federal workers charged with protecting our nation’s nuclear
weapons is also dumb. So is shutting down efforts to fight pandemics just as a
deadly Ebola outbreak is spreading in Africa. It makes no sense to purge
talented generals, diplomats and spies at a time when rivals like China and
Russia are trying to expand their global reach.
In a
dangerous and complex world, it’s not enough to be strong. You must also be
smart. As secretary of state during the Obama administration, I argued for
smart power, integrating the hard power of our military with the soft power of
our diplomacy, development assistance, economic might and cultural influence.
None of those tools can do the job alone. Together, they make America a
superpower. The Trump approach is dumb power. Instead of a strong America using
all our strengths to lead the world and confront our adversaries, Mr. Trump’s
America will be increasingly blind and blundering, feeble and friendless.
Let’s start
with the military, because that’s what he claims to care about. Don’t let the
swagger fool you. Mr. Trump and Secretary of Defense Pete Hegseth (of group
chat fame) are apparently more focused on performative fights over wokeness
than preparing for real fights with America’s adversaries. Does anyone really
think deleting tributes to the Tuskegee Airmen makes us more safe? The Trump
Pentagon purged images of the plane that dropped the atomic bomb that ended
World War II because its name is the Enola Gay. Dumb.
Instead of
working with Congress to modernize the military’s budget to reflect changing
threats, the president is firing top generals without credible justification.
Five former secretaries of defense, Republicans and Democrats, rightly warned
that this would “undermine our all-volunteer force and weaken our national
security.” Mass layoffs are also hitting the intelligence agencies. As one
former senior spy put it, “We’re shooting ourselves in the head, not the foot.”
Not smart.
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If they’re
this reckless with America’s hard power, it’s no surprise that they’re
shredding our soft power. As a former secretary of state, I am particularly
alarmed by the administration’s plan to close embassies and consulates, fire
diplomats and destroy the U.S. Agency for International Development. Let me
explain why this matters, because it’s less widely understood than the
importance of tanks and fighter jets.
I visited
112 countries and traveled nearly one million miles as America’s top diplomat,
and I have seen how valuable it is for our country to be represented on the
ground in far-flung places. The U.S. military has long understood that our
forces must be forward deployed in order to project American power and respond
quickly to crises. The same is true of our diplomats. Our embassies are our
eyes and ears informing policy decisions back home. They are launchpads for
operations that keep us safe and prosperous, from training foreign
counterterrorism forces to helping U.S. companies enter new markets.
China
understands the value of forward-deployed diplomacy, which is why it has opened
new embassies and consulates around the world and now has more than the United
States. The Trump administration’s retreat would leave the field open for
Beijing to spread its influence uncontested.
Diplomats
win America friends so we don’t have to go it alone in a competitive world.
That’s how my colleagues and I were able to rally the United Nations to impose
crippling sanctions against Iran’s nuclear program and ultimately force Tehran
to stop its progress toward a bomb — something Mr. Trump’s bluster has failed
to do. (He actually defunded inspectors keeping an eye on Iranian research
sites. Dumb.)
Diplomacy is
cost-effective, especially compared with military action. Preventing wars is
cheaper than fighting them. Mr. Trump’s own former secretary of defense Jim
Mattis, a retired Marine Corps four-star general, told Congress, “If you don’t
fund the State Department fully, then I need to buy more ammunition.”
Our
development assistance has always been a small portion of the federal budget,
but it also has an outsize impact on international stability, especially paired
with effective diplomacy. When American aid dollars help stop a famine or an
outbreak, when we respond to a natural disaster or open schools, we win hearts
and minds that might otherwise go to terrorists or rivals like China. We reduce
the flow of migrants and refugees. We strengthen friendly governments that
might otherwise collapse.
I don’t want
to pretend that any of this is easy or that American foreign policy hasn’t been
plagued by mistakes. Leadership is hard. But our best chance to get it right
and to keep our country safe is to strengthen our government, not weaken it. We
should invest in the patriots who serve our nation, not insult them.
Smart
reforms could make federal agencies, including the State Department and
U.S.A.I.D., more efficient and effective. During the Clinton administration, my
husband’s Reinventing Government initiative, led by Vice President Al Gore,
worked with Congress to thoughtfully streamline bureaucracy, modernize the work
force and save billions of dollars. In many ways it was the opposite of the
Trump administration’s slash-and-burn approach. Today they are not reinventing
government; they’re wrecking it.
All of this
is both dumb and dangerous. And I haven’t even gotten to the damage Mr. Trump
is doing by cozying up to dictators like Russia’s Vladimir Putin, blowing up
our alliances — force multipliers that extend our reach and share our burdens —
and trashing our moral influence by undermining the rule of law at home. Or how
he’s tanking our economy and blowing up our national debt. Propagandists in
Beijing and Moscow know we are in a global debate about competing systems of
governance. People and leaders around the world are watching to see if
democracy can still deliver peace and prosperity or even function. If America
is ruled like a banana republic, with flagrant corruption and a leader who puts
himself above the law, we lose that argument. We also lose the qualities that
have made America exceptional and indispensable.
If there’s a
grand strategy at work here, I don’t know what it is. Maybe Mr. Trump wants to
return to 19th-century spheres of influence. Maybe he’s just driven by personal
grudges and is in way over his head. As a businessman, he bankrupted his
Atlantic City casinos. Now he’s gambling with the national security of the
United States. If this continues, a group chat foul will be the least of our
concerns, and all the fist and flag emojis in the world won’t save us.
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