Donald Trump is ‘surprisingly’ good at foreign policy, according to former Australian prime minister Paul Keating.
Mr Keating said the United States was directionless under the previous three administrations and Barack Obama blew an opportunity to reshape the world.
On Friday Mr Keating said he had not expected Mr Trump to have ‘such a pragmatic’ foreign policy on China and Russia, and he urged the president to continue down the path he was on.
His comments came as the US President accepted a dramatic offer from North Korean leader Kim Jong-un to meet face-to-face.
Donald Trump (pictured) is ‘surprisingly’ good at foreign policy, according to former Australian prime minister Paul Keating
Mr Keating (pictured) said the United States was directionless under the previous three administrations and Barack Obama blew an opportunity to reshape the world
Mr Keating’s comments came as the US President accepted a dramatic offer from North Korean leader Kim Jong-un (pictured) to meet face-to-face
‘America has gone on for 24 years without a strategy,’ Mr Keating told a business conference in Sydney, during which he criticised Barack Obama’s timidity and ‘lack of policy ambition’ in office.
‘Trump has, surprisingly – and I hope he maintains this – put his hand up for the right policy.’
Mr Keating credited Mr Obama for avoiding major conflicts and underwriting some of the US’s economic recovery, but argued he failed on the world stage.
‘In terms of the big game, we lost two more terms,’ he said.
‘America has gone on for 24 years without a strategy,’ Mr Keating (pictured) told a business conference in Sydney
Mr Keating credited Mr Obama (pictured) for avoiding major conflicts and underwriting some of the US’s economic recovery, but argued he failed on the world stage
Mr Keating also criticised George W Bush (pictured) for blowing two presidential terms attempting to ‘propagate American values in the Middle East’
Mr Keating described Bill Clinton as a ‘domestic politician’ who missed the opportunity to remake the world after the fall of the Berlin Wall.
‘We lost two Clinton terms as these huge changes in the post-colonial world were taking place.’
He also criticised George W Bush for blowing two presidential terms attempting to ‘propagate American values in the Middle East’.
‘Meanwhile China is growing in the east,’ he said.
The former prime minister described Mr Bush’s deputy secretary of defence Paul Wolfowitz as ‘dreadful’, and warned the US against attempting to remain a homogeneous power in Asia.
‘The Chinese will never accept it – we’ll have military problems, confrontations,’ he said.
‘It will all come unstuck.’
Mr Keating argued the US should be a ‘balancing power’ in Asia and learn to relinquish some control of the region.
Mr Trump’s strategy of using partnership diplomacy with China was a better approach than what Democrat Hillary Clinton would have adopted if elected, he added.
Mr Keating said Russia had the power to ‘obliterate’ the US, and urged Mr Trump to maintain a workable relationship with the Kremlin.
‘Russia alone has the capacity to obliterate the United States. If you’re a country that lives under the threat of obliteration, you generally should have a policy.’
The White House confirmed President Trump will meet the North Korean dictator (pictured), but said the time and place of the meeting was yet to be set
Mr Keating described Bill Clinton (pictured with Kim Jong-il) as a ‘domestic politician’ who missed the opportunity to remake the world after the fall of the Berlin Wall
The White House confirmed President Trump will meet the North Korean dictator, but said the time and place of the meeting was yet to be set.
‘President Trump greatly appreciates the nice words of the South Korean delegation and President Moon,’ said White House Press Secretary Sarah Sanders.
‘He will accept the invitation to meet with Kim Jong-un at a place and time to be determined.’
‘We look forward to the denuclearisation of North Korea. In the meantime, all sanctions and maximum pressure must remain.’