President Trump Has Broken the Spell of Climate Change Mania

By Charles Moore, at The Daily telegraph

Donald Trump imposed punitive tariffs on steel imports exactly a year after he announced that the US would withdraw from the Paris climate change agreement. The two decisions are unrelated, except that both reflect the character of his presidency.

President Trump looks at any international arrangement on any subject – Iran, North Korea, trade, climate – and asks himself whether it is a good deal for America. If he thinks it is not, he starts making trouble. He loves a deal but, unlike some politicians on this side of the water, he sees no point in a bad deal.

When President Trump starts the trouble, he does not necessarily know where it will end. He is, if you like, open-minded; or, if you don’t like, irresponsible. He just wants a result, and will pull back if he thinks he won’t get the right one. In the case of his trade war, he will succeed if his action exposes unfair practices by trade rivals and forces them to change. He will fail if all he does is put up everyone’s prices, including, of course, America’s.

In the case of the Paris process, he has succeeded almost without trying. The answer to the question, “Which major country in the world has most successfully reduced its CO2 emissions?” is, “The United States of America”. US emissions hit a 25-year low last year. This success has nothing to do with the UN caravan, which has rolled on for 30 years, or, indeed, with Mr Trump. It has everything to do with the shale revolution – the triumph of much cleaner fossil fuels. Energy prices are falling.

By contrast, the greenest of the great economic powers, Germany and Japan, have poured money into renewables. They are consuming more coal than before, however, with Japan planning 36 new coal-fired power stations over the next 10 years. Since renewables are not reliable (because of intermittency), Germany must have more coal or lie prostrate before Mr Putin and his gas. Both Germany and Japan are increasing their carbon footprint because they have run away from nuclear. Energy prices are rising. China, after a slowdown, is increasing its CO2 emissions fast once again.

As for “Paris”, this is failing, chiefly for the reason that poorer countries won’t decarbonise unless richer ones pay them stupendous sums. The amount supposedly required to do this, agreed at the Copenhagen conference in 2009, was $100 billion a year, every year, from 2020; but no mechanism could be devised to compel the poor countries to restrict their emissions. At yet another conference in the process, in Bonn last month, the parties broke up without agreement on handing the money across. It is almost impossible to imagine real agreement, because it would be unenforceable.

If you look back, you can see that Copenhagen was the first ebbing of climate panic. Gordon Brown, then prime minister, told us that we had “50 days” to avoid catastrophe. Prince Charles warned delegates that “our planet has reached a point of crisis and we have only seven years before we lose the levers of control”. President Barack Obama, burnished by his freshly awarded Nobel Peace Prize, flew in. Yet all these great men failed to persuade the wretched of the earth to abandon their right to economic growth. “With your pens, you can write our future,” said HRH. The developing countries had the wit not to sign all the same.

Perhaps if Copenhagen had taken place before the global credit crunch of 2008, the world would have swallowed anything. The great paradox of greenery is that it is a boom phenomenon: only when a society is awash with dosh does it start believing it wouldn’t mind getting poorer. By December 2009, however, the dosh had evaporated.

The Paris conference of 2015 put a brave face on the failure of Copenhagen, by parading an agreement. But as the agreement was non-binding, and permitted countries to determine their progress on CO2 reductions unilaterally, it did not alter the reality. The whole UN process originated in the belief that global warming could be prevented only by a global solution. It never found that solution, and so, at Paris, was hoist with its own petard.

The Prince of Wales was proved wrong in 2016, when the “irretrievable climate and ecosystem collapse” that he had predicted did not show up. Yet he spoke truer than he knew when he made that warning about losing the levers of control. The global warmists lost those levers – if they ever had them – after Paris.

Mr Trump noticed this and felt free to walk away. US participation in the Paris arrangements formally ends the day after the next US presidential election. It will be a brave Democrat who campaigns for the White House on a “Let’s stay in” ticket. What’s in it, after all, for America?

Since Mr Trump walked out, it has been fascinating to watch the decline of media interest in “saving the planet”. There was the most tremendous rumpus when he made his announcement, but the End-Of-The-World-Is-Nigh-Unless feeling that made headlines before Rio, Kyoto, Copenhagen, Paris, and numerous other gatherings, has gone. This feeling was essential to achieve the “Everybody’s doing it, so we must do it” effect the organisers sought.

The media barely noticed the recent Bonn meeting. I doubt if they will get apocalyptic about the next big show, “COP24” in Katowice, Poland, this December. The Poles are among the nations emerging as “climate realists” – people with their own coal and a very strong wish not to depend on the Russians. Climate-change zealotry is looking like CND after the installation of cruise and Pershing missiles in the 1980s – a bit beside the point.

None of this means that activism will disappear. There will be strong anti-American campaigns and moves to impose ESG (environmental, social and governance) investment principles to make the lives of fossil-fuel companies a misery. In Britain, energy bill levies to subsidise renewables will probably continue to ensure that Theresa May’s famous “just about managing” people are just about screwed simply because they want light and heat in their home.

There will also be plenty more pieces of green showmanship. Here we have Claire Perry, our Minister for Energy and Clean Growth, who wants us “Powering Past Coal” just when we shall probably have to run after the stuff to keep the lights on. In France, Nicolas Hulot, the funky and untranslatable “Ministre de la Transition écologique et solidaire”, has ordered an end to the internal combustion engine by 2040, despite possessing six cars, a motorboat and a BMW motorbike. But M Hulot’s holiday from reality will not much affect the course of events, and Ms Perry has a lot less power than Rick Perry, Mr Trump’s Energy Secretary.

The great guardians of this attempt at government by global conferencing will continue to make their speeches and write their reports, usually paid for out of public funds. The frameworks and panels, the COPs and ARs, the climate-change organisations that fill 168 pages of Wikipedia, all these will continue, though with diminished status. Priesthoods usually find ways to survive longer than the belief systems they represent. But the recognition is now dawning that, if the planet needs saving, it will not be achieved by these means.

Read more at The Daily Telegraph

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John Garrett
June 3, 2018 5:45 am

HRH was pretty easy but “CND” stumped me.

“…Climate-change zealotry is looking like CND after the installation of cruise and Pershing missiles in the 1980s – a bit beside the point…”

After a little research, I’ll hazard a guess:
Campaign for
Nuclear
Disarmament

fretslider
Reply to  John Garrett
June 3, 2018 5:51 am

Well done.

You could have asked. Their latest idea…

Stop NATO 2018
https://cnduk.org/

Ed Zuiderwijk
Reply to  John Garrett
June 3, 2018 6:24 am

John. Anyone who has lived in the UK at any time in the 5 decades after 1945 will know what CND stands for. The fact that you had to look it up shows what a parochial lot they were and how right it was that they were ignored by those in power. Of course only nukes from the West were bad, the Pershings, the cruise missiles, the neutron bomb. The SS20s in the east were so okay that they weren’t even mentioned. A right bunch of hardcore hypocrites.

tom0mason
Reply to  John Garrett
June 3, 2018 8:43 am

CND was and still is the Fabian’s and the Socialist’s cudgel against government policy on nuclear arms in the UK.
CND was the Fabian Society’s test-bed for modern, mass advocacy driven, protests (morphed from CND into the politically left ‘rent a mob’ in the UK). Many in the Fabians push the “exploration of public attitudes to fairness in the context of sustainable consumption and Climate change”.

see https://fabians.org.uk/five-of-the-best-environment-speeches/ for more.

Reply to  tom0mason
June 3, 2018 10:50 am

Bertrand Russell’s CND, that “peacenik” who called to preemptively nuke the Soviet? The answer of the Czara Bomba was, well, it.
Russell’s Impact of Science on Society and Scientific Outlook are essential to understand how people are to be convinced snow is black, or indeed any shade of grey depending on cost, and never to know from whence come such beliefs.
Russell’s outlook has become pervasive : “I hate the world and almost all the people in it. . . . I hate the planet and the human race. I am ashamed to belong to such a species,” wrote Russell to Colette (Lady Constance Malleson) in 1916.

Kaiser Derden
June 3, 2018 6:17 am

I love how even in an article that on the surface is positive about Trump these virtue signaling authors manage to take a backhanded swipe at Trump …

“When President Trump starts the trouble, he does not necessarily know where it will end. He is, if you like, open-minded; or, if you don’t like, irresponsible. He just wants a result, and will pull back if he thinks he won’t get the right one. In the case of his trade war, he will succeed if his action exposes unfair practices by trade rivals and forces them to change. He will fail if all he does is put up everyone’s prices, including, of course, America’s.”

the one thing in common with all these quasi nevertrumper writers and pundits is that they all think he’s an idiot and has no plan (see above quote)… the second thing they all have in common is Trump is much smarter and craftier than they are and thus is always one or two moves ahead …

Ed Zuiderwijk
Reply to  Kaiser Derden
June 3, 2018 6:28 am

I didn’t read that as a swipe, rather as praise.

June 3, 2018 6:19 am

Climate news and climate change hysteria is still a huge news and political issue in Canada. Unfortunately.

Ed Zuiderwijk
Reply to  wildlifeperspectives
June 3, 2018 6:34 am

That will disappear once they vote out Justin, when they figured out whether Justin is a he, she or it.

Reply to  Ed Zuiderwijk
June 3, 2018 8:19 am

Peoplekind.

Alan Tomalty
Reply to  bonbon
June 3, 2018 9:46 am

In Canada we are living in the land Of OZ. Trudeau wants to spend $35 billion to reduce the world’s temperature increase by 0.005 C after 100 years from now.

Reply to  Alan Tomalty
June 3, 2018 10:21 am

Maybe Trump’s repeal of NAFTA will break that spell? Without the USA the entire CO2 spell wears off. Joke is most will have no memory of the spell, genuinely not believing they actually were that crazy, wondering where all that money went.

MarkG
Reply to  Alan Tomalty
June 3, 2018 11:13 am

And he wants to increase the price of fossil fuels with his Carbon Tax, then spends Canadian taxpayers’ money buying an oil pipeline because the BC liberals are whining about high oil prices due to Alberta threatening to cut off the supply of oil to them if the pipeline doesn’t go through.

Since he likes dressing up so much, maybe he could start wearing a clown suit.

TA
June 3, 2018 6:21 am

“The Great Accounting”

What a pleasant thought. 🙂

I want to hear James Hansen say, “I was wrong” and I want to hear Michael Mann and his co-conspirators say, “I cheated and lied about CAGW.”

Will any of us live that long?

Ed Zuiderwijk
Reply to  TA
June 3, 2018 6:35 am

I don’t want to hear, I want to see. Them being locked up for conspiracy against the people.

Alan Tomalty
Reply to  Ed Zuiderwijk
June 3, 2018 9:48 am

Hansen should be tried for treason.

Reply to  Alan Tomalty
June 3, 2018 11:01 am

Bigger fish will be on the dock, Clapper, Comey, Wray, Halper, Steele, Dearlove … Trump was not supposed to win on either side of the pool. What goes around comes around.

simple-touriste
Reply to  bonbon
June 3, 2018 12:52 pm

The members of top layer of the intelligence community are coming out of the closet, publicly advertising the fact that they are just political hacks, as much as Valerie Plame Wilson, formerly known as some CIA female “James Bond” who was betrayed by the Bush administration; Valerie Plame advertised her antisemitism by linking to this essay “America’s Jews Are Driving U.S. Wars”:

For those American Jews who lack any shred of integrity, the media should be required to label them at the bottom of the television screen whenever they pop up, e.g. Bill Kristol is “Jewish and an outspoken supporter of the state of Israel.” That would be kind-of-like a warning label on a bottle of rat poison — translating roughly as “ingest even the tiniest little dosage of the nonsense spewed by Bill Kristol at your own peril.”

https://www.nationalreview.com/the-morning-jolt/valerie-plame-anti-semitism-tweets/

The piece takes Bill Kristol (who ALSO came out of the closet as a complete lunatic) as the typical American Jew and then establish an equivalence between “Jewish and an outspoken supporter of the state of Israel.” with “lacking any shred of integrity”. (The correct label for Bill Kristol is obviously “complete lunatic who gets pretty much everything wrong and had a meltdown follow Trump’s election”, not “Jewish and an outspoken supporter of the state of Israel.”)

And when called out she gave these excuses on Twitter:

“OK folks, look, I messed up. I skimmed this piece, zeroed in on the neocon criticism, and shared it without seeing and considering the rest.”

“I missed gross undercurrents to this article & didn’t do my homework on the platform this piece came from. Now that I see it, it’s obvious.”

and then

“On a personal note, one should not tweet while moving, 8 workmen are in a small space, the dog is going nuts, and kids are texting one asking for things they forgot for school. Social media very unforgiving.

http://www.businessinsider.fr/us/valerie-plame-wilson-apology-tweeting-anti-semitic-story-2017-9

Linking “Jewish and an outspoken supporter of the state of Israel.”, “who lack any shred of integrity” and “a bottle of rat poison”. The implication was too subtle. She was allowed to work for the CIA. Let that sink in.

That’s the kind of people the left thinks of as a hero.

So maybe Scooter Libby should get a CIA distinction for outing Valerie Plame…

gbaikie
Reply to  bonbon
June 3, 2018 3:32 pm

I guess in regards to the CIA, all the smart ones, can remain completely hidden.

TA
Reply to  bonbon
June 3, 2018 3:43 pm

“So maybe Scooter Libby should get a CIA distinction for outing Valerie Plame…”

Scooter Libby did not out Valeria Plame, it was Richard Armitage and the Special Prosecutor knew it at the time, but went after Libby anyway in order to try to get something on Vice President Cheney.

Valerie Plame was not an active CIA agent at the time she was named, so no harm done..

G.W. Bush should have pardoned Libby but he didn’t want the Left criticizing him, so he passed. Trump doesn’t care what the Left says about him, or at least, he doesn’t let their opinions deter him from taking action.

http://www.cnn.com/2006/POLITICS/09/08/leak.armitage/

I hope this posts. I’ve been having a lot of difficulty posting.

Reply to  bonbon
June 4, 2018 3:21 am

Treason, otherwise known as an attempted putsch, a coup, organized from London to bring down a duly elected US President.
How about a Regime Change Too Far?
Only because that boomeranged the whole swamp “community” is visible.
Climategate started also in Britain.
Regime Change and Climate Change are two sides of the same shilling.
Not to be sidetracked to South West Asia…

Luke George
Reply to  TA
June 3, 2018 2:57 pm

Not going to happen because they are right!

Bruce Cobb
June 3, 2018 6:33 am

The kicker, and the hilarious thing about all this hullaballoo, shenanigans, and bickering about “carbon” and about “climate change” is that it is all an idiotic farce. It is much ado about nothing, and total madness, because none of it matters in the slightest.

TA
June 3, 2018 6:36 am

“The US legacy media has lost the shreds of credibility it had”

I heard yesterday that CNN has lost 25 percent of its viewers and 35 percent of the most important demographic, and did this during one of the most news-intensive periods in world history. Trump has successfully exposed the Leftwing Media for what they are: Partisan political propagandists.

Reply to  TA
June 3, 2018 9:24 am

The news market has switched to Facebook.
They are not supporters of Trump.

TA
Reply to  M Courtney
June 3, 2018 3:52 pm

Facebook may be going the way of MySpace. I heard the other day that mellenials are starting to avoid Facebook for other platforms.

I never use Facebook, although I do have an account, and I don’t miss it a bit. Much too intrusive for my taste. And now they want to be the arbiters of the truth, which is another strike against them.

June 3, 2018 6:46 am

President Trump must demand transparency regarding climate science, and we need Red/Blue Teams to provide countering analysis so the public can make an informed decision. The one sided approach of the Climate Alarmists rob the public of the truth. The following link highlights how this could be done.

Climate Data Doesn’t Support CO2 Driving Climate Change and Global Temperatures
https://co2islife.wordpress.com/2018/06/03/climate-data-doesnt-support-co2-driving-climate-change-and-global-temperatures/

R. Shearer
Reply to  co2islife
June 3, 2018 7:51 am

Nice article.

Reply to  co2islife
June 3, 2018 7:54 am

EPA chief Scott Pruitt is doing the necessary.

June 3, 2018 7:51 am

The moment Trump said he was Brexit+ it was a done deal. The EU spell is broken, witness Italy’s Bagnai reply to Guy Verhofstadt’s (of Maidan fame) rant, a tweet of Belgian King Leopold II, the butcher of the Congo.
The next spell to go is the voodoo finance likely starting with Deutsche Bank, and that will shake the City of London! All the Skripal capers, Spygate, May not save it. Even Isaac Newton’s Green Lions won’t work anymore.

tom0mason
Reply to  bonbon
June 3, 2018 8:59 am

Unfortunately in the UK BREXIT is stuttering along now with such wonderful people as American/Hungarian George Soros is sticking his offensive snout into the trough.

See https://chiefio.wordpress.com/2018/05/30/soros-funding-move-to-kill-brexit/

Reply to  tom0mason
June 3, 2018 10:10 am

All the Queens men (including George),
all the Queens horses (don’t ask),
May not put Humpty together again.
When I heard of Stefan Halper, the Cambridge MI6/CIA “asset” of Spygate, nicknamed Walrus, I knew we live in Wonderland. I just wonder who the Carpenter is?

MarkG
Reply to  tom0mason
June 3, 2018 11:16 am

If May manages to kill Brexit, it will destroy any last vestige of legitimacy the government claims to have.

Besides, it will be moot soon, since the EU is going to fall apart either way. Britain may find that it’s still in the EU but all the other countries have left.

Reply to  MarkG
June 4, 2018 3:24 am

exactly, with Quitaly simmering to a boil right now. A better Deal is urgently needed.

Tim
June 3, 2018 7:52 am

“Minister for Energy and Clean Growth, who wants us “Powering Past Coal”

And it is happening, big time: One of the UK’s eight remaining coal power stations is expected to cease generating electricity this year, the government has said as it laid out new rules that will force all the plants to close by 2025 because of “new pollution standards”, leading to increasing fuel poverty, where people cannot afford to heat their homes adequately.

Tell the pensioners to “Power Past Coal” as they freeze…

https://www.theguardian.com/society/2016/jan/20/older-person-dying-winter-fuel-poverty

JimG1
June 3, 2018 8:12 am

The last two presidents to actually be Democrats were Kennedy and Truman, in my lifetime. All subsequent Democrat presidents have actually been socialists/communists, at least in their policies. Not sure what Trump really is but I like what he is doing. And to those who think he is a little crazy/dangerous, they said that about Ronald Reagan as well. And what could be more crazy than running a blockade on the high seas against the soviets, an act of war, as JFK did in the Cuba missile crisis? And JFK was the last “good” Democrat president in my book. Pro gun, pro life, reduced taxes, and anti communist, better than half the Republicans today!

n.n
June 3, 2018 8:13 am

… of Catastrophic Anthropogenic Global Warming, Climate Change, Disruption? Now, we’ve returned to cooling, warming, climate change, on a decadal order, with seasonal, daily, and sometimes hourly swings. In short, a return to normal.

June 3, 2018 8:16 am

I do believe the Author has hit the nail on the head!
A “Spell” refers to magic, mesmerism, hypnosis, today called the narrative. Susceptibility can be induced by drugs (Lennon’s Lucy in the Sky with Diamonds), wars, catastrophes, terrorism etc… All of this well studied and applied. The daylight murder of JFK, 9/11 being the two most damaging. Vietnam made a whole generation susceptible to plain magic. ISIL today. The author may have heard of the Tavistock Institute?
The dumbest thing is well educated scientists failing to identify magic climate concoctions. The reason for this willful blindness is the adoration of that wildly irrational alchemist Isaac Newton in the hallowed halls of Harvard, Yale, Cambridge… The occult action-at-a-distace and “hypotheses non fingo” touted as the scientific method?
Magic, and the sleep of reason, open doors to monsters – Goya.
https://www.metmuseum.org/art/collection/search/338473

Nigel Clarke
June 3, 2018 9:37 am

My god though, did you read the comments below the article in the Telegraph!

Ivor Ward
June 3, 2018 10:57 am

HRH….. His Royal Halfwit. Don’t forget his horse Camilla.

michael hart
June 3, 2018 10:59 am

The main point is that Moore, one of the big names at The Telegraph, the biggest ‘serious’ UK newspaper (right-of-center, politically) actually takes the trouble to say something slightly sensible about energy prices, global-warming and President Trump in the same breath.
In a sensible universe that certainly ought to seem obvious, and only a very small mercy. But The Telegraph, while not The Guardian, still has plenty of other contributors who have difficulty joining up the dots and who may well frequently and unthinkingly regurgitate the global warming spiel from the state-financed broadcasting company, the BBC.

Thus on the first of this month, on their Science page, the BBC spewed forth a typical article (no comments allowed yet) titled “Paris climate pullout: the worst is yet to come” together with a large photograph of a well-known US Citizen whose name begins with D- and ends with -onald Trump. Now, The Telegraph may well be the leading conservative newspaper in the UK, but a lot of their employees and readers still watch BBC TV, read the BBC website, and listen to the dominant BBC radio stations. It takes a conscious act of will to make yourself remember that the BBC has an agenda, and a dominant position in shaping UK political discussions. Worse still, the BBC gets to broadcast their political opinions about global warming around the world in more than 40 different languages. I can’t believe they are any more measured, accurate, and truthful about their global warming opinions in Afaan Oromoo, Turkish, or Vietnamese, than they are in English.

paqyfelyc
Reply to  michael hart
June 4, 2018 2:08 am

BBC failed, young people are NOT looking at BBC, they look at their tweeter feed with youtube video and links, very few of them coming for BBC or newspaper.
Which is a trouble, since [insert political side] people only connect with [same] point of view, not even knowing what other are really saying (except of course when someone cross a line, then they will eagerly bash him down). And BBC trying to herd cats into toeing the line just make them angry, making thing worse.

June 3, 2018 12:14 pm

“Energy prices are falling.”

then the next paragraph.:
“Energy prices are rising.”

Which is it?

Maybe he meant “in the US” in the former, and “in Germany and Japan” in the latter, but that is not well written. Just merely manipulative writing.

Keith R Jurena
June 3, 2018 12:35 pm

Both Fe and Al production from ore emit carbon dioxide. Al is further complicated as the energy must be electric and its low atomic weight and valence of three means a lot more energy..

Increasing tariff means less dumping and less carbon dioxide..as Charlie Sheen was want to say ” WINNING”.

Of course I doubt this will have any effect on third world emissions of carbon dioxide. Or that carbon dioxide is an issue. Plants have to eat.

simple-touriste
June 3, 2018 1:20 pm

the funky and untranslatable “Ministre de la Transition écologique et solidaire”,

There is no translation to real French language (of real French people) either. It’s like “la mobilité inclusive(sic)“. (Although it might have to do with lots of subsidies for non viable projects and many gifts to useless parasitic associations “d’intérêt public”.)

Il considère que la réponse aux enjeux écologiques actuels, -climat, pollutions, épuisement des ressources-, ne sera apportée que par une société qui intègre le vivre ensemble et l’inclusion.

https://bfmbusiness.bfmtv.com/entreprise/pourquoi-la-mobilitac-inclusive-est-bonne-pour-la-transition-acnergactique-et-pour-l-emploi-954066.html

Ecological challenges (plural), climate, pollutions (plural), resources exhaustion, the living togetherness and inclusion.

Bingo challenge passed!

paqyfelyc
Reply to  simple-touriste
June 4, 2018 1:57 am

I find it easy to translate, actually
“transition” is “transition”, “change”(in german “wende”)
“ecologique” is “green”
“solidaire” is “socialist”
So he is minister for changing [France] into green socialism.

June 3, 2018 5:42 pm

Note to Charles Moore & the Daily Telegraph.

Mr. Trump ceased being “Mr.” on January 20, 2017 when he took the oath of office and became “President Trump”. As much as I disliked President Obama’s policies, never for a minute did I think he should be called “Mr. Obama”. I understand many people don’t like President Trump’s policies and demeanor but that’s precisely the point: if he were just “Mr. Trump” they wouldn’t care. “President Trump”, on the other hand, cannot be ignored.

MarkW
Reply to  Alan Watt Climate Denialist, Level 7
June 4, 2018 7:55 am

In Obama’s case, since he declared that he was only the president of “his people” (meaning people who agree with and support him, not color), he relieved me of the obligation of treating him like a president.

Krudd Gillard of the Commondebt of Australia
June 4, 2018 2:04 am

Trump. One of the great presidents of the USA. USA=Australia’s closest ally. We need a strong USA, otherwise…it is too horrible to contemplate.

ResourceGuy
Reply to  Krudd Gillard of the Commondebt of Australia
June 4, 2018 8:07 am

Can you say hypersonic weapons?

June 4, 2018 3:52 am

The US Paris treaty exit is not the first time the USA has exited a bad treaty.
It happened after WW1 when the US did not ratify the Versailles treaty:

https://www.senate.gov/artandhistory/history/common/generic/Feature_Homepage_TreatyVersailles.htm

Though vilified at the time, with hindsight the US exit from Versailles proved to be as wise as Trump’s exit from the Paris climate treaty will also prove to be.

Both Paris climate and Versailles treaties show the capacity of world powers to get it wrong big time, and the US’s ability to – accidentally or otherwise – get it right.

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