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Former Commerce Secretary Raimondo argues that the US cannot effectively compete with China's economic and technological scale alone. Therefore, the current administration's most significant strategic error is antagonizing essential allies in Europe and Southeast Asia.

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Despite friction with the US, allies like Germany have no real economic alternative in China. The US is an 'empire of consumption'—a massive market to sell to. In contrast, China's model is to sell its own goods while cloning and stealing foreign technology, making it a dangerous long-term economic partner.

The United States' greatest strategic advantage over competitors like China is its vast ecosystem of over 50 wealthy, advanced, allied nations. China has only one treaty ally: North Korea. Weakening these alliances through punitive actions is a critical foreign policy error that erodes America's primary source of global strength.

The U.S. is undoing 25 years of bipartisan work by pushing India away with punitive tariffs. This is a massive strategic blunder, as India is the only country with the population and industrial scale to serve as a viable supply chain alternative to China, making it a critical geopolitical partner.

By dismantling the post-WWII global order, the Trump administration forces allies to realign with China. As the U.S. retreats from global partnerships, China is positioned to dominate key industries like renewable energy, making the 21st century "the China century" by default as the world moves on without America.

Contrary to its goals, the U.S. trade war has resulted in self-isolation. Data shows the U.S. is the only country buying less from China, while U.S. allies and developing nations have increased their trade, leading to a record $1 trillion surplus for China. This highlights a strategic miscalculation in U.S. foreign trade policy.

In private meetings, European leaders admit their increased engagement with China is a strategic, albeit self-destructive, response to feeling pushed into a corner by the Trump administration's behavior, according to former Commerce Secretary Raimondo.

Restricting allies like the UAE from buying U.S. AI chips is a counterproductive policy. It doesn't deny them access to AI; it pushes them to purchase Chinese alternatives like Huawei. This strategy inadvertently builds up China's market share and creates a global technology ecosystem centered around a key U.S. competitor.

Despite claims of being 'realist,' Trump's foreign policy is fundamentally anti-realist. By alienating allies, cutting R&D, and acting imprudently, it undermines the very sources of long-term American power—partnerships and technological superiority—that a true realist would seek to preserve.

The administration's aggressive, unilateral actions are pushing European nations toward strategic autonomy rather than cooperation. This alienates key partners and fundamentally undermines the 'Allied Scale' strategy of building a collective economic bloc to counter adversaries like China.

Far from being a precise tool against China, recent US tariffs act as a blunt instrument that harms America's own interests. They tax raw materials and machine tools needed for domestic production and hit allies harder than adversaries. This alienates partners, disrupts supply chains, and pushes the world towards a 'World Minus One' economic coalition excluding the US.