Tillerson Points to Shift in U.S. Foreign Policy Priorities by Felicia Schwartz, Wall Street Journal
Secretary of State Rex Tillerson said the U.S. will pursue national security and economic interests before turning to human rights concerns in its relationships with other countries, signalling a shift in Washington’s global outlook.
Mr. Tillerson’s remarks, to U.S. diplomats and employees at the State Department on Wednesday, amounted to the clearest expression yet of President Donald Trump’s “America First” foreign policy doctrine, in which the U.S. won’t condition its approach to other countries based on “how they treat people,” he said.
“We really have to understand, in each country or each region of the world that we’re dealing with, what are our national security interests, what are our economic prosperity interests, and then, as we can advocate and advance our values, we should,” he said.
In separating U.S. policies from values such as human rights, democracy, press freedom and the treatment of minorities, Mr. Tillerson appeared to outline a departure from priorities pursued during both the Bush and Obama administrations.
Since taking office, Mr. Trump has sought to strengthen ties with leaders who have drawn criticism for their human rights records. He hosted Egypt’s President Abdel Fattah Al Sisi last month at the White House for his first state visit since he took power in 2014 and has invited the Philippines’ President Rodrigo Duterte to Washington.
Human rights groups and some lawmakers have raised concerns about what they’ve described as a U.S. turn away from an emphasis on human rights and basic freedoms…
Comments
Scenarios:
a. Should we say that Secretary Tillerson concurs with the theory that it is the efforts made by the U.S./the West of late -- to transform outlying states and societies more along modern western political, economic, social and value lines -- that these such "tranformational" efforts are the source of instability and chaos in the world today? Herein,
b. Tillerson specifically rejecting the notion that such instability and chaos, in fact, are derived from these outlying states and societies specific lack of such U.S./Western political, economic, social and value attributes; this being the matter which ultimately leads to the "root causes" of rebellion, to wit: "lack of opportunity, insecurity, injustice, and hopelessness?"
http://www.usglc.org/downloads/2017/02/FY18_International_Affairs_Budge… (See the third paragraph.)
In the scenario "a" above -- minus U.S./Western "transformational" interference -- a "strongman," ruling ruthlessly, keeps his population and his nation viable, secure and "in check;" this, in the face of, for example, "globalization's/"progress's" demands?
In the scenario "b" above -- minus U.S./Western "transformational" interference -- a "strongman," ruling ruthlessly, creates the conditions which make an explosive rebellion (and thus instability and chaos) inevitable; this, due to this ruler's refusal to meet, for example, "globalization's"/"progress's" demands?