Trump puts ‘might is right’ principle on steroids in Gaza and Ukraine
By James M.
Dorsey
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Might is
right.
That sums up
US President Donald J. Trump’s vision of a 21st-century world order.
Barely a month in office, Mr. Trump has not wasted time creating building blocks for his worldview.
Mr. Trump’s
efforts to end fighting in Ukraine, coupled with his territorial ambitions in Gaza, Greenland, Panama, and Canada, have put the ‘might is right’
principle on steroids. So has the president’s unilateral renaming of the Gulf of Mexico as the
Gulf of America.
Russian
President Vladimir Putin and Israeli Prime Minister Binyamin Netanyahu are
probably popping champagne bottles. They could have hardly asked for more.
Mr. Trump
has signalled that his moves are part policy and part negotiating tactic.
Granted, at
times, Mr. Trump’s bark is worse than his bite.
Mexican
President Claudia Sheinbaum set an example
of how to curb Mr. Trump's worst instincts when she, earlier this month, using a combination of
toughness and a willingness to play ball, persuaded the president not to impose
tariffs, at least temporarily.
Canada
followed in Ms. Sheinbaum’s footsteps, adopting her approach as a template.
Europe may do the same.
Ms.
Sheinbaum and Canada’s success doesn’t detract from Mr. Trump’s application of
the ‘might is right’ principle in Gaza and Ukraine by legitimising ethnic
cleansing and wars designed to grab land.
The Mexican
president’s approach may not work in Ukraine and Gaza, at least not in ways
that would salvage a rules-based order governed by international law rather
than might.
Jordanian
King Abdullah, who visited the White House earlier this week, tried Ms.
Sheinbaum's approach but to no avail.
Mr. Trump
doubled down on his proposal to take control of Gaza, resettle its population
elsewhere, and turn the Strip into a high-end, beachfront real estate
development.
In doing so,
King Abdullah highlighted the fact that Gaza, like Ukraine but unlike Mexico
and Canada, raises the question of the degree to which supporters of a rules-based
world order engage with Mr. Trump when he applies the ‘might is right’
principle rather than international law.
Egypt, and possibly the Arab world, appears to have gotten the message.
Egyptian
security sources said President Abdel-Fattah al-Sisi would not travel to
Washington for talks with Mr. Trump if the agenda included the president's plan to displace
Palestinians from Gaza.
“We cannot
engage or negotiate with Donald Trump on issues related to international law,
not on values that are related to a human society, not on the sovereignty of
neighbouring countries… There is no engagement on this… There
is a confrontation on them,” said conflict resolution scholar Ibrahim Fraihat.
Although no
date was announced, Mr. Al-Sisi had been expected to visit Washington later
this month. In comments to the media in Mr. Trump’s presence, King Abdullah
said Egypt would present to the US president a "comprehensive vision"
for the reconstruction of Gaza that guarantees Palestinians the right to stay
on their land.
An Arab
summit scheduled for February 27 in Cairo is expected to produce a plan that,
beyond reconstruction, is likely to address post-war governance in Gaza. Arab
diplomats said the plan could involve an updating of a 2002 Arab peace plan that
called for recognition of Israel in exchange for an Israeli withdrawal from
territories occupied in the 1967 Middle East war.
Credit:
Wilson Center
The
diplomats said proposals range from an Egyptian suggestion for the creation of
a post-war administration made up of Gazan technocrats backed up by an
Arab-trained Palestinian security force. Egypt would convene a donor conference
to secure funding for the administration and reconstruction of the Strip.
Veteran
journalist and Middle East analyst Ehud Yaari reported that President Mahmoud
Abbas’s West Bank-based, internationally recognised Palestine Authority
submitted a US$31 billion, five-year plan for
the reconstruction of Gaza in three phases. The first phase would address Gazans’ immediate needs
in a territory in which Israel destroyed or damaged much of the housing stock
and critical infrastructure.
Mr. Yaari
said the plan envisions construction of a deep-water port, high-speed
transportation networks, renewable energy facilities, and advanced health and
education systems managed by a Gaza Rehabilitation Agency that would draw on a
fund established by donor countries.
Getting the
Cairo summit to adopt a plan may not be smooth sailing. Some Arab states are
more insistent than others on ensuring that reconstruction of Gaza is linked to
a credible path toward the creation of an independent Palestinian state.
Many doubt the
ability of an unreformed Authority, widely viewed as dysfunctional and corrupt,
to handle the reconstruction. They also question the ability of the Authority’s
security forces to take on Hamas’ continued presence in the Strip.
Similarly,
some Arab states, like the United Arab Emirates, believe the Cairo summit
should respond to Mr. Trump’s resettlement plan in the vein of Mexican
President Sheinbaum’s handling of the president. The Arab diplomats said that
rather than outright rejecting the plan, the UAE has suggested Arab endorsement
of the plan minus the resettlement element.
‘The bottom
line is Israel has no (post-war) plan - only immature ideas, the Palestinian
Authority has no credit, Egypt has no desire, and the Saudis are more
interested in investing in Syria… As a result, the Gazans’ chance…to rebuild
the Strip is still very distant,” Mr. Yaari said.
Credit:
Singapore Institute of International Affairs
The Gaza
war, the intricacies of Arab politics, and Ukraine illustrate why the renewed
dominance of the ‘might is right’ principle may not be surprising given the
rules-based order’s lack of an effective enforcement mechanism and the fact
that it allows a defendant or its protector in the United Nations Security
Council to veto a verdict.
If anything,
the rules-based order’s deficiencies reinforce the ‘might is right’ principle
in a world where a critical mass of leaders adhere to the principle instead of
upholding the rules.
At his first
NATO defense ministers conference, the contours of a Ukrainian-Russian peace outlined by Mr. Trump's defense
secretary, Pete Hegseth, suggest as much.
Messrs.
Trump and Putin would essentially negotiate the peace agreement with Ukrainian
officials left to hammer out the details with their Russian counterparts.
Credit: ANI
News
Mr. Trump’s
plan rewards Russia by allowing it to hold on to territories it captured in the
three-year-old Ukrainian war. The territories host 20 per cent of the East
European country’s rare earth minerals that power technology and are worth
hundreds of billions of dollars.
In addition,
Ukraine would concede its ability to join NATO with the United States
effectively ensuring that the alliance would reject a Ukrainian application.
To emphasise
the point, NATO members would contribute to a peacekeeping force in Ukraine as
individual states rather than under the alliance’s umbrella in what Mr. Hegseth
called a “non-NATO mission.”
The absence
of the NATO umbrella means the alliance’s Article 5 mutual defense obligation
would not apply to the peacekeeping force. Mr. Hegseth ruled out US
participation in the force but made no mention of intelligence or logistics
support or air cover for the force.
In return,
Ukraine’s existence as an independent, sovereign state would be guaranteed.
The proposed
deal’s upside is that it would end a debilitating war that Ukraine cannot
sustain without substantial US support, and that could lead to its demise if
left to fend for itself.
The problem
is that it potentially sets a precedent legitimising the 'might is right'
principle that can be adopted by others, including Mr. Trump as he eyes Gaza,
Greenland, Panama, and Canada, or Chinese President Xi Jinping, who claims
Taiwan and much of the South China Sea.
Mr. Trump “will
be measured as president by whether he achieves a just peace agreement that
doesn’t benefit the aggressor. The process is just beginning, but, so far, Trump doesn’t appear to have caved to
the Kremlin,” said
Washington Post columnist David Ignatius.
Mr. Ignatius
based his optimism on the assertion that Mr. Trump’s proposed deal resembles
the armistice that ended the Korean War and allowed South Korea to achieve
spectacular prosperity.
Moreover,
Mr. Trump kept in place the Biden administration’s restrictive energy sector
sanctions against Russia and voiced his continued support for Ukraine, even
though his blanket freeze of foreign aid affects Ukraine, too.
Even so, Mr.
Trump adopted Israel’s negotiating tactic that seek to strip the Palestinians
of whatever trump cards they may have before talks start. Only in the case of
Ukraine Mr. Trump surrendered Ukraine’s cards voluntarily.
The ‘might
is right’ principle’s other immediate litmus test is Gaza, as Qatar and Egypt successfully
scrambled to salvage the Strip’s ceasefire
agreement.
Mr. Trump
took the ‘might is right’ principle to new heights with his proposition that the
United States would take possession of Gaza without its 2.3 million Palestinian
residents based on “US authority” rather than international law.
Mr. Trump’s
proposition puts a potential future breakdown of the ceasefire and resumption
of the war that has made Gaza virtually inhabitable in a different, more urgent
light if that is possible.
Not that it
wasn’t already an example of what can happen when ‘might is right.’
The
difference is that Mr. Trump’s framework for an end to the Ukraine war erases
much of the perceived double standards in US policy towards Ukraine and Gaza, when
the Biden administration insisted on the application of international law in Europe
but not in the Middle East.
International
law is not part of Mr. Trump’s thinking. ‘Might is right’ is.
Dr. James M. Dorsey is an
Adjunct Senior Fellow at Nanyang Technological University’s S. Rajaratnam
School of International Studies, and the author of the syndicated column and
podcast, The Turbulent World with James M. Dorsey.

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