Analysis-Aiming to weaken US foes, Trump faces an ‘unholy alliance’

By David Brunnstrom, Michael Martina and Daphne Psaledakis

WASHINGTON (Reuters) – During his first term in office, U.S. President Donald Trump applied his particular brand of diplomacy with Washington’s adversaries, publicly befriending Russia and North Korea while separately piling pressure on China and Iran.

This time he faces a different kind of challenge: a more united group of U.S. antagonists who have drawn closer following Russia’s 2022 invasion of Ukraine.

Trump, who took office Monday, has vowed to end Russia’s war in Ukraine, curb Iran’s nuclear program and counter China while building up the U.S. military.

But in the past few years, Chinese President Xi Jinping and Russian President Vladimir Putin have forged a “no-limits partnership,” with Beijing giving Russia the economic support it needs to sustain its war in Ukraine.

On Tuesday, Putin and Xi proposed a further deepening of their strategic partnership during a long phone call after Trump was sworn in as U.S. president.

Russia has also signed strategic pacts with North Korea in June 2024 and Iran on Friday.

The grouping of four U.S. foes, which Biden’s ambassador to China recently called an “unholy alliance,” adds up to a loss of leverage for the U.S. and its partners, say analysts.

“The dilemma for Trump, who has expressed a desire to ‘get along with Russia,’ and who is trying to squeeze China on trade, is that Moscow’s partnership with Beijing limits both Russian willingness to engage with Washington and Chinese vulnerability to U.S. pressure,” said Daniel Russel of the Washington-based Asia Society Policy Institute, who headed East Asia policy under former President Barack Obama.

Russia has weathered intense Western sanctions largely thanks to massive purchases of Russian oil by China and a supply of dual-use goods that the previous Biden administration said prop up the Russian defense industrial base, a charge China denies.

North Korea is supplying soldiers and weapons for Russia in Ukraine and has rapidly advanced its nuclear missile program. And experts fear Iran, though weakened by Israel’s assault on its regional proxies, could restart its effort to build a nuclear weapon.

Members of the new administration acknowledge the challenge.

“China is buying oil from Iran for pennies on the dollar, Iran is using that to send missiles and drones into Russia, that is then hitting Ukrainian critical infrastructure,” said Mike Waltz, the incoming national security advisor in a Fox News interview in November.

In his Senate confirmation hearing last week, Secretary of State Marco Rubio labeled China as the gravest threat facing the United States and accused Moscow, Tehran and Pyongyang of sowing “chaos and instability.”

PEELING ALLIES AWAY FROM CHINA

Zack Cooper, a senior fellow focused on Asia at the American Enterprise Institute, said he thinks Trump’s team “will try to peel countries away from China.”

“They seem to want to wedge Russia, North Korea and Iran away from China, which means differentiating these threats rather than implying that they are inter-related,” Cooper said. “So pushing for a deal with Pyongyang and another one with Moscow seems most likely to me.”

Dividing the partners will not be easy.

North Korea, for one, may have less incentive to engage directly with the United States, said Michael Froman, who served in Obama’s cabinet as the U.S. trade representative and is now president of the Council on Foreign Relations think tank.

While Trump during his first term thought he could reach a deal with Pyongyang, Froman said it was unclear whether North Korea has an interest in engaging with the U.S. now that it has broader support from Russia and China.

Trump held unprecedented summits with North Korean leader Kim Jong Un during his first term and touts their rapport. Trump’s team is again discussing pursuing direct talks with Kim.

Some cracks in the countries’ ties are starting to appear.

Former deputy U.S. Ambassador to the United Nations under Biden, Robert Wood, questioned whether Tehran could rely on Moscow for help, citing the lack of Russian support for its ally, former Syrian President Bashar al-Assad, shortly before he was ousted.

“If I were Iran and I looked at how Russia abandoned Assad, I would be very concerned,” Wood said.

On Iran, Trump appears likely to return to the policy he pursued in his previous term that sought to wreck Iran’s economy to force the country to negotiate a deal on its nuclear program, ballistic missile program and regional activities.

Wood said all such efforts will be easier if the new administration focuses on strengthening U.S. alliances, a U.S. asset that Trump downplayed during his first term in office.

“You try to divide them where you can,” he said, referring to China, Russia, Iran and North Korea. “It’s so critically important to have and be able to rely on the kind of alliances that we have, because the United States can’t take on all of these players by themselves.”

(Additional reporting by Michelle Nichols and Gram Slattery; writing by Michelle Nichols; editing by Don Durfee and Alistair Bell)

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