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Culture War Roundup for the week of October 3, 2022

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That's exactly the definition of "Credibility Destroying" in foreign policy. Credibility is generally portrayed as avoiding calculations of precise advantage in favor of broadly "having your friends' backs" and sticking to the first idea you had regardless of how it is going. Think of it as the difference between a friend that will always jump in if you get into a fight out at the bar, versus a friend who will ask whether you started it.

I tend to agree, the whole "Trump wants to destroy NATO" memes were ridiculous, Trump's statements were that if EU allies weren't meeting treaty obligations then the treaty wasn't in force. Which is the only way to get allies to meet their commitments, really. Nonetheless, Trump represented a break from the prior Blob position on the topic, and the Obama-Trump-Biden sequence of elections makes the USA broadly unreliable in foreign policy compared to the relative continuity of the Bush-Clinton-Bush-Obama Washington Consensus years, when elections didn't seem to have any impact on American foreign policy.

That's exactly the definition of "Credibility Destroying" in foreign policy.

If this is true I think your post should probably use a word that doesn't mean the opposite of its plain english meaning to avoid confusion.

It's been the term used, confusingly, for decades by Neocons in the foreign policy discourse. Though your post really shows that maybe everyone else isn't as plugged into that discourse of Omni-Belligerent hawks vs restraints on American commitments, which might explain why the post seems to have confused some people.