WASHINGTON — President Donald Trump gives. And he takes away.
Offended by Canadian Prime Minister Mark Carney's increasingly assertive posture toward the U.S., Trump revoked an invitation to join his Board of Peace. Many Western allies are suspicious of the organization, which is chaired by Trump and was initially formed to focus on maintaining the ceasefire in Israel's war with Hamas but has grown into something skeptics fear could rival the United Nations.
Appearing at the World Economic Forum, Trump spoke of imposing tariffs on Switzerland — which he ultimately lowered — because the country's leader ''rubbed me the wrong way'' during a phone call. Before shelving sweeping tariffs on multiple European countries, Trump pressed Denmark to ''say yes'' to the U.S. push to control Greenland ''and we will be very appreciative. Or you can say no and we will remember,'' he said, imperiling the NATO alliance.
Over his decades in public life, Trump has never been one for niceties. But even by his standards, the tumult of the past week stood out because it crystallized his determination to erase the rules-based order that has governed U.S. foreign policy — and by extension most of the Western world — since World War II.
The president and his supporters have dismissed that approach as inefficient, overly focused on compromise and unresponsive to the needs of people contending with rapid economic change. But in its place, Trump is advancing a system that is poorly understood and could prove far less stable, driven by the whims of a single, often mercurial, leader who regularly demonstrates that personal flattery or animus can shape his decisions.
Returning to the U.S. from Davos, home to the World Economic Forum, Republican Sen. Lisa Murkowski of Alaska said the phrase she heard ''over and over'' was that ''we are entering this new world order'' as she described a sense of confusion among allies.
''It may be you just had a bad telephone call with the president and now you're going to have tariffs directed at you,'' she told reporters. ''This lack of stability and reliability, I think, is causing what were traditionally reliable trade partners to be saying to other countries, ‘Hey, maybe you and I should talk because I'm not sure about what's going on with the United States.'''
The Trump-centric approach to governing