Judging Freedom - Prof. Jeffrey Sachs : Trump's Dangerous Moves.
Episode Date: August 4, 2025Prof. Jeffrey Sachs : Trump's Dangerous Moves.See Privacy Policy at https://art19.com/privacy and California Privacy Notice at https://art19.com/privacy#do-not-sell-my-info. ...
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Thank you.
Hi, everyone, Judge Andrew Napolitano here for Judging Freedom.
Today is Monday, August 4, 2025. Professor Jeffrey Sachs joins us now.
Professor Sachs, always a pleasure, my dear friend.
Great to be with you. Thank you. I want to spend a little time with you seeking your analysis
on some rather dangerous things, the President of the United States.
States has done and said lately, but before we get there, I have an interest in this, and I know
you do, and I know it's one of your fields of expertise, and I know viewers are interested in it.
What are the origins of American hostility toward China? Why this hostility rather than compatibility?
Well, we had compatibility up until 10 years ago, and then a conscious decision.
was made to move to hostility.
This was actually a contrived move to try to stop China's successful economic development.
The origins of it are that from the 1970s to around 2010, China was viewed as both a constructive partner,
a trade partner, and geopolitically helpful to the United States for quite a while.
Remember when Richard Nixon went to China, the idea was a kind of triangulation that there was
the U.S. Cold War with the Soviet Union, by the U.S. warming up with China.
This would help to put more pressure it was thought on the Soviet Union.
So it was an instrumental idea that the U.S. would get closer to China.
Starting in 1978, China undertook remarkable economic reforms, arguably the most successful economic reforms in world history,
because China went from being an impoverished economy in 1978, to being one of the most successful dynamic, arguably,
currently the most successful economy in the world today during a period of just a bit
over 40 years. Now, during that time, U.S.-China economic and political relations were good
for most of the period, actually. A lot of Americans were making a lot of money by selling things
to China or making investments in China or integrating Chinese companies into global
supply chains, and America, on the whole, benefited enormously from China's economic growth,
though some places in America faced intense import competition from China and suffered, but
others boomed. California boomed, no question, as a result of the growing U.S.-China trade.
probably places in the industrial Midwest were hit by the increase in competition from China.
But net net, the U.S.-China relations were very positive.
Now, starting around 2010, American strategists, I use that.
I think it's a euphemism because I think they're idiots, basically, as you know.
I don't think that they're strategists at all.
But anyway, who's the president in this time period?
That's Obama.
But it doesn't matter.
This is another point of American foreign policy, all this idea that, oh, we'll see if
it's Clinton or Bush Jr. or Obama or Trump one or Biden or Trump two.
This is not actually how foreign policy works.
It's the Pentagon, the CIA, the deep state, the military industrial complex.
And starting around to 2010, these strategists said, oh, my God, China's too successful.
We need to do something.
In 2015, a very interesting article, horrible on one level, because I think it's foolishness to the maximum,
but insightful also to the maximum, was written by a former colleague of mine, Ambassador Robert Blackwell.
who was a professor at Harvard, then a senior U.S. diplomat,
and another leading specialist, Ashley Tellis.
And the paper in 2015 was written for the Council on Foreign Relations,
so you could put a link to it because I believe it's openly available.
And it declares bluntly that America's goal, or its grand strategy, is primacy.
In other words, the grand strategy of the United States is to be number one.
And China's rise, these authors say, is a threat to America being number one.
They don't say China's evil.
They don't say China's done something terrible.
They don't say that China is a threat to U.S. national security or prosperity.
they say that China's success is a threat to the American grand strategy of being number one.
Okay, if you're in a high school clique, maybe that's your goal.
If you're grownups in a world where there are dangers of nuclear war, where you need
cooperation, where there's mutual gains from trade, the idea that being number one,
One is a meaningful idea when you're 4% of the world population.
And the idea that the success of another country is harmful to you because they're successful,
not because of what they're doing, but because of their successful,
is to my mind, so mind-bogglingly wrong-headed.
But that became the core of American policy.
And in this very interesting paper, which I really would like,
like people to read with their own eyes, because it's incredible. It says, we must stop China.
It's no longer in our interest for China to be successful. And they list all the things we should do.
For example, one of the incredibly stupid ideas was we should have a trade arrangement for the U.S.
and Asian countries that excludes China. It's like kids on it. You take a map. We put an X over
China, but we trade with all the others, not noticing that all the others have their main
trading partner, China. But Obama really tried to do that. He tried to launch something
called the Trans-Pacific Partnership, which was a trade group that would exclude China.
Okay, this was another one of these ideas that belongs in the dustbin of history, and it did
never materialize. But the list goes on.
We should stop exporting technology.
We should break relations.
We should increase our military bases around China's rimlands.
We should do other things, restrictions on investments, trade barriers.
Why?
Because America needs to be number one.
So we have to do whatever we can to harm China's economy.
Now, today, I was just reading the typical columnists of the Washington Post and the New York Times and financial times.
And every one of them treats China like an enemy.
Just naturally, we have to prepare for war.
They're an enemy.
We have to be smarter in our trade policy than Trump because China's going to take an advantage.
everything is not about American interests or American well-being or the American people.
It's about this game, like it's a board game.
So you ask me, why do we hate China?
Because we were told to, starting 10 years ago, because it became the strategy of the United States to harm China.
By the way, how do you think Chinese officials and government,
business feel about this, that another country is overtly aiming to harm them. Is that conducive
to peace, to goodwill, to normal behavior, to the security of the United States of America?
Of course not. We're provoking. But it's so clear from this article. People should read it.
So this is the basic point.
And I've been, I just have to add, I've been visiting China since 1981.
So 44 years, I toured all parts of the country.
I've studied Chinese history extensively.
I've published about China.
I've written very extensively about the Chinese reforms.
China is not an enemy.
China's not doing anything to threaten American security.
There is no reason for the United States to view China's well-being as harmful to America's interest.
Nor did China's rise hurt the United States.
But our political system is so broken that if major parts of the U.S. benefit but one part, say the industrial Midwest, say in Ohio or Indiana,
hurts, we don't have a policy to help those people. Our policy is to attack China, even though the
overall relationship is mutually beneficial. So, by the way, every day there's a drumbeat of war
right now on our side. I was in China, by the way, recently, just a couple of weeks ago.
They just look on in amazement. What is going on in your country?
What is it? What is this hostility?
Why does the president fulminate every day about us?
That's what they ask.
I wish the president could listen to you.
I wish the Congress could listen to you.
Professor Sachs two months ago, the Secretary of Defense, who has his own issues,
was in Japan and was threatening China.
They're all threatening every day.
And these incredibly awful columnist, Max Boot,
today. I'll name names in the Washington Post. It's just pure war mongering. Now, of course,
he supported every war we've been in because that's our columnists. They're just war mongers.
But the next war they want is with China. Good luck with that. What is the matter with our country?
Can we just get along with somebody? Is there any reason from an economic perspective,
One of your other fields of expertise, Professor Sachs, that we can't just have an open trading policy with China.
They can sell us what they want and we can buy what we want and we can sell whatever they want to buy from us.
Of course.
And when they outcompete us in certain areas like they are doing right now in electric vehicles,
it's because the United States has no policy that, you know, Trump just pulled the plug literally on election.
vehicles and on the incentives and so forth.
Okay, we handed China the world market for electric vehicles and then we say, oh, they've got
overcapacity in electric vehicles because they're selling electric vehicles all over the
world.
Then we have to put up tariff barriers because we have no sensible industrial policy whatsoever.
And so this is not China's fault.
China is just diligently following the future, developing new efficient energy sources,
5G technology, open source AI, fourth generation nuclear power.
I toured factories recently. Incredible integration of artificial intelligence systems and
robotics in highly sophisticated solar module factories. Incredible, what I
saw. Yeah, and we complain. They're just doing a good job in manufacturing. What is Trump doing?
Trump is attacking the universities, cutting the research budgets, driving scientists from the United
States to China or to other parts of the world, and then whining about all those terrible things
the other countries are doing to us, all that unfairness. Well, Professor Sachs, President
and Trump shoots the messenger.
If you're the director of the Bureau of Labor Statistics
and the statistics are bad for a month
and you reveal them and he doesn't like what you revealed,
even though what you revealed is based on an algorithm,
you're fired.
That's the mentality we're dealing with.
By the way,
Trump, okay, that is like a five-year-old.
I don't like the news,
so I just throw everything into turmoil.
But what's amazing is not that.
That we might have expected.
What is amazing is the silence in Washington.
This is how our country is supposed to be that you get a month of bad data and then you fire the person in charge of the Bureau of Labor Statistics.
And by the way, there always are revisions to the data.
This is a core and systematic and scientific part of how to measure a complex $30 trillion economy.
But what struck me first was the silence.
Where are the Congress people saying, no, we can't run a country on the most shoddy whims?
But then the chairman of the Council of Economic Advisors comes out and defends the firing
of the commissioner of the Bureau of Labor Statistics.
Honestly, we are completely destroying our institutions before our eyes.
The only word that characterizes Washington,
and I'm speaking beyond Trump himself, is pathetic.
Nobody speaks the truth.
No one says that this completely erratic and,
dangerous behavior is very damaging to our national security.
We had the president shooting off about nuclear, this, and that in the last few days.
Just unbelievable.
Here's what he said, and this is in response to a tweet based on the highly provocative statements
of the former president, Chris, can you put it up?
Based on the highly provocative statements of the former president of Russia,
Dmitri Medvedev, who is now the deputy chairman of the Security Council of the Russian Federation,
I have ordered two nuclear submarines to be positioned in the appropriate regions,
just in case these foolish and inflammatory statements are more than just that.
Words are very important and can often lead to unintended consequences.
I hope this will not be one of those instances.
Thank you for your attention to this.
matter. Talk about being foolish with words. Why would you do this and why would you announce
it and why would you provoke another nuclear power that has three or four times the number
of nuclear submarines that we do? And the reason that this unbelievable posting occurred was in
response to a posting by Medvedev, which was in response to an ultimatum delivered by Trump
to President Putin, that if you don't have a ceasefire in 10 days, I impose the sanctions on all
countries in the world that are dealing with you, ultimatum to Russia rather than actual
diplomacy. Good luck with that.
Ultimatum, an ultimatum.
You know, the problem is Trump is, of course, he has no attention span, maybe no understanding,
no knowledge of what he's doing.
But the fact of the matter is there's no diplomacy taking place right now.
Because the war in Ukraine that he promised to end in 24 hours, which by the way,
could have been ended in 24 hours, not on the basis of an ultimatum or declaring,
you must have a ceasefire, but on the basis of solving the underlying issue that led us to this war.
And this war, as every analyst you talk to, says, and as everyone who has looked clearly into this, understands,
came because we pushed NATO up to Russia's borders, because we overthrew a government
in Ukraine so that that new government would support NATO because the government we overthrew
wanted neutrality, which is a no-no in American eyes, and because the United States
resisted every attempt at diplomacy to avoid the war and then to end the war.
We absolutely threw out the agreement at the UN called the Minsk II agreement that would have avoided this war, telling the Ukrainians you don't have to abide by the UN Security Council and an agreement that the Ukraine itself had signed.
And then when there was a peace agreement reached just about to be reached in April 2022, the U.S. government told the Ukrainians, no, you fight on.
We don't want you neutral.
We want you on our side.
No neutrality.
So Trump now gives an ultimatum that doesn't get to any of the root causes of this conflict.
Of course, the ultimatum is not going to be observed,
but he's giving an ultimatum to a nuclear superpower.
But more than that, he's telling China, India, Brazil,
and all the other countries of the world,
that the United States demands that they stop trading with Russia as well.
Well, fancy that.
You think that's going to work, that the United States,
that the president of the United States can just dictate to the whole world what to do?
No, that is not how conflicts are resolved.
That's not how diplomacy works.
That's not, and this is the most important point.
how American security is achieved. Trump is driving America into the greatest insecurity
that we have had in decades, certainly since the worst moments of the Cold War, if not
worse than that right now, by this obstreperous, deuterative, unstable, non or anti-diplomacy
that we're engaged in.
Sit and talk and resolve serious issues like grown-ups.
Not this shooting off in the most provocative possible ways.
But again, I have to emphasize Trump does it.
It's disgusting and it's shocking.
But in Washington, no one says anything else
because it's as if the rest of the constitutional order has disappeared in the United States.
Professor Sachs, did the United States government in the past two weeks
announced that it had just completed the delivery of nuclear weapons to NATO countries?
I can't tell you, actually. I can't tell you authoritatively,
and I don't know authoritatively on
such a crucial question, but I know you have many interlocutors who can give an authoritative answer.
I appreciate your candor. Tomorrow's New York Times has an article by the New York Times Bureau Chief
in Jerusalem. It's highly critical of Prime Minister Netanyahu, but the opening line is so curious
when Benjamin Netanyahu, the Israeli Prime Minister,
led the country to a military victory over Iran in June.
What military victory over Iran in June
is the New York Times talking about?
Every day I decide to cancel my subscription to the New York Times,
and every day I pull back just because I need at least to see
the foolishness so that I understand what others are hearing. Of course, there was no military victory.
We are in a much deeper crisis than we were before the so-called 12-day war. The IAEA, the International
Atomic Energy Agency, was pushed out of Iran. There is no diplomacy. You see, everything,
Judge, is coming from the basic point that the American delusion, and it's not just Trump,
although he has his particular way, the American delusion, let me just add, say, Lindsay Graham or Richard Blumenthal,
but it's everywhere that the United States can dictate all terms to all of the rest of the world.
And that is true, whether it's in Iran, this 12-day war, we bomb when we want, we make demands of diplomacy when we want, or true in Ukraine or true vis-a-vis China or true vis-a-vis India's trade with Russia, you name it.
You know, the one leader in the world who said it most clearly, just very succinctly, because he's,
a brilliant leader and communicators, Brazil's president,
Lula, who said, very matter-of-factly,
we don't need an emperor.
And he was referring, of course, to all the threats
that Trump had made against Brazil.
Trump telling the independent Brazilian judiciary
to stop a court case,
if you can imagine.
And Lula said we don't need an emperor.
But we have an emperor right now
and we don't have a constitutional order.
And we have a growing crises all over the world.
And the biggest culprit is a supine Congress that does nothing,
lets the president impose taxes, looks the other way,
doesn't complain have been anything, as you pointed out earlier. The silence from Congress,
I just don't get it. We used to know of senators who were personalities and would speak to the country
and actually advise the nation about the right way forward. We had debates in Washington,
and sometimes very heated debates,
but sometimes very illuminating debates.
We have nothing right now.
We have executive orders
where one person declares emergencies.
We have silence from the Congress
as if it doesn't exist at all.
We have a Supreme Court that basically fades its eyes
and turns away and lets this destruction of the constitutional order proceed.
We have spokespeople completely unqualified, knowing nothing, opining on the gravest matters of
international relations because they're in the White House.
without any responsibility, I don't even want to name names.
It's so ugly, the things that have been coming out of the White House in the last few days
and the idiocy of it of people who know nothing about the world except that they're making
the world far more dangerous every single day.
Not to raise your blood pressure, but I believe that shortly before we came on air,
the Israeli government announced the firing of the Attorney General of Israel, who is the principal
prosecutor of Netanyahu. Now, this will obviously go before the Israeli Supreme Court
and there will be another Israeli constitutional crisis.
Yeah, whether Israel survives all of this, we don't know, because it is in the process
of self-destructing, undermining the most basic legitimate.
legitimacy of the state in an orgy of murder, in an orgy of the genocide, where the ministers of
the government have left any even slightest compunction about talking about genocide openly.
And the United States is completely complicit in this.
Completely.
And again, Trump's our president, so he's complicit in it, but it goes far beyond Trump.
It is the completely compromised American political class.
Mike Huckabee, my former colleague at Fox News, every time you turn around,
there's somebody that used to work at Fox being given a significant position in the government,
was allowed to visit Gaza, and, of course, the person he spoke to was healthy, happy,
well-dressed and said all the right things to him, and he came on and repeated that.
I don't know how any of this ends, Professor Sachs.
Trump has only been in office for eight months.
I share every one of your criticisms against them,
except that people are dying, dying horrible, horrific deaths,
and nothing seems to come of it.
What will come of Great Britain, France,
Canada, a few other countries, I think Spain, maybe Portugal, recognizing a Palestinian state.
I don't think anything until the UN Security Council does it. Am I right?
Well, we have right now 150 countries that have recognized the state of Palestine.
They represent around 90% of the world population.
I need to do an update of the arithmetic.
but basically 90 plus percent of the world population says there needs to be a state of Palestine
alongside the state of Israel. There was a declaration by the Arab countries saying that
Hamas would be disarmed, that there would be a normalization of relations on the basis of
a state of Palestine alongside the state of Israel. Of course, Israel, Israel rejected.
that this is what's important for everybody to understand.
Israel is not looking for peace.
Israel is looking for domination.
This government and much of Israeli society is absolutely content on mass murder and on ethnic
cleansing so that Israel retains control over 100% of what was
the so-called British mandatory Palestine.
In other words, the land that Britain in its typical imperialistic way promised to everybody,
to the Arabs, to the Jews, to the French, to everybody.
And the Zionists said, we'll take it all.
And they don't want peace based on two states.
They want everything.
And since there just happened to be some millions of Arabs living there, they're just going to have to leave or starve to death or be killed or submit to apartheid rule.
That's all that's going on.
There is no attempt in the United States or Israel to actually make peace.
but for 90% of the world, what's happening is abhorrent.
And for most of American citizens who, of course, play no role in our government in foreign policy whatsoever, no voice, no say, no reflection of our attitudes, we are revolted by Israel's extraordinarily cruelly.
I don't I I lose the words but it is a genocide and and and and just to say we're it's two countries now and you ask will something come of this yes in the end there will be a state of Palestine how many people die beforehand is the real question but there absolutely will be a state of Palestine there is a question will there be a state of Israel because if Israel is so.
shockingly, disgustingly brazen in this mass murder, how is Israel going to go on among the
community of nations? That's the real question. Here's Senator Tim Kane of Virginia who agrees with you
and regrettably Secretary of State Marco Rubio who does not. Chris, back to back two and three.
The international community, including the United States, made a promise in 1947.
that there would be a state of Israel and a state for Arabs, Palestine, in this space.
One promise has been met, nearly 80 years later, one promise has not been met.
More than 100 nations have done a recognition.
They said, look, we need to meet the promise that the international community made,
but it needs to be conditions-based.
And I think the most important condition is recognizing a Palestine
when they are able to peacefully coexist with their neighbors, including Israel.
And so as I read what the nations are saying, it's not an immediate recognition, no questions asked in September.
It's establishing conditions that when they are met, Palestine would be recognized.
The U.K. is like, well, if Israel doesn't agree to a ceasefire by September, we're going to recognize the Palestinian state.
So if I'm Hamas, I say, you know what, let's not allow there to be a ceasefire.
If Hamas refuses to agree to a ceasefire, it guarantees a Palestinian state will be recognized by all these countries in September.
So they're not going to agree to a ceasefire.
I mean, it's so clumsy.
It's hard to know whether these people like Rubio are so dense that they don't understand anything
or so vulgar that they obfuscate everything.
But Rubio's not working towards a two-state solution.
No.
What's his complaint?
Do your diplomacy.
That's your job, Mr. Secretary.
state, do your diplomacy, but you're not doing any diplomacy. So who are you to say what other
countries should do? Because you and your administration is not engaged in diplomacy. It's
engaged in war. War is not diplomacy. Diplomacy is finding a way to peace. What are you doing,
Mr. Rubio, to find a way to peace and a two-state solution? Nothing. So, every,
word that Rubio utters is either this measure of how dense he might be or how much he wants
to obfuscate the most basic point that we are complicit in a genocide and do not find words
for diplomacy, which 150 other countries have easily recognized. And by the way, that's 150 that
have recognized Palestine, more than 180 have repeatedly voted for Palestinian right to political
self-determination at the UN year after year. That I know the count because I've done the arithmetic.
It's 95% of the world population. Do you think that the arguments that you've made are even
articulated in the White House? No. I think the
military industrial
state which runs our country
lives in a delusion
of being all powerful
and thinking
that whenever there's resistance
all they have to do is escalate
more arms, more military, more war
so that they can dictate
this has been like this for a long time.
Again, I don't find
anything particular with Trump, except how obnoxious things are put. But Biden was terrible.
Trump won same way. Obama, terrible. Bush, terrible, Bush Jr. This is why none of these problems
get solved. It's not just that Trump's not solving them. The military industrial state, as Eisenhower
told us, took over our country by the mid-1960s, probably with the coup in which President Kennedy
was assassinated. And since then, we don't have public opinion on foreign policy. We don't have
American security interests. We just have war. And the war is based on a delusion that we're the
most powerful so that we can dictate terms to everyone else. So no, I don't think that these
arguments are discussed or debated because there is no discussion or debate in Washington.
None.
By the way, there's an article today of some senators saying how unhappy they are in the Senate
and they say there's no debate in the Senate anymore.
There isn't.
I used to work in the Senate a long time ago, 52 years ago when I was a kid.
I saw a real debate.
There's no debate right now.
So no, the things we're discussing, they're not discussed at all.
They're too arrogant and too ignorant, even to have the discussion.
Professor Sachs, even when you're angry, you are over-the-top articulate and so informative.
Thank you very much for all of this.
I didn't mean to raise your blood pressure, but God bless you.
Thank you for your understanding and your ability to explain
that understanding to all of us.
And we'll look forward to seeing you again soon.
See you next week.
Thanks a lot.
Bye-bye.
Fathulous.
Coming up tomorrow Tuesday at 8 in the morning,
Ambassador Charles Freeman at 2 in the afternoon,
Aaron Monte at 3 in the afternoon,
Colonel Karen Koukowski, Judge Napolitano for judging freedom.
Thank you.
