Trump administration’s new National Security Strategy fuels global culture-war debate

The Trump administration has released a new National Security Strategy that breaks with previous U.S. policy blueprints, according to The Nation. The document is described as abandoning an explicit goal of global hegemony while emphasizing culture-war politics in Europe, economic competition with China, and renewed U.S. military dominance in the Western Hemisphere—an agenda analysts say exposes contradictions at the heart of Trump’s foreign policy.

The Trump administration's latest National Security Strategy is being cast by some analysts as a significant departure from both earlier U.S. administrations and Donald Trump’s first term in office. As summarized by The Nation’s podcast The Time of Monsters, the new policy statement is presented as a marked shift not only from long-standing U.S. grand strategy but also from how Trump initially governed.

According to The Nation’s description of the document, the strategy explicitly steps back from the traditional American aim of sustaining global hegemony. Instead, it outlines a narrower project that puts greater emphasis on regional priorities and ideological conflict.

In Europe, the document is reported to promote a culture-war agenda by promising U.S. support for anti-immigration political parties and movements, positioning Washington as an active player in the continent’s battles over migration and national identity. This framing casts U.S. policy as aligning with like-minded groups that oppose current migration trends and multicultural integration.

In Asia, the strategy highlights intensified economic rivalry with China. As described on The Time of Monsters, it underscores efforts to counter Beijing’s influence through trade measures and other tools of economic pressure, reflecting the Trump administration’s broader use of tariffs and investment restrictions as instruments of foreign policy.

The strategy also calls for a renewed focus on U.S. military dominance in the Western Hemisphere, signaling a bid to reassert traditional primacy in the Americas. This emphasis on hemispheric hegemony fits with a broader shift in Trump-era policy thinking that prioritizes the Western Hemisphere and treats it as a central arena for projecting U.S. power.

To unpack the policy and its implications, The Nation’s national affairs correspondent Jeet Heer devoted an episode of The Time of Monsters to a conversation with Stephen Wertheim, a senior fellow in the American Statecraft program at the Carnegie Endowment for International Peace. Wertheim, a frequent guest on the show, discussed what he sees as deep inconsistencies in the strategy, arguing that it blends nationalist or quasi-isolationist rhetoric with interventionist practices and ambitions.

Their discussion, featured on the Time of Monsters episode "Trump’s Global Culture War," situates the new National Security Strategy within a broader pattern of Trump-era foreign policy. Wertheim and Heer describe how the administration’s stated rejection of global hegemony coexists with aims to dominate the Western Hemisphere and to shape political outcomes in Europe, revealing what they view as tensions between retrenchment and continued assertion of U.S. power.

These shifts, they contend, raise questions about the future of U.S. alliances and global stability, as Washington recalibrates its commitments while pursuing selective engagement and ideological confrontation.

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