Foreign policy, however, is not Atlantic City. Reality eventually sends invoices. Empires, markets, alliances, oil prices, logistics chains, and wars possess the irritating habit of refusing to obey television scripts.
The problem begins when political theater ceases to be theater and becomes statecraft. Hyperbole can sell condominiums. It performs poorly when handling alliances built over eighty years, global trade systems involving trillions of dollars, or wars in the Persian Gulf.
Trump’s second presidency increasingly resembles a case study in what happens when a marketing strategy mistakes itself for geopolitics.
The result resembles a casino owner trying to run the international system as if NATO were a licensing deal and the Strait of Hormuz were a golf resort negotiation.
Three decisions illustrate the pattern: tariffs, the progressive rupture with NATO and Europe, and the war with Iran.
Tariffs: The Emperor Discovers Supply Chains
Trump’s tariff doctrine rests on a beautifully simple premise: America is rich, therefore everyone needs access to the American market more than America needs access to theirs. Threaten tariffs, force concessions, declare victory.
In speeches, this sounds muscular and patriotic. In reality, the modern global economy resembles a spider web designed by accountants, engineers, and container ships. Pull one strand and the entire structure vibrates.
Trump treated tariffs as if they were paid by foreigners out of patriotic shame. Markets treated them as taxes on American consumers and manufacturers.
The irony is almost literary. Trump promised to restore American industrial supremacy through protectionism, only to discover that American industry itself depends on international supply chains. A Ford assembled in Michigan may contain parts crossing borders six times before completion. Tariffs in such systems resemble a man taxing his own left pocket to punish his right pocket.
The “truthful hyperbole” logic assumed other countries would panic and surrender. Instead, they retaliated. China adapted. Europe reorganized. Canada countered. Inflation rose. Markets became volatile.
The most revealing aspect was psychological. Trump appeared genuinely surprised that allies and competitors possessed agency. The worldview resembled a 1980s Manhattan real-estate negotiation transplanted into a multipolar world.
The result: America looked less like the architect of the global economy and more like a furious customer screaming at the plumbing inside his own house.
The hyperbole collided with arithmetic.
Arithmetic won.
Breaking With NATO and Europe: How to Turn Allies Into Competitors
Trump correctly identified a real issue: Europe had underinvested in defense for decades while relying heavily on American military power. That critique long predated Trump.
The catastrophe emerged from confusing leverage with humiliation.
Great alliances operate partly on power and partly on trust. NATO was not merely a military contract. It was the geopolitical operating system of the Western world since 1945. Trump approached it less as a civilization-scale alliance and more as a protection racket whose customers were behind on payments.
Repeated threats against European allies, flirtations with abandoning commitments, tariff wars against the EU, and erratic diplomacy gradually produced the one outcome Washington historically tried to avoid: a Europe strategically preparing for a future without reliable American leadership.
Europe’s reaction increasingly shifted from anxiety to adaptation. Germany accelerated rearmament. France pushed “strategic autonomy.” EU leaders openly discussed reducing dependence on Washington.
Trump believed fear would create obedience. Instead, fear created diversification.
It resembles the CEO who terrorizes his best customers until they start searching for alternative suppliers.
The deeper irony is geopolitical. The largest strategic beneficiary of Western fragmentation is neither Europe nor America. It is China and, to a lesser degree, Russia. The transatlantic fracture weakened precisely the coalition structure that had underwritten Western power for generations.
This was not “America First.”
It increasingly resembled “America Alone.”
The salesman’s instinct again mistook intimidation for leadership.
A hotel chain can bully franchisees.
Civilizations operate differently.
The Iran War: From Reality Television to Reality
Nothing reveals the limits of hyperbole faster than war.
Trump’s approach to Iran followed the same dramatic structure visible throughout his career: escalate rhetorically, project overwhelming confidence, dismiss constraints, promise rapid victory.
The difficulty is that Iran is not a bankrupt casino contractor from New Jersey.
The war exposed the dangerous gap between performative strength and strategic planning. Trump repeatedly oscillated between triumphalist declarations and contradictory improvisation. Iran was supposedly “finished” one week, yet the conflict continued escalating the next. Ceasefires were “complete victories” until they collapsed hours later.
The economic consequences spread globally. Oil prices surged. Inflation accelerated. The Strait of Hormuz became a geopolitical choke point threatening food, fertilizer, and energy markets worldwide.
Wars possess an inconvenient characteristic absent from television: the enemy also gets a vote.
The administration appeared to assume that displays of overwhelming force would automatically produce submission. Instead, the conflict produced regional instability, alliance tensions, domestic backlash, and strategic uncertainty.
The tragedy is as much historical as it is strategic. The United States spent decades constructing a reputation for predictability, institutional continuity, and alliance reliability. Hyper-personalized diplomacy replaced much of that with improvisation driven by instinct, grievance, and media cycles.
The “truthful hyperbole” that once helped sell luxury towers now risks normalizing permanent geopolitical brinkmanship.
Eventually, even supporters began confronting an uncomfortable reality:
Slogans cannot reopen shipping lanes.
Is There Still a Way Out? Probably — But Not Under Trump
There is still a way out for the United States.
The uncomfortable reality is that it is increasingly unlikely to happen under Donald Trump himself.
Trump’s political identity is built around escalation, doubling down, and personal infallibility. Admitting strategic error would contradict the central mythology of Trumpism: the idea that instinct always defeats expertise, disruption always produces strength, and every retreat signals weakness.
That makes course correction structurally improbable.
The same psychological mechanism that once made Trump successful in branding and media now traps him politically. In business, one can quietly abandon a failed casino, rename a hotel, or blame contractors. Presidents operate differently. Every reversal becomes global. Every inconsistency affects alliances, markets, military planning, and credibility.
Trump therefore governs inside a permanent performance loop. Each crisis generated by hyperbole demands even larger hyperbole to sustain the narrative.
The narrative must continuously expand because reality continuously resists it.
That is why the cleanup operation will likely fall to the next president, regardless of party.
And the cleanup will resemble post-disaster reconstruction more than ordinary policy adjustment.
The Next POTUS Inherits a Geopolitical Hoarder House
The next American president may discover that repairing institutions is harder than breaking them.
Destroying trust requires months.
Rebuilding it requires years.
The future administration will face at least five major repair operations simultaneously.
First, rebuilding alliance credibility. NATO allies and Asian partners will no longer automatically assume American continuity. European governments will continue diversifying defense capabilities independently of Washington. The next president will spend enormous diplomatic energy simply convincing allies that treaties still mean something.
Second, repairing economic predictability. Trump transformed tariffs into rolling geopolitical weather reports. Companies could no longer distinguish between industrial policy, campaign rhetoric, retaliation, or improvisation at 2 a.m. on social media. The next administration will inherit multinational firms redesigning supply chains around political unpredictability rather than economic efficiency.
Third, containing the Iran aftershocks. Wars rarely end when politicians announce victory. Even if active conflict diminishes, the strategic consequences remain: unstable energy markets, proxy conflicts, regional radicalization, strained military resources, and long-term distrust.
Fourth, restoring institutional professionalism. Career diplomats, intelligence professionals, military leadership, and regulatory agencies increasingly became targets of political suspicion whenever facts contradicted narratives. The long-term damage is subtle but profound. A superpower functions because thousands of institutions quietly produce continuity beneath politics. When expertise itself becomes politically suspect, the state gradually loses strategic memory.
Finally, repairing America’s reputation for rationality. For decades, allies and markets assumed that beneath political drama, the United States ultimately behaved rationally and predictably. Trump introduced a new variable: uncertainty about whether American decisions were driven by strategy or impulse.
That uncertainty now becomes part of every calculation involving Washington.
This may become Trumpism’s most enduring legacy.
Volatility.
The Final Irony
Trump built his political identity on the image of the master builder.
Yet future presidents may spend years acting less like conquerors and more like exhausted contractors repairing burst pipes, rewiring damaged systems, and explaining to allies why the house is still structurally sound after the previous owner attempted renovations with a flamethrower.
That is the hidden danger of governing through “truthful hyperbole.”
Eventually, reality stops negotiating.
Then someone else has to clean up the mess.
