Natalie Kitro-Eff
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From The New York Times, I'm Natalie Kitro-Eff.
From slamming Europe and abandoning our commitments to our closest allies there to carrying out a lethal U.S.
military campaign in the Caribbean, President Trump has overseen an aggressive foreign policy that hasn't always been easy to understand.
But the White House has now unveiled a national security strategy that offers a justification for those actions, laying bare Trump's true goals and alarming countries around the world.
Today, my colleague David Sanger explains what the strategy actually is and how the emerging Trump doctrine it represents may change America's global relationships for good.
David, our resident foreign policy expert, it's great to have you here.
There has been a lot of debate on the right, among voters, about Trump's focus on international affairs, a notion that he's not following through on his stated agenda of putting America and Americans first.
And it's true that Trump in his second term has been extremely active around the world.
He's been engaging in a trade war with China.
He's bombed Iran's nuclear facility, brokered a ceasefire in Gaza.
There's been the recent boat strikes in Latin America.
And through all that, it hasn't always been all that clear exactly how all of these actions cohere.
But now the Trump administration has released this document that tries to articulate the country's foreign policy strategy, that tries to make sense of it all.
So first of all, what is this document?
And if those days are over, if that's no longer our priority, being the defender of liberty around the world, what is the new priority?
You know, I've seen this in the coverage around this document that there is a focus on making America, as you said, wealthy, a focus on profit.
What does that actually mean?