Triumph
London (AP) – No antagonize opponents unnecessarily, says a basic principle of diplomacy. But as the United States faces a commercial war with China and several tensions abroad, President Donald Trump’s emissaries are increasingly marking allied countries and are called accounts.
Just this week, no less than three US envoys. Uu. They rushed out of the hot diplomatic water.
Denmark Foreign Minister called the main American diplomat in the country to respond to the reports that at least three people with connections with Trump have carried out undercover operations of influence in Greenland, a Danish territory. France summoned the United States ambassador to Trump Charles Kushner’s in -laws, for his letter to President Emmanuel Macron claiming that the country has not done enough to combat anti -Semitism. And the American ambassador to Turkey, Trump’s former friend, Tom Barrack, apologized on Thursday for using the word “animal” while asking that a group of reporters would calm down during a press conference in Lebanon.
But in the other two cases, the Trump administration was PAT. Kushner did not show up to his call, leaving the French to take him to their number 2. The main diplomat in Denmark attended his meeting in Copenhagen, and the State Department said that a “productive conversation” occurred. But behind the scene in Washington, the Trump administration, through an official who spoke only on condition of anonymity, had a much more informal response.
“The Danes,” said the official, “needs to calm down.”

Bloomberg through Getty Images
A pattern arises
There was a lot of TSK-TSKING of the diplomatic world about indelicated exchanges, which perhaps would have been lower on their own.
But they are consistent with Trump’s blunt voice style, their “America First” approach for foreign policy and their attitude towards journalists, all of which attracts wide strips of their political base. And track with the history of the president of the alterable standards. In fact, the State Department has offered little in response, except to say that it supports Kushner’s letter to Macron and that the government “does not control or direct” the actions of private citizens in Greenland.
The White House spokeswoman, Anna Kelly, ruled out the notion that recent diplomatic kerfuffles have undermined Trump’s overall position or attenuated their confidence in their envoys.
“President Trump has restored the United States position on the world stage, and his foreign policy achievements speak for themselves,” said Kelly, citing Trump’s commercial agreements, his strike in Iran’s nuclear facilities and the release of Americans detained in other countries as examples. “He has full confidence in his entire team to advance in his first foreign policy agenda in the United States.”
The IRA triofecta against US diplomats in recent days was only the last one named Trump’s abroad, several of whom raised their eyebrows during the president’s first mandate. That is partly due to the particularly American practice, in both parties, to deliver coveted publications to campaign donors and presidential friends, regardless of their diplomatic experience.
Trump diplomats have a history of annoying foreign governments. During their first term, numerous US ambassadors.
A former Senior State Department official said Trump loved the advertising that these incidents received often sent to the ambassadors in question congratulations when their actions produced news coverage.
The main exception to this was Gordon Sondland, the Ambassador in the EU whom Trump shot only a few days after Sondland testified in Capitol Hill during Trump’s first political trial procedures on Ukraine.
The hearings mentioned another disorderly diplomatic issue: Trump’s expulsion to his ambassador to Ukraine, Marie Yovanovitch, who testified that she was pressed to issue support statements for Trump. “The woman,” Trump said during a phone call with President Volodymyr Zelenskyy, “will go through some things.”

Via News
Even so, recent dust were surprising for their risk of amplifying tensions between Western allies as the United States and China compete for economic superiority and speak of a meeting between their leaders as soon as this fall.
“The Trump administration emphasizes, I think rightly, that the rivalry between the United States and China is now the main axis around international issues,” wrote Iver B. Neumann, director of the Fridtjof Nansen Institute, a group of independent experts in Norway, in an email. “One of the main assets of the USA. In that rivalry, it has a large number of allies, while China only has one (North Korea). The US policy. Uu. Aliena to the allies on purpose, which runs the risk of losing them.”
What happened to France?
He began with Macron’s decision to recognize a Palestinian state, which enraged Israel and the United States because it revived the possibility of a solution of two states to the apparently endless conflict.
Kushner’s response, published on Sunday by the Wall Street Journal, alleged that such “public statements that argue Israel and gestures towards the recognition of a Palestinian state emboldene to extremists, fuel violence and endangers Jewish life in France.” Kushner urged Macron, among other things, to “abandon the steps that give legitimacy to Hamas and his allies.”
The French Ministry of Foreign Affairs said that “firmly refutes” Kushner’s accusation and declared that it did not reach the quality of the transatlantic relationship between France and the United States and the confidence that should be among the allies. “
(Trump has said several times and in several contexts, “I don’t trust anyone,” including Israeli Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu).
The Ministry summoned the United States ambassador on Monday, a formal and public notice of disgust. It was not shown, so the French officials met with number 2 of the embassy. Kushner, a real estate developer, is Trump’s father, Jared Kushner.

Thomas Trasdahl through Getty Images
What about Denmark?
Trump has recently been relatively quiet about his desire to acquire Greenland, the Danish territory in the Arctic, for security purposes. In March, Greenland voted to decide his own future as he advances towards the independence of Denmark.
But Trump’s track that could invade the huge island’s positions. Then, when the main station of Denmark reported on Wednesday that at least three people with connections with Trump had carried out undercover influence operations in Greenland, the Denmark Ministry of Foreign Affairs convened the main American diplomat in the country, Mark Stroh, a member of his foreign service career, for an explanation.
The State Department said that “the United States government does not control or direct the actions of private citizens,” values its relationship with Denmark and “respects the right of Greenlands to determine their own future.”
Yun Sun, director of the China program at the non -profit center Stimson in Washington, said it is unlikely that Trump’s envoys will be rebuked or change their agendas. But incidents can serve as a warning “observe what they say and do more care.”
“The ball is in the court of other countries to decide whether they are willing to endanger diplomatic relations with (the),” Sun wrote in an email. Doing it “would have significant repercussions about much more critical domains.”
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News Matthew Lee writers Aamer Madhani and Amelia Thomson Deveaux contributed to this Washington story.


