By Newt Gingrich
Newt Gingrich, a Republican from Georgia, was
speaker of the House of Representatives from 1995 to 1999. He served as
vice chair of the Trump transition team and is the author of the book
“Understanding Trump,” which is scheduled to be released in June.
This
newspaper’s legendary former publisher, Philip Graham, famously
described journalism as the business of writing the “first rough draft
of history.” This week, as President Trump gave a historic speech in
Saudi Arabia before the leaders of more than 50 Muslim-majority nations,
journalism’s first draft missed the history almost entirely.
While
the media focused on the ephemeral questions — whether the president
would use campaign rhetoric in a diplomatic setting, or how the trip
would affect the Obama legacy — they largely missed the real drama of
the moment: a titanic shift in U.S. foreign policy occurring right
before their eyes.
Trump stood before an
unprecedented gathering of leaders to do something far more significant
than utter a single phrase or undermine his predecessor’s record. He was
there to rally the Muslim world, in his words, “to meet history’s great test”
— defeating the forces of terrorism and extremism. He did so in a way
that no American president ever had before. While extending a hand of
friendship to Muslim nations, he also issued them a clear challenge: to
take the lead in solving the crisis that has engulfed their region and
spread across the planet. “Drive out the terrorists and extremists,” he
urged them, or consign your peoples to futures of misery and squalor.
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Source: The Washington Post
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