EFTA00634535.pdf
dataset_9 pdf 525.1 KB • Feb 3, 2026 • 5 pages
From: Terje Rod-Larsen
To: Jeffrey Epstein cJeevacation@gmail.com>
Subject: Fwd: The Time of Trump's Surprises and Putin's Alliances I isaii 4 11116:3 d+tia
Date: Sun, 05 Feb 2017 18:43:58 +0000
Sent from my iPhone
Begin forwarded message:
From: Raghida Dergham
Date: February 5, 2017 at 09:52:55 GMT
To: Terje R?d-Larsen
Subject: The Time of Trump's Surprises and Putin's Alliances I od:cti calLaSi crud.; i=a4LIA CsAi
Reply-To: Raghida Dergham c
English Link: The Time of Trump's Surprises and Putin's Alliances
Arabic Link: ,4•11) d÷lia
The Time of Trump's Sur n nd Putin's Alli n
The first ten days of Donald Trump saw the controversial new US president deliver on many of his
campaign promises. He has disrupted usual government business and has brought a seismic shock
that has shaken Washington and world capitals. The new president grabbed for his magical pen, and
signed astonishing executive orders, deliberately pre-empting the traditional work of his cabinet
appointees and his administration. The silver lining is that Trump has settled the debate on whether he
will adapt with the post of president, and made it clear to all that he intends to put to practice all that he
had pledged as candidate, heading off speculations and assumptions. The frightening news is that
Trump may truly take the United States towards unravelling, and the world towards a perfect storm,
crashing the international order without setting up an alternative. It might be said that the internal re
sistance to Donald Trump's orders and measures could force him to reconsider and back down.
However, Trump for his part is betting on exhausting his opponents, as they dash to catch up with his
relentless executive orders. Meanwhile, ten days into his presidency, there has been increasing talk of
his impeachment, because some argue America will not allow him to dismantle it, drag it to civil war,
impoverish it, harm is global influence, and allow China and Russia to take its superpower status.
Trump's supporters are gloating, taunting those dreaming to topple the president. They are certain that
Trump will truly make America 'great again', and that his foreign policy realism will build a new world
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order and unprecedented alliances, that would in turn lead to American and global prosperity. Russia
is pivotal to Trump's calculations. Trump's close associates say he will not base relations with Moscow
on the basis of ethical standards but on the basi s of what it would take for the dealmaker in chief to
cut a deal. People well familiar with Trump say he will pursue realpolitik to build alliances and modify
policy on Iran and Syria, and will split the world into allies who are useful for the US and rewarded
accordingly, and non-allies who will be made to pay the price for their positions and non-usefulness.
The new US envoy to the UN, Nikki Hailey, began her tenure by stressing an intent to show strength
and vowed that those who don't support us will face appropriate consequences. We want to support
our allies, she said, but our allies must support us too. Hailey added that the new administration will
focus more on bilateral relations, perhaps at the expense of multilateral ones. Haley's statements were
received with surprise when she undiplomatically threatened: "For those that don't have our back,
we're taking names, we will make points to respond to that accordingly."
And who exactly are America's allies in the age of Trump? He has antagonized Mexico with his plans
for a border wall, banned travelers from seven Muslim-majority countries and refugees, drawing fierce
criticism including from neighboring Canada, and rankled NATO allies including Britain, which has
been scrambling to protect the so-called special relationship with the US under the new administration.
A source close to Trump's inner circle said: "We are determined to help those who truly help us and
prove their worth in the Middle East, including Saudi Arabia, Egypt, Jordan, and the Emirates." "At the
same time, we will condemn those we class as pariah states, Iran and Syria included." In short, the
source added, "It is a simple equation: be an honest ally, and we will be willing to help in return."
Interestingly, the source spoke of the US desire for Saudi Arabia to help keep Iran in check, without
elaborating. The Trump administration wants Saudi Arabia to take a proactive role in stopping terror
financing, not necessarily in an overt manner. "The bottom line is that Saudi Arabia will be closer to the
United States," according to the high level source.
The Trump administration intends to strictly enforce the nuclear agreement with Iran rather than run it
through the paper shredder. It will put Iran on notice through intense scrutiny. If Tehran violates the
deal, "the agreement will be void and we will jump to accountability," the source stressed.
How will the Trump administration modify the once-favorable US attitude on Iran's expansionism in the
Arab sphere, especially in Iraq, Syria, Yemen, and Lebanon? It is not clear yet whether the Trump
administration will adopt Obama's greenlighting of Iranian incursions in Iraq and Syria in the name of
helping in the fight against ISIS and jihadists. There are hints that change could come through the
Yemeni gateway, but there are no fully developed policies yet to clarify whether or how the anticipated
rapprochement with Saudi Arabia will be reflected in Yemen. Clearly so far, that won't happen in Syria.
Russia remains the most important player in Syria. The Trump administration is prepared to cur a deal
on the basis of 'give and take', and the art of the deal, rather than moral grounds as was the case
under President Obama — albeit rhetorically and to the exclusion of Syria, as the source remarked.
The source said the policy based on urging Assad to step down under Obama was rhetorical, and
never intended to be enforced. "Bashar al-Assad is still in power. This is a fact. Accordingly, the new
policy will be based on acknowledging this but classing him as rogue and isolating him."
In other words, the thinking in the Trump administration is that Obama had pursued an unrealistic
policy, while Trump is looking to "change declared policy to match reality." The Trump administration
will abandon the policy of regime change in Syria, and focus instead on isolating Assad "who has
committed war crimes against his people and will remain a pariah."
The current wager is on a deal whereby Assad would go into exile, or coax Russia into joining the
effort of isolating Assad, once it ascertains that the US will not be seeking regime change in Syria,
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according to the source.
At any rate, US-Russian negotiations have not yet begun in earnest. It is still too early to scrutinize the
elements of any putative grand bargain that Putin and Trump may want to conclude. Indeed, what is at
stake goes beyond Syria or even Ukraine. It involves major interests and it will not be necessarily easy
or close. In the meantime, Russia will continue to manage things in Syria with Turkey and Iran, while
the West's absence on this issue is set to continue, under the pretext that Russia has hijacked the
Syrian issue from the UN Security Council to Astana.
UN Secretary General Antonio Guterres has considered UN participation in Astana to be a
reaffirmation of its role in the peace process, stressing that the substantial negotiations would take
place on February 20 in Geneva under the auspices of his envoy Staffan De Mistura. He said that the
transition in Syria affirmed by the Geneva Communique will be a central issue in those talks between
regime and opposition. For his part, De Mistura has warned the opposition that if it fails to form a
unified delegation for the talks, he would take action and form the delegation himself as part of his
authorities granted by resolution 2254. This statement riled up figures in the Syrian opposition, but the
opposition today is being pulled in different directions as Turkey abandons its support and Russia and
Iran now guarantee the ceasefire, all while the Gulf nations have washed their hands clean of Syria
and the US administration signals its intentions to sacrifice the rebels but while maintaining support for
the Syrian Democratic Forces (complete with armored vehicles this week for the fight against ISIS.)
The projects for Syria are conflicting, especially the three projects of Russia, Turkey, and Iran
respectively. It is not clear what has happened recently between Russia and Iran with regards to their
divergent schemes. Russia wants a strong regime in Damascus with the withdrawal of all foreign
forces including those backed by Iran. Iran, however, wants to keep its influence in Syria through
paramilitary forces along the lines of its own Revolutionary Guards. These issues will be on hold for
now, according to Guterres, who has indicated the withdrawal of foreign forces from Syrian include all
forces without exception. But reality on the ground has the final say, and there is competition to shape
things in a de facto manner in Syria ahead of any talks and final deals.
Anything and everything is possible in the time of unconventional surprises promised by Trump, and
unconventional alliances being drafted by Trump and Putin. Everyone is realigning themselves
accordingly in a landscape of quicksand and seismic shifts.
Raghida Dergham
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