President Trump presenting the 2025 National Security Strategy at the White House, emphasizing 'America First' with a map of the Western Hemisphere.
AI에 의해 생성된 이미지

Trump administration releases 2025 National Security Strategy outlining 'America First' foreign policy shift

AI에 의해 생성된 이미지
사실 확인됨

The White House has released the 2025 National Security Strategy under President Donald Trump’s second administration, framing U.S. policy around an 'America First' doctrine, a renewed focus on the Western Hemisphere, and a sharper critique of Europe. The document presents his new term as the start of a “new golden age” for American power, sovereignty, and influence.

The 2025 National Security Strategy (NSS), issued by the White House during President Donald Trump’s second administration, sets out a plan to reshape U.S. foreign and security policy around an updated 'America First' approach. Coverage by outlets including The Daily Wire and major international newspapers describes the strategy as a break from post–Cold War assumptions and from the 2017 Trump-era NSS, with an emphasis on sovereignty, reduced global commitments, and reasserting U.S. dominance in the Western Hemisphere.

The new strategy opens with a broad narrative of U.S. renewal under Trump’s return to office, echoing themes from his 2025 inaugural address in which he pledged that a “golden age of America” was beginning and vowed to put America first every day of his administration.

The NSS criticizes previous U.S. leaders for overextending American power and resources overseas, arguing that past policies fostered economic dependence and weakened national sovereignty. According to reporting by the Financial Times and The Washington Post, the document broadens the definition of national security beyond traditional military threats to include concerns such as mass migration, demographic change, espionage, predatory economic practices, organized crime, propaganda, and what it describes as cultural or civilizational erosion in the West.

The strategy affirms that border control and immigration enforcement are central to national security and links domestic enforcement to efforts to reduce migration pressures abroad, particularly in the Western Hemisphere. This focus builds on the Trump White House’s early second-term messaging, which placed border security and action against cartels among its top priorities.

Militarily, the NSS calls for maintaining and modernizing U.S. nuclear forces and strengthening missile defenses, including the proposed "Golden Dome" system, a space-focused, multi-layered missile shield that Trump announced earlier in 2025. Separate reporting on Golden Dome describes it as a long‑term project intended to protect against ballistic and hypersonic missile threats, with costs and timelines subject to significant debate.

The document also stresses the need for more resilient critical infrastructure and improved defenses against cyber and other non‑traditional attacks. At the same time, it signals a desire to reduce some overseas military commitments, pressing allies to take on more responsibility for their own defense.

On the economic front, the NSS emphasizes reindustrialization, securing supply chains, and greater self‑reliance in energy, highlighting fossil fuels and nuclear power as key pillars of U.S. prosperity and leverage. It frames economic policy as an instrument of security, calling for protection of critical technologies and industrial capacity and for limiting foreign influence over strategic sectors.

The strategy calls for maintaining U.S. leadership in advanced technologies such as artificial intelligence, biotechnology, quantum computing, and advanced manufacturing. It ties this to a mix of regulatory changes and stronger protections for intellectual property, though detailed implementation steps are not fully spelled out in the public reporting on the document.

Culturally, the NSS links national strength to what it describes as a renewal of shared values, patriotism, and social cohesion rooted in families and civic institutions. It argues that foreign policy should be guided by clear national interests, a preference for peace through strength, and caution toward large‑scale, open‑ended interventions.

The document adopts a skeptical stance toward multilateral institutions and global governance frameworks, casting them as potential constraints on U.S. sovereignty. It calls for stricter reciprocity in alliances, including within NATO, and argues that partners should increase their defense contributions and assume greater responsibility for regional security.

Regionally, the NSS places the Western Hemisphere at the top of U.S. priorities. Multiple outlets report that the strategy invokes a "Trump Corollary" to the Monroe Doctrine, signaling an intent to reassert U.S. primacy in the region, counter rival powers’ influence, and intensify efforts against drug trafficking and irregular migration. The document envisions a larger U.S. presence and influence in the Caribbean and Latin America, with tools ranging from security cooperation and Coast Guard deployments to trade and financial instruments.

In the Indo‑Pacific, the strategy continues to treat Taiwan’s security and the balance of power in the South China Sea as key interests. However, according to analyses in the Financial Times and The Washington Post, the new NSS generally portrays China more as an economic and systemic competitor than as an immediate military adversary, while giving comparatively less emphasis to Russia than previous U.S. strategy documents. It maintains existing U.S. security ties with partners such as Japan, India, and Australia but signals an overall desire to limit long‑term defense commitments.

In Europe, the strategy marks a sharp rhetorical shift. Press accounts note that the NSS warns of "civilizational erasure" on the continent, faults European governments over migration, demographic trends, and their handling of the war in Ukraine, and suggests that some NATO countries could become majority non‑European in coming decades. It accuses certain European leaders of ignoring domestic constituencies that favor a negotiated end to the conflict and suggests the United States should cultivate political forces in Europe that share Washington’s new priorities. European officials and analysts have sharply criticized this framing, describing it as an intervention in internal politics and a departure from longstanding alliance norms.

In the Middle East and Africa, the document appears to de‑emphasize democracy promotion and large‑scale military engagements. Instead, it stresses pragmatic partnerships in areas such as energy, trade, and security cooperation, while encouraging commercial ties and resource development over traditional aid models, especially in parts of Africa and the broader Global South.

Across all regions, the NSS presents a vision of a United States that seeks to shape stability and advance its interests primarily through what it describes as disciplined strength, economic leverage, and tighter control of its immediate neighborhood. Supporters argue that this approach corrects decades of overreach and restores focus on core American priorities, while critics contend that it undermines traditional alliances, downplays threats from Russia, and signals a retreat from global leadership.

사람들이 말하는 것

X discussions praise the 2025 National Security Strategy's America First focus, border security, and hemispheric priorities as a pragmatic shift from globalism. Supporters highlight reduced foreign commitments and ally burden-sharing. Skeptics express concerns over weakened deterrence for Taiwan and Europe. Critics decry inflammatory rhetoric on European 'civilizational erasure' and perceived isolationism.

관련 기사

Illustration of US National Security Strategy map emphasizing Taiwan defense, South Korea uncertainties, and Indo-Pacific alliances amid 'America First' policy.
AI에 의해 생성된 이미지

새 미 국가안보전략, 한국 안보와 인도-태평양 역할에 의문 제기

AI에 의해 보고됨 AI에 의해 생성된 이미지

도널드 트럼프 행정부가 12월 5일 발표한 새로운 국가안보전략(NSS)은 대만 방어 우선과 북한 비핵화 목표 생략으로 한국의 안보와 지역 역할에 의문을 불러일으키고 있다. 이 문서는 한국과 일본이 제1도련방을 방어하기 위한 역량을 강화하도록 촉구하며, 동맹국들의 방위비 분담 증가를 강조한다. 이는 미국의 '아메리카 퍼스트' 원칙을 재확인하는 내용이다.

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.

AI에 의해 보고됨

The U.S. Department of War has released its 2026 National Defense Strategy, aiming to maintain the country's status as the world's most formidable fighting force. The document highlights China as the primary strategic competitor and outlines priorities for deterrence, homeland protection, and industrial strengthening. It credits President Trump's leadership for rebuilding the military since his return to office in January 2025.

홍콩대학교 현대 중국 및 세계 센터의 가상 대화에서 중국 학자 왕지사가 현재 ‘두 초강대국과 다수의 강국’으로 특징지어지는 세계 질서가 갈등 위험이 커지고 있다고 경고했다. 그는 트럼프 미국 대통령 하의 미국의 내향적 전환, 워싱턴의 지정학적·지정경제적 봉쇄 추구, 그리고 대만해협 긴장 고조에 우려를 표했다.

AI에 의해 보고됨

미국 국방부는 새 국가방위전략(NDS) 발표 다음 날인 토요일, 정책 차관 엘브리지 콜비의 한국과 일본 방문을 공식 발표했다. 이 방문은 트럼프 행정부의 '힘으로 평화' 의제를 추진하기 위한 것으로, 한미동맹의 부담 분담과 미군 주둔 태세 조정을 논의할 전망이다. 이에 대해 이재명 대통령은 자주국방 강화가 '가장 기본'이라고 강조했다.

In 2025, India encountered significant hurdles in its relations with the United States under President Trump, including steep tariffs on its goods and diplomatic setbacks following the Pahalgam terrorist attack. External Affairs Minister S. Jaishankar had expressed optimism earlier in the year about converging interests. However, events unfolded differently, highlighting contrasts in diplomatic strategies with Pakistan.

AI에 의해 보고됨 사실 확인됨

As President Donald Trump mediates discussions between Russia and Ukraine, several conservative policy experts describe the talks as a highly challenging diplomatic effort and argue that any settlement should both end the war and impose steep costs on Moscow to deter future aggression, while protecting core U.S. interests.

 

 

 

이 웹사이트는 쿠키를 사용합니다

사이트를 개선하기 위해 분석을 위한 쿠키를 사용합니다. 자세한 내용은 개인정보 보호 정책을 읽으세요.
거부