Is American Power Receding or Staging a Comeback?

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National security analyst KT McFarland sees fossil fuels as key to U.S. dominance. 

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KT McFarland and Joyce Giuffra '91
KT McFarland, right, a former national security aide in the first Trump administration, discusses foreign policy during her Rockefeller Center talk on Feb. 10. Joyce Giuffra 鈥91 served as moderator. (Photo by Eli Burakian 鈥00)
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What are the most pressing national security issues facing the new administration of President Donald Trump, and how can the United States effectively project leadership in an increasingly competitive global environment?

Delivering the annual Brooks Family Lecture on Feb. 10, Kathleen Troia 鈥淜T鈥 McFarland, who was deputy national security adviser early in Trump鈥檚 first presidency, said one of the best ways to guarantee America鈥檚 pre-eminence in world affairs is to ramp up domestic production of fossil fuels, a centerpiece of Trump鈥檚 鈥淎merica First鈥 agenda. 

鈥淚t鈥檚 going to be great for our economy,鈥 McFarland said. 鈥淎nd it has a knock-on effect in our foreign policy because our adversaries, Russia and Iran, are going to be really squeezed, very badly, very quickly, because the price of oil will fall below where they need it to be.鈥 

Conversely, she said, given alternatives to current dependence on costly Russian oil, 鈥淥ur allies, particularly in Europe, will be in a position where they won鈥檛 have to be blackmailed by Russia.鈥 

McFarland also held national security posts in the Nixon, Ford, and Reagan administrations. From 2010-2016 she was FOX News鈥 national security analyst. Co-sponsored by , her presentation to 150 people in Filene Auditorium and another 200 viewing the was moderated by Joyce Giuffra 鈥91, who served as deputy press secretary for U.S. Senate Majority Leader Bob Dole in the 1990s. 

Giuffra asked about the impact of raising tariffs on imported goods.

鈥淭hat gives somebody like President Trump, or whoever is in the White House, an enormous amount of bargaining leverage,鈥 McFarland answered, lamenting that taxes on vehicles exported from the U.S. have historically exceeded levies on imports. 

McFarland said the threat of higher tariffs will exact help from other countries in preventing unlawful immigration, citing 鈥渢he fentanyl issue, where China is participating and pushing fentanyl into the United States. Also the uncontrolled immigration of 10鈥攚ell, who knows how many鈥攎illion people鈥 across the Mexican and Canadian borders. 

Turning her attention to the war in Ukraine, McFarland predicted that, unlike former President Joe Biden, Trump would force the combatants to negotiate a peace settlement 鈥渢hat neither will like,鈥 and that rebuilding the war-torn democracy would provide opportunities for global investment. 鈥淲ithin five years, Ukraine would be fully integrated into the European economy. It would be like Poland,鈥 she said. 

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An audience listing to KT McFarland talk
KT McFarland鈥檚 talk was attended by 150 people in Filene Auditorium. (Photo by Eli Burakian 鈥00)

天美麻豆 another hot spot鈥擨ran鈥擬cFarland said, 鈥淭his one scares me the most,鈥 even though Iran鈥檚 proxy defenders, Hamas and Hezbollah, have been weakened by Israel, which has also destroyed its missile defense systems in Syria. 

鈥淚s Iran going to race to the bomb, to be in a position where they have nuclear weapons that everybody will be scared of? Or will they go to a negotiating table and figure out how to have some kind of a peaceful situation with their neighbors? I don鈥檛 know the answer to that,鈥 she said. 

As for Trump鈥檚 ambition for the U.S. to own or control Greenland and the Panama Canal, McFarland said 鈥渋t may sound bonkers, but it鈥檚 actually kind of brilliant.鈥 While cautioning that some of his provocative statements should be taken 鈥渟eriously but not literally,鈥 she shares his worry that both ends of the Canal are 鈥渃ontrolled by Chinese companies鈥 and proposed that Greenland鈥檚 location on a key trade route and its copious untapped resources call for 鈥渁n improved, increased strategic relationship.鈥

In a Q/A session. McFarland answered a student鈥檚 question about the role of renewable energy in shaping international power dynamics.

鈥淚鈥檓 a big believer in renewables, but I think they鈥檙e not there yet. To meet your domestic energy needs right now, you need to have fossil fuels,鈥 she said. 鈥淲hichever country has its own domestic supply of energy has been a country that鈥檚 had an enormous advantage. And countries that don鈥檛 have energy go to war to get it.鈥

Responding to another student, McFarland criticized programs promoting diversity, equity, and inclusion in the military, which she said has already been a forerunner in desegregation. 

鈥淚f you鈥檙e going to spend a lot of time more concerned with social issues and checking the box of which group is represented, you鈥檙e not going to have time or bandwidth or resources to defend the United States and take care of the armed forces,鈥 she said. 

Following the conversation, Emma Brulotte 鈥28 and Nevaeha Carroll 鈥28 lingered in their seats to talk over what they had heard.

鈥淚 think it鈥檚 very valid to support your former boss, but McFarland was making claims that she supports clean energy and wants to see it developed more into the future while also dismissing the fact that the person that she is supporting is gutting clean energy initiatives and research. That juxtaposition really stood out to me,鈥 said Brulotte.

Carroll describes herself as a liberal from a small town in Texas where conservative views hold sway. She said McFarland helped her reach a fresh understanding of 鈥渨hy President Trump says the things he says and why he acts the way he does and why his cabinet members have taken these stances. She did a very good job of explaining where they鈥檙e coming from and how they鈥檙e thinking. So I now understand better what that is, even though I may not agree with it.鈥

Before leaving the auditorium, McFarland, who had met with students earlier in the day, commended their open-mindedness. The next Rockefeller Center event, on Feb. 13 in Hinman Forum, will be a roundtable discussion about journalistic neutrality when covering politics in a polarized environment.

Charlotte Albright