In diplomacy, style now matters just as much as substance.
Suzanne Nossel,
The Lester Crown senior fellow for U.S. foreign policy and international order at the Chicago Council on Global Affairs.Trump holds up a finger as he speaks to the press, with microphones pointed at him.U.S. President Donald Trump speaks with the media aboard Air Force One as he flies from Washington to Israel on Oct. 12. Saul Loeb/AFP via Getty Images
The deal between Israel and Hamas to end two years of war is a triumph for U.S. President Donald Trump. Trump thrust himself to the center of one of the world’s bloodiest conflicts and brokered a cease-fire at a moment of great geopolitical uncertainty. Although Trump’s startling bombast often evokes head-shaking from diplomats and policy wonks trained to eschew self-aggrandizement, the deal shows that his flair for high-wire, personality-driven diplomacy can be remarkably potent.
Trump understands that politics is in large part about performance. In his second term, unconstrained by more traditional and cautious advisors, he has turned diplomacy into must-see reality TV that lets viewers tune into unscripted Oval Office meetings, rambling speeches, and off-the-cuff Truth Social posts. Like Larry David or Jerry Seinfeld, he plays an exaggerated version of himself in public, mugging to a crowd that revels in his antics. He is auteur, leading man, and
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