The Atlantic

The Rise of ‘Revisionist’ America

The U.S. president doesn’t want to play by the international rules the U.S. itself set.
Source: Kevin Lamarque / Reuters

H. R. McMaster, Donald Trump’s former national-security adviser, used to warn of the dangers of “revisionist powers.” He had in mind countries like China and Russia that are newly ascendant and determined to amend to their advantage the global status quo: a decades-old, U.S.-led international system of free trade, military and diplomatic alliances, and liberal rules and institutions that govern how countries conduct themselves.

But the U.S. president’s recent Europe trip, which whisked him from a with the secretary general of to a with the president of Russia, made one thing clearer than it’s ever been before: The call is also coming from inside the house. Trump is a revisionist, even if many of his advisers may still conceive of the United States as the world’s leading

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