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You Can't Quit America - NY Times 본문

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You Can't Quit America - NY Times

오뚝이충 2025. 8. 2. 17:10

https://www.nytimes.com/2025/07/29/opinion/trump-trade-deal-europe.html

 

Opinion | You Can’t Quit America

U.S. power is too big to escape or isolate or ignore.

www.nytimes.com

 

But since that walk-back, the president has enjoyed a run of victories, establishing a new base line for U.S. tariff revenue with minimal retaliation from our trading partners. The deal that Ursula von der Leyen, the president of the European Commission, sealed with Trump is part of this new normal, in which most countries appear willing to pay extra for access to our markets, and it's not America but the rest of the world seems to be chickening out. 

 

But both conceits — a world economic order that isolates America and a liberal order that continues on without us — are fundamental misreadings of the global situation, which the foreign leaders who have bowed to Trump’s demands seem to understand quite clearly.

 

The first thing they understand is that American economic power is just too big to escape or isolate or ignore. Before Trump’s 2024 victory the economic story was one in which American growth was clearly pulling away from our peer economies in Europe and East Asia. Since Trump’s return to power, the economic story is one in which even protectionist policies that almost every economist deplores haven’t prevented the American stock market from rising and the American growth machine from churning onward.

 

Moreover, even if Trump reverts to deeper folly and causes a recession, the forces favoring the United States over Germany or Britain or South Korea or Japan will still be present in the next administration and beyond. Almost all of our liberal-democratic peers are poorer than we are and too sclerotic to suddenly surge past us. There is just no booming, youthful, dynamic, entrepreneurial zone capable of taking the place of America in a network of free economies, and therefore no substitute for trade with our companies and access to our markets, even at a Trumpian price.

 

There is, of course, the People’s Republic of China, which is strong enough to stand up to Trump’s bullying and dynamic enough to stand as a counterweight to American economic might. But unless your country is already authoritarian — and not necessarily even then — the risks of throwing yourself fully into China’s orbit are still much more extreme than the costs of managing a populist administration in Washington. This doesn’t mean other countries won’t end up trading more with China because of American protectionism. But there is no plausible world where China simply replaces the United States as a trusted partner and pillar of globalization.

Here the economic story links up with the political one. If it’s implausible to imagine a network of European and Asian economies prospering without the American leviathan, it’s even less plausible to imagine some kind of liberal world order reconstituting itself separately from the United States.

Should American power retreat fully from that role, there is no liberal successor waiting in the wings. And the concessions made to Trump by NATO members on military spending targets, like the European Union’s trade concessions, reflect an awareness of this reality — in which it’s always better to help prop up the Pax Americana than to seek to build a post-American system.

Over the years I have known both left-wing and right-wing Americans who have decamped from our country for what seem like more politically congenial situations — escaping wokeness in Eastern Europe, escaping Trumpism in Canada or Britain.

 

My suggestion to these friends has been consistent: Whatever your ideals or fears, whatever your beliefs about the good society, the battles you care about will be won or lost in the United States.

 

The refuges are illusory, the alternatives are compromised or weak, and the future of freedom will be American or it will not be at all.