by Vitaly Ryumshin
Gazeta.ru political analyst
November 13, 2024
from
RT Website
This article was first published by
the
online newspaper Gazeta.ru
and was translated and edited
by the RT team.
U.S. President-elect Donald Trump.
© Chip
Somodevilla/Getty Images
In one of the biggest
comebacks since Lazarus,
the 45th US
president
will also be the 47th...
It seems that humanity has managed to turn back the clock to 2016.
The sense of déjà vu that haunted me
throughout November 6 was too strong:
the US presidential election once again
didn't go according to plan, sociologists are scratching their
heads in bewilderment because all their predictions have failed,
American liberals are crying, internet trolls are gloating,
Western Europeans are tense, and Russians are jubilant...
At the center of it all is
Donald Trump, president-elect
again, preparing to turn the world upside down... for real this
time...!
The election results clearly showed that Americans were fed up with
the old establishment and the strange progressive ideas of which
Kamala Harris was an
ambassador.
The false public image created by the Democratic
Party's 'political technology' apparatus didn't help her either.
While Kamala was buying up celebrities and
giving scripted interviews to loyal journalists under the
watchful eye of her PR team, Trump was standing behind the fryer
at McDonald's, driving around Wisconsin in a garbage truck and
chatting amicably with blogger Joe Rogan on his podcast.
This eventually resonated with the nation, and
for most, he was a more acceptable figure.
However, I will not dwell on the reasons for Trump's victory.
The more relevant question now is what his second
term will be like.
Should we expect something fundamentally new,
or will it be a remake of his first rodeo, with managerial
chaos, multiple investigations and endless clowning?
And most importantly, how will his presidency
affect Russia and the prospects for resolving the Ukraine
conflict?
The short answer is that no one knows for sure
because it is still unclear exactly what kind of environment the
Trump presidency will take place in.
The Republicans were able to maintain their
majority in the House of Representatives, which is a positive, but
we don't know all the names of the people who will hold key
positions in the White House.
And they will influence his policies...
At the same time, there are indications that Trump's new four-year
term will at least be more meaningful than the previous one.
Firstly, no one will dare
question the legitimacy of the elected president. In 2016,
Trump's victory seemed unnatural (Clinton won the popular vote).
This led people to see his presidency as a failure of the system
and to speculate about foreign interference.
Now Trump has safely won both the electoral
and popular votes. The Democrats are unlikely to dispute this.
There could be a flare-up of political tensions if Trump starts
taking revenge on all those who have wronged him (which the
Democrats are very afraid of).
But I think a truce is more likely.
The Democratic Party is facing a massive
internal showdown, with a search for those responsible for its
electoral woes.
The president-elect has never been
particularly eager to follow through on his threats (remember:
Hillary Clinton wasn't
jailed).
Second, the Trump of 2024 is not the same as the
Trump of 2016.
Eight years ago, a somewhat naive businessman
who thought running a government was as easy as building
skyscrapers in Manhattan entered the White House.
Since then, however, Trump has matured politically, learned to
compromise and completely taken over the Republican Party.
The bitter experience of his first
administration, filled with random and often disagreeable
people, suggests that this time he'll have a clear plan of
action and a suitable team under him.
For Russia, the positions of Secretary of State
and National Security Advisor are of particular interest.
These are the people who will determine the
foreign policy of the second Trump administration - and whether he
will keep his promise to end the
conflict in Ukraine.
There is the former US ambassador to Germany, Ric Grenell.
He hangs out in European right-wing circles,
opposes Ukrainian membership in NATO and favors the creation of
'autonomous zones' there (i.e. recognizing Russia's control over
the south-east).
Grenell is being considered for Secretary
of State or National Security Adviser - if he takes
either position, it would be rather good news for us.
It would be doubly good if other foreign policy
positions were filled by people with similar views (Marco Rubio or
Bill Hagerty).
There's also Trump's former national security adviser, Robert
O'Brien.
He's also a contender for the top job, but is
seen as a 'hawk'.
O'Brien supports military aid to Ukraine, and
his selection could be a sign that potential negotiations
between Moscow and Washington will be difficult.
Of course, whoever Trump picks, we should not
expect a ''ceasefire in 24 hours' - that is, to put it mildly, an
unrealistic exaggeration.
But I believe that under him, serious
settlement talks could actually begin in
2025. Well, at least there will be an attempt to start a peace
process.
The other question is,
What methods will the president use to
achieve this?
What will his proposal be and what will he
ask of Russia in return for concessions?
But it is probably too early to speculate about
that.
For now, let's look at the new US
president-elect's first steps...
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