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Just read an interesting take on Trump's foreign policy that actually makes a lot of sense. The argument is pretty straightforward: his approach to international relations mirrors how he's handled his personal relationships—impulsive, self-centered, and without consequences. Think about it. The Access Hollywood tape, the E. Jean Carroll case, yet he still got elected twice. That pattern of facing minimal accountability clearly shapes how he operates on the world stage.
The whole "I can do anything I want with it" comment about Cuba is a perfect example. It's not strategic thinking—it's the same megalomania that's defined his entire career. And that attitude bleeds into everything: tariffs, vaccine policy, threats toward Iran, the whole mess. There's no long-term planning, just whatever he feels like doing in the moment.
Here's what's interesting though—his sense of invincibility doesn't actually translate to getting what he wants. Failed on Obamacare repeal, couldn't control COVID, lost the 2020 election despite trying, and couldn't rally allies for his Iran plans. Turns out being a superpower doesn't mean you can just do whatever you want when nobody's backing you up.
The Cuba situation is particularly telling. Secretary of State Rubio's pushing a personal agenda tied to his family history rather than actual national interests. Cuba's response was basically "we've been under pressure for 66 years and we're not backing down." Classic miscalculation—assuming everyone will fold because you have military might.
The real problem? When this inevitably blows up, we all deal with the fallout. Not just Trump. That's what makes this actually concerning beyond just the political theater.