Trump is angry with a world that won’t give him easy deals

Trump’s Unpredictability Doctrine Fails in Global Crises

Just as in Ukraine, Trump’s chaotic, bullying tactics are proving ineffective in the Middle East. His “nobody knows what I’ll do” mantra creates confusion but not real strategy.

This unpredictability, once sold as a strength, is a mix of erratic management and coercive control—intended to keep allies and opponents off-balance. But international leaders aren’t White House staffers or MAGA fans. They have their own national interests and can’t simply follow Trump’s whims.

At the NATO summit in The Hague, Trump’s disdain for European allies was clear. He still resents their military dependency on the U.S. and questions whether defending them from Russian aggression is America’s problem. NATO now scrambles to appease him, pledging 5% of GDP in defense by 2035, all while unsure whether he’ll remain committed.

Trump’s impulsive support for Israeli strikes on Iran stemmed more from ego and being manipulated by Netanyahu than strategic thinking. His administration wasn’t even aware war was coming. Some call this the “madman theory”—feigning irrationality to pressure opponents—but it may simply teach other nations that only nuclear weapons can guarantee survival.

Trump, however, isn’t interested in nuance or consequences. He’s frustrated by ceasefire failures, by looking manipulated, and by not getting his promised “wins.” His erratic style creates instability, making diplomacy harder and exposing his limited grasp of complex geopolitics.

Europe sees this clearly. NATO depends on a U.S. president whose doctrine is chaos, and whose defining trait—volatility—is the one thing allies can’t count on.

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