Skip to content
Detailed Information
Title
Author
Andreas Krieg
Institution
King's College London
Abstract
In drafting its Middle East policy, the Trump administration appears to depart from the soft power rhetoric of the Obama years, seemingly favoring a more hawkish, hard power approach to dealing with America’s most important interests in the region: the defeat of ISIS and the containment of Iran. While many regional partners hope for a radical U.S. foreign policy shift after years of perceived American disengagement, Trump seems to be constrained by path dependency. He inherits a region in turmoil, a public adverse to regional military engagements for peripheral interests, and a major strategic discrepancy between ambition and capability. Consequently, the new White House will be forced to continue Obama’s policy of delegation and multilateralism.
Date of Publication
Recommended citation
Krieg, Andreas. “Trump and the Middle East: ‘Barking Dogs Seldom Bite.’” Insight Turkey, vol. 19, no. 3, 2017, pp. 139–158.
0.000
Reviews