from Part IV - Language, White Nationalism, and International Responses to Trump
Published online by Cambridge University Press: 18 September 2020
Trump’s personal relationships with Middle Eastern leaders have disrupted the long-standing bureaucracy and image of American public diplomacy, especially as new policies hinge on Trump’s tweets about his personal feelings. This chapter reads Trump’s positionality vis-à-vis Middle Eastern politics through the lens of stance-taking, which structures relationships, ideologies, and identities. One of the striking dimensions of Trump’s stances with respect to the Middle East is the way he indexes Arab and Muslim hierarchies. By aligning with rich Arab Gulf states and dis-aligning with the larger majority of Muslims and Arabs, Trump produces a cluster of simplified binary stances evaluating “good/rich” and “bad/poor” Arabs and Muslims. Saudi royalty are friendly billionaires; al-Sisi of Egypt and Netanyahu of Israel are his partners in fighting Islamic terrorism; and the rest of Arabs and Muslims represent either radical Islamic threats or uncivilized refugees. Trumpian speeches about “rich Arabs” buying American arms and goods and the total absence of “other Arabs” (ordinary people in non-wealthy, but also Arab countries) are consistent with his overall diplomatic and economic view of “America First,” which speaks largely to an internal American base and is not only unconcerned with other cultures, but also callous to refugees and immigrants.
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