"It is not only the Republican establishment confronting the once-unthinkable reality that Donald Trump is the presumptive GOP presidential nominee.
World leaders who previously dismissed and ridiculed the former reality TV star also are adjusting to a new normal.
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British Prime Minister David Cameron,
who at one point called Trump's proposed ban on Muslim foreigners
entering the United States "divisive, stupid and wrong," said Thursday
at a press conference with Japanese Prime Minister Shinzo Abe that Trump
"deserves our respect" for making it through the primaries.
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Abe, whose country was aghast at Trump's idea of Tokyo acquiring nuclear weapons, was unable to suppress a smirk at his host's comments.
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The British leader did not offer an actual mea culpa for his earlier statements,
despite a Trump adviser having called on Cameron to apologize for his
initial outburst. Indeed, Cameron went on to say that his view about
Trump's comments remains.
........
"I'm very clear that the policy idea that was put forward was wrong, is wrong and will remain wrong, so I'm very clear on that," he said.
........
"I'm very clear that the policy idea that was put forward was wrong, is wrong and will remain wrong, so I'm very clear on that," he said.
........
But
the nod toward Trump marks a subtle shift. Last month, in his first
formal foreign policy speech, Trump offered a largely isolationist
vision that challenged decades-old foreign policy assumptions of the
United States and its allies.
.........
Polls show his charges that NATO member countries need to pay more of their share and that the United States should avoid getting involved in costly wars resonate with the American people.
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Polls show his charges that NATO member countries need to pay more of their share and that the United States should avoid getting involved in costly wars resonate with the American people.
...........
Many
U.S. allies who dismissed Trump as a clown are now starting to respond
to the very real possibility that he could become the next leader of the
free world.
..........
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In February, in response to Trump's pledge to make Mexico pay for a vast wall along the country's border to keep illegal immigrants out of the United States, former Mexican President Vicente Fox retorted, "I'm not going to pay for that f---ing wall." Last
week, Fox took to right-wing media to mend fences. In an interview with
Breitbart News, Fox offered an apology to Trump: "If I offended you,
I'm sorry.""...
...........
[Ed. note: Since then, Vicente Fox has described Trump voters as "lazy drunks:" "He (Vicente Fox) disparaged Trump supporters as lazy, uneducated, TV watching drunks....We need them to take them away from the TV and drinking beer,
to working hard, to getting the skills, to getting knowledge." 5/6/16, "Pelosi, Vicente Fox plot to defeat Trump, Mexican calls Trump voters lazy drunks," Wash. Examiner]
(continuing): "When announcing his presidential campaign in June, Trump made headlines for calling Mexicans who cross the border to the U.S. "rapists" who bring drugs and crime, though he also said, "Some, I assume, are good people.""...
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[Ed. note: "Mexico would have died...without the option to send its rural poor-fully one-fifth of its
population-to the United States."...6/17/2013, "Syria and Egypt can't be fixed," by Spengler, Asia Times]
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(continuing): "Mexicans are not alone in having been
offended by the billionaire businessman. A wide range of U.S. allies
have found themselves in Trump's crosshairs, or in disagreement with his
policies at some point during the campaign. Russian President Vladimir Putin, with whom the United States has frosty relations, has been the rare world leader with positive words for the Republican candidate.
.........
But
with the growing chances of a Trump presidency, international figures
are beginning to swallow their distaste and jump aboard what his
advisers call the "Trump Train" -- or at least temper their comments.
...........
...........
China,
a frequent Trump target for alleged currency manipulation and unfair
trade practices, has generally avoiding wading into the U.S. political
campaign. But even Finance Minister Lou Jiwei last month called the
candidate "irrational" over his proposal to impose tariffs on imported Chinese goods."...
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[Ed. note: 5/9/15, "China Continues to Prop Up Its Ailing Factories, Adding to Global Glut," Wall St. Journal, ]
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(continuing): "After Trump's strong showing in Indiana on Tuesday, and on the heels of Trump's recent statements that China was "raping" the United States
in unbalanced trade deals, China's Foreign Ministry offered a more
positive, if still pointed, commentary on the likely Republican nominee.
...........
"What needs to be pointed out is that the essence of Sino-U.S. trade and business cooperation is mutually beneficial and win-win, and accords with the interests of both sides," Foreign Ministry spokesman Hong Lei told reporters. "We hope people in all fields in the U.S. can rationally and objectively view this relationship."
"What needs to be pointed out is that the essence of Sino-U.S. trade and business cooperation is mutually beneficial and win-win, and accords with the interests of both sides," Foreign Ministry spokesman Hong Lei told reporters. "We hope people in all fields in the U.S. can rationally and objectively view this relationship."
..........
But others are still outspoken about their negative view of a President Trump.
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Saudi Prince Turki al-Faisal, a former ambassador to the United States with close ties to Washington, warned Thursday against that scenario."...
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[Ed. note: Saudi Arabia is ISIS: 11/20/15, "Saudi Arabia, an ISIS That Has Made It," NY Times op-ed, Kamel Daoud, a columnist for Quotidien d’Oran, is the author of “The
Meursault Investigation.” This essay was translated by John Cullen from
the French. "Black
Daesh, white Daesh. The former slits throats, kills, stones, cuts off
hands, destroys humanity’s common heritage and despises archaeology,
women and non-Muslims. The latter is better dressed and neater but does
the same things. The Islamic State; Saudi Arabia. In its struggle
against terrorism, the West wages war on one, but shakes hands with the
other. This is a mechanism of denial, and denial has a price: preserving
the famous strategic alliance with Saudi Arabia at the risk of
forgetting that the kingdom also relies on an alliance with a religious
clergy that produces, legitimizes, spreads, preaches and defends
Wahhabism, the ultra-puritanical form of Islam that Daesh feeds on."...1/20/15, "How Saudi Wahhabism Is the Fountainhead of Islamist Terrorism," Huffington Post, Dr. Yousaf Butt, London. updated, ]
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(continuing): "A
student in the United States in the 1960s, Turki told guests at a
dinner for the Washington Institute for Near East Policy that he enjoyed
"the spectacle" of American elections, which he described as "sometimes
uplifting, other times the opposite."
.......
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"For
the life of me, I cannot believe that a country like the United States
can afford to have someone as president who
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"It's
up to you, it's not up to me," Turki said. "I just hope you, as
American citizens, will make the right choice in November.""
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READ: Donald Trump's foreign policy: 'America first'
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READ: Donald Trump's foreign policy: 'America first'
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