Will Trade Pol­i­cy Be Amer­i­ca First’s Iraq War?

Will Trade Policy Be America First’s Iraq War?

Will Trade Pol­i­cy Be Amer­i­ca First’s Iraq War?

There are bet­ter and worse ways to do things, and there is no rea­son to dig in on the worse ways.

President Trump Holds "Make America Wealthy Again Event" In White House Rose Garden
(Chip Somodevilla/Getty Images)

There’s a fine line between con­vic­tion and par­ti­san­ship. A help­ful rubric is whether you have stopped ask­ing the ques­tion, What if we’re wrong? 

The Iraq War is an exam­ple of choice around The Amer­i­can Con­ser­v­a­tive’s offices, for good rea­son. That misadventure’s archi­tects ignored cred­i­ble crit­i­cisms of the project from start to fin­ish, from dis­qual­i­fy­ing exam­i­na­tion of the “intel­li­gence” about Sad­dam Hussein’s weapons of mass destruc­tion pro­gram from the Bureau of Intel­li­gence and Research to the CIA’s oppo­si­tion to “debaathi­fi­ca­tion” (per­haps the only worth­while major analy­sis that organ has pro­duced in its entire his­to­ry). The results were pre­dictable and have been thor­ough­ly dis­cussed else­where, not least in these pages (please sub­scribe!). Such an error, defend­ed and per­sist­ed long past its expi­ra­tion date, is per­ma­nent­ly dam­ag­ing to an ide­o­log­i­cal ten­den­cy, even dis­cred­it­ing.

Of course, nobody has the mar­ket cor­nered on this kind of thing. The “Lib­er­a­tion Day” tar­iff pack­age, of which I offered a qual­i­fied defense ear­li­er this week, has not been what you’d call a smash­ing suc­cess. Nor is the anomie lim­it­ed to Trump’s oppo­nents. (Any­way, doc­tri­naire neolib­er­als’ carp­ing about tar­iffs sim­pliciter is under­cut in large part by that crowd’s quiet­ness about Joe Biden’s trade pro­tec­tion­ism, which built on mea­sures from the first Trump admin­is­tra­tion.) Jamie Dimon, the chair­man and CEO of JP Mor­gan Chase and so not exact­ly a bas­tion of eco­nom­ic het­ero­doxy, was broad­ly sup­port­ive of the Trump tar­iff pol­i­cy at the begin­ning of the admin­is­tra­tion. Late­ly, how­ev­er, he has argued that the iter­a­tion we got is mis­guid­ed, and has start­ed to make gloomy nois­es about the chances of a reces­sion. Of course, a reces­sion may well have been in the off­ing anyway—it has been a decade, give or take, since there was a nat­ur­al cor­rec­tion to the economy—but there are more and less polit­i­cal­ly painful ways to stop the run and slide into sec­ond base.

I sup­port tar­iffs, broad­ly speak­ing, as one of the tools in the pro­tec­tion­ist pol­i­cy kit; as not­ed before, for bet­ter or worse, tar­iffs are cur­rent­ly the least polit­i­cal­ly con­strained tool avail­able. There is a case to be made even for rad­i­cal changes in tar­iff pol­i­cy. Yet states­man­ship is the craft in which the ide­al meets the real. Some­times some­thing, even some­thing that should be done, because of quirks of cir­cum­stance or exe­cu­tion, doesn’t work very well. Trump has shown a will­ing­ness to cut bait when the fish aren’t bit­ing or are threat­en­ing to cap­size the boat; impro­vi­sa­tion is going to be part of any effort to reori­ent a sys­tem as mas­sive as the world econ­o­my. 

But impro­vi­sa­tion is not a good in itself, and the cur­rent approach to trade pol­i­cy seems to threat­en to ele­vate it to the pan­theon; it is not encour­ag­ing that the final Lib­er­a­tion Day rate card was set­tled only the night before its announce­ment, or that Trump’s cab­i­net seems at odds with itself over what the tar­iff mes­sage actu­al­ly is. (It is worth empha­siz­ing that the uncer­tain­ty per se is in large part what is roil­ing mar­kets.) The tar­iffs that arguably made the most sense, on high-tech­nol­o­gy goods from Chi­na, have been giv­en an exemp­tion, albeit a tem­po­rary one per a new Sun­day mis­sive from the White House. This isn’t inspired prag­ma­tism; this is a dis­co. Entrench­ing this approach threat­ens to become Amer­i­ca First’s Iraq War—an avoid­able cat­a­stro­phe that ren­ders per­ma­nent polit­i­cal dam­age to the camp, con­strict­ing future bites at the apple of pow­er.

Just because a sit­u­a­tion is dire and urgent—as I have argued it is—does not mean that things can’t be done in bet­ter or worse ways. The White House has not made its case well to the Amer­i­can peo­ple and has done lit­tle to mit­i­gate the dis­rup­tion its pol­i­cy was bound to cause. Time is short, and some amount of dam­age may be irrev­o­ca­ble, but there is still some room to maneu­ver. A clear, uni­fied mes­sage about ends and means, prob­a­bly spear­head­ed by Trea­sury Sec­re­tary Scott Bessent, who has emerged as the most seri­ous, artic­u­late voice for Trump eco­nom­ic pol­i­cy; an imple­men­ta­tion timetable; absten­tion from ad-hoc carve­outs: These would go a long way. Nor is there any rea­son to dis­miss out of hand the pend­ing trade deal nego­ti­a­tions shak­en from the glob­al tree, so long as they do not actu­al­ly fun­da­men­tal­ly under­cut the pro­gram. 

“We’re an empire now, and when we act, we cre­ate our own real­i­ty. And while you’re study­ing that reality—judiciously, as you will—we’ll act again, cre­at­ing oth­er new real­i­ties, which you can study too, and that’s how things will sort out. We’re history’s actors … and you, all of you, will be left to just study what we do.” These words, wide­ly attrib­uted to George W. Bush’s advi­sor Karl Rove, should haunt every pol­i­cy­mak­er. Hubris does not take a side.

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