It used to be one of the easiest jobs for a president of the United States after going through Inauguration Day and all the ceremonies and balls and parades. The next day – not later in the week, but the very next morning, for most presidents, before 9 a.m. -- one of those curved doors to the Oval Office opens and your chief of staff enters accompanied by two men. One of the men is in uniform, the other in a neatly pressed suit. The younger of the two men is carrying a briefcase. They’re here to give you the first intelligence briefing of your term.
In the old days, if there was a lot going on in the world, the briefing might even take place in the Situation Room, the secure bunker-like space an elevator ride away in the White House basement, so the briefers could refer to maps they already put up on the wall. These days, the maps would be on large flatscreen TV’s. The briefers would begin by telling the president about any places where U.S. troops or even embassies might be under threat or in active danger. During the long wars in Iraq and Afghanistan, the briefers might have recent casualty figures and reports of “kinetic” action – bombings carried out by Navy or Air Force jets, maybe a terrorist attack in Baghdad or Kandahar, firefights if they are likely to lead to action taken by more U.S. forces.
After the active military actions involving U.S. forces around the world have been reported, the briefers might run down recent actions or statements by U.S. allies and enemies. What has happened over the last few days in Ukraine, for example, or reports of Chinese naval activity near the Philippines in the South China Sea, or perhaps the results of an election in South America or an attempted coup in Africa. Maybe the president of the European Union said something newsworthy about the new U.S. president, or the Chinese announced a new trade deal in a part of the world in which the U.S. has national security interests, or Russia has shot down a commercial airliner near the border with Ukraine, or a new Russian submarine has been reported to have departed the port of Severomorsk in the Murmansk region of northern Russia. The president will be told when reports have been relayed to the Pentagon by the intelligence services of allies and what importance U.S. intelligence places on the reports.
What the president of the United States has not needed to be told, at least until now, is which countries are allies and which are enemies. Certain assumptions have been stable throughout the years since the end of World War II. European nations are our friends and allies. Nations such as Russia and China are our rivals and even economic enemies in the struggle for resources and dominance in certain regions of the world. Other nations, such as unstable autocracies in South America and Africa, or even on-the-fence countries such as Armenia and Azerbaijan or Moldova or Serbia, might enter the conversation if there are recent developments that impact U.S. interests or ongoing conflicts that might end up drawing more intense attention of U.S. intelligence or the Pentagon.
Being one of the people who delivers the president’s “daily brief” used to be a plum assignment. To get the job, you would need to pass the background check for the very highest security clearance. People who were briefers of the president have gone on to bigger things. Bob Woodward, yes that Bob Woodward, carried the briefcase when he was a young ensign in the Navy accompanying senior briefers to the White House every morning. That’s where some of his sources came from when he was a reporter for the Washington Post in later years.
Think of what it’s like today. Donald Trump doesn’t get up in the morning and go downstairs to the Oval Office to get his morning briefing. It is said when he receives a briefing at all, he likes to be shown videos and photographs and given a single page to read, if that.
This is because Donald Trump does not believe in United States interests. He believes in Donald Trump’s interests. To the extent that his interests are affected by national security information, he will listen to briefings. Trump might want to know what the chances are for new developments in parts of the world that are not on the front pages of newspapers, such as Albania or Azerbaijan.
He has remade what used to be the lists of U.S. allies and enemies. NATO nations, which were at the forefront of American national security for decades as they stood fast against Russia and the countries behind the Iron Curtain, are not necessarily considered allies under the Trump regime. He has threatened Denmark, a NATO nation, with taking over their territory of Greenland. He has threatened to turn Canada into the 51st state. He regularly belittles national leaders of NATO countries, calling them names and posting silly memes on his social media account. Countries which have been our enemies, such as Russia, he considers friendly to his interests because he wants to develop hotels or golf courses or condos there.
It emerged last year that the way to become an ally of Donald Trump during his second term in office is to flatter him and give him things of value. Qatar, a Gulf nation, gave him what was described as a $400 million gold plated 747. Other countries have delivered gimcrackery made from gold into his hands in the Oval Office, the acceptance of which violates about 20 ethics rules. We don’t know what goes on behind the scenes in U.S. foreign relations of the Trump administration, but it is a sure thing that Trump himself and his company are being offered business opportunities all over the place. Jared Kushner, married to Trump’s daughter Ivanka, has been on the receiving end of billions of so-called “investments” from Gulf nations. Trump’s real estate buddy, Steve Witkoff, is said to have been nakedly upfront about potential business deals as he has served as Trump’s special envoy here and there…mostly there.
Countries that have been long-time U.S. allies such as those in NATO and even Korea and Japan have learned that when Trump yells at you, it’s best not to yell back, but rather refer to him in grandiose terms and arrange to give him gifts that, while not as grandiose as a 747, are almost certainly worth millions of dollars. Trump, who once called the whole idea of crypto a “scam,” has changed his mind and conveniently established a way to slip him money through Liberty Financial, his crypto investment firm. We have no way of knowing what crypto “wallets” are held by the Trump sons and daughters that could be filled with crypto coins or cash or whatever dodgy form such payoffs take these days. Because the world of crypto is secret. Why do you think it’s secret? So, it can be used to shift money around without anyone seeing a thing on the table, that’s why.
You would think the United States would be standing foursquare behind Ukraine as an ally. Not only are they under attack by one of our enemies, Ukraine is the last bulwark between Russia and Europe and the countries that used to be our allies there. But nooooo. Trump doesn’t want to build hotels in Kyiv. He wants to build them in Moscow, because Russia is bigger and it has oil and it is a country that is at least potentially richer.
The question almost asks itself. What does Donald Trump believe in when it comes to the international interests of the United States? The answer is beyond imagining. There was once a notion that “what’s good for Standard Oil is good for America.” Boy, do those cutthroat times seem innocent looking back from 2026. Just look at the trash heap Trump has turned the White House into. He’s holding a mixed martial arts fight in the White House backyard put on by a company he owns stock in. Look at his recent assertion that his presidential papers belong to him, not to the United States, which paid for them, as the federal law states. Trump has had the Department of Justice prepare a challenge to that law as unconstitutional. Why? So, he and his family can profit from the record of his presidency, including from top secret materials that he will assert belong to him and that he will take with him, so he can use those secrets to his advantage in business deals after he leaves office.
It doesn’t matter if what’s good for Donald Trump is also good for America. What’s good for Donald Trump is good for Donald Trump, and to hell with the rest of it. That is now the foreign policy of the United States in a single sentence.
News from the home front: My wife, Tracy Harris, has begun her own Substack, writing about our life together in Milford and reporting on the dreams and aspirations of our many cats and dog and other goings on. Here is a link to her latest column, where you can sign up for a subscription:




