On with Kara Swisher - Christiane Amanpour on Hot Wars, Trade Wars & Potential Wars
Episode Date: May 12, 2025Christiane Amanpour, CNN’s chief international anchor, joins Kara to unpack current and potential conflicts — from simmering tension between India and Pakistan to escalating violence in Gaza, atte...mpts to forge a peace deal between Russia and Ukraine, and rising concerns over Taiwan. They also examine how President Trump’s trade wars are reshaping global diplomacy and the rules of international engagement. Plus, Kara and Christiane discuss Amanpour's new podcast, The Ex Files, which she co-hosts with her ex-husband Jamie Rubin, and how journalism is evolving amid partisanship, social media, and endless attacks on the press. This episode was recorded on Wednesday May 7th, before India and Pakistan signed a cease-fire and The White House announced a trade deal with China. Questions? Comments? Email us at on@voxmedia.com or find us on Instagram, TikTok, and Bluesky @onwithkaraswisher. Learn more about your ad choices. Visit podcastchoices.com/adchoices
Transcript
Discussion (0)
Kara, listen, I hate to do this, but I've only got 45 minutes.
That's fine.
Don't worry.
You just have to talk fast.
Hi, everyone from New York Magazine, the Vox Media Podcast Network.
This is On with Kara Swisher and I'm Kara Swisher.
My guest today needs little introduction. Christiane Amanpour, CNN's chief international anchor, has won
16 Emmy Awards, four Peabody Awards, and three DuPont Columbia Awards, just to name a few.
She understands geopolitics as well, or better than anyone. And I just love Christiane. She
has become a friend and she actually asked my advice on going into podcasting, which
she has just started to do.
She's just one of these people who is so substantive and so smart and she's willing to think around
things and change her mind too.
And we're living in uncertain times with multiple wars raging around the world and more potential
ones bubbling up.
So Christiane is the perfect person to talk about all that turmoil and instability, especially since she's about to launch this new international affairs podcast
called X-Files. It's a very fun concept and we'll talk about that too. I really like the
way she's approaching this, especially because it's hard to get people to listen to international
affairs information, even though it's critically important. Our expert question comes from Mike Abramowitz, the head of the embattled Voice of America. So stick around.
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Christiane, thank you for coming on on.
I am thrilled to be here with you, Kara. It's always great talking to you.
So you're now a podcaster. Are you, are you stalking me? Christiane, no, I'm kidding.
We talked about this.
Stalking, no, but inspired by, yes. I mean, we talked about it a lot.
Uh-huh, at dinner in London.
Yes, this time last year in London.
Yeah.
I have a pretty full day job,
and I just thought that it would be really interesting
to try this, and clearly you have set the tone
and the standards on.
Obviously a completely different subject to yours,
but I think that it's an interesting, more sort of personal space to be in.
And of course it matches the time that we're in right now.
Right.
We're going to talk specifically about it, but we can't, we've got to stick with the
news to start with.
We're going to discuss geopolitics and particular conflicts, wars and potential wars happening
right now.
And we'll also talk a little bit about journalism, but let's talk about what's happening right
now.
The whole backdrop to this conversation is President Trump's global trade war and the
economic uncertainty.
American allies don't trust it anymore.
The dollar is weakening.
There's general sense of global instability.
How would you describe the moment we're living in right now?
The way I sort of see it and coined it, and maybe I'm not the one who coined it, but I
claim it, you know, it's not a new world order.
It's almost no world order, a world order that is being essentially started from scratch.
You know, in Trump's image, he wanted to do that.
He essentially laid it out in his campaign.
But I think it's true to say that neither people abroad nor in the United States realized
how quick and, you know, how huge it would be and what effects it would have.
So Cara, obviously that means everybody is trying to figure it out.
And we speak, Kara, around the time of the celebration of VE Day,
in other words, 80 years since the end of war in Europe, victory in Europe,
where the whole US world order began to unfold after that victory.
Yes. And this whole US war order began to unfold after that victory.
And this whole US war order, as you know, has brought the world a rules of the road
and rules of the game, but also an amount of peace and prosperity and trust and certainty.
And now it's all being thrown, as Elon Musk says, in the wood chipper.
And we need to figure out where it's going to come out, who's going to put those splinters back together and is it going to be better, worse, indifferent,
who knows?
And what would you say the mood is when you talk to, you talk to so many world leaders,
what is the overall mood besides uncertainty or chaos, I guess?
So I was at the Munich Security Conference in the middle of February.
That is where, essentially,
Vice President Vance came and laid out this new Trump world order.
Yeah, get over it.
And what he did, yeah, and what he did was basically tell allies of 80 years, 75 years,
that it's different now. You know, overnight, you have to figure out how to defend yourselves.
You have to figure out how to cope yourselves, you have to figure out how to
cope with us and our protectionism, we call it unfair and being taken advantage of, and
you need to figure out how to make up the deficit that we believe that we've been victimized
all these years.
So let's take a lot of those things and say, well, maybe there are places around the edges
of all of those things that need to be reformed, adjusted.
It happens all the time.
But the problem is, as world leaders see it and we journalists see it, because we have
to cope with reporting it, is that it's all happening everywhere, all at once, and it's
manifesting as destruction rather than reform.
So world leaders are trying to figure out
how to fill that gap and how to fill the vacuum
and how to make maybe other alliances
and figure out at home what sort of cost cutting
they're going to make in maybe the welfare
and well-being of people more towards defense,
figuring out how to do trade deals.
And, Kara, you know that the president has said
he wants to make, I don't know how many,
but a lot of trade deals within and it's, yeah, 200.
We're a day like 30 now, yeah.
If not more, practically more than 30.
And it takes forever to make a trade deal.
Yes, exactly.
But because this post-war peace and prosperity was built around trade, and it really was,
you know, away from all the guns and everything else and protection, and that was to be able
to trade freely.
How does America's retrenchment affect that from your perspective right now?
Well, I think it affects it a lot, but I would also say that, you know, obviously globalization
is in the crosshairs.
But the idea was to try to enhance peace and prosperity through interconnectedness.
And all I can tell you is, you know, I live in Brexit Britain,
and Brexit Britain is materially less well off
than pre-Brexit Britain.
Obviously, we had COVID.
Obviously, we had a number of things.
But in general, the investment, the, you know...
No, you did not come roaring back.
No, no, we didn't.
So one of the things you're doing,
I'm going to first talk about your podcast,
then I want to get to some other world affairs.
This new podcast that premieres on May 13th
is called The X-Files, spelled E-X,
because your co-host, Jamie Rubin,
is a former diplomat and assistant secretary of state,
is also your ex-husband.
The stated goal of the podcast is
to make sense of the new no-world order, as you said.
How did you come up with talking with your ex?
Well, look, actually it was after the election.
And then my ex, who used to be in the Biden administration
before that in the Clinton administration,
was out of a job.
So, and we were starting to,
I was trying to figure out how to navigate this new
sort of international road that we're all on.
And I thought, you know what?
The real crux of what I wanted to do was go back,
use our 35 year history, not millennia of history,
not even decades and decades of history,
but our shared 35 odd years of history,
him from the Clinton administration,
me from starting as a foreign correspondent for CNN
back in 1990, and going going back finding issues and wars and
crises and actual negotiations and successes and failures and you know all
of the rest of it. Do the comparisons right? Yes the comparison and if we could
also reveal what people forget and that is there have been successful peace
deal. Let's just take the Oslo Accords you might be people might piss all over that today between Israel and the Palestinians given what's happening today, but that was actually
Material change in that region for the first time, you know in decades and it could have led to something else and it also
highlighted, you know how the hard work of diplomacy and
highlighted how the hard work of diplomacy and leadership
could actually, over a long period of time, it wasn't an overnight thing,
it wasn't I'm gonna bring peace in 24 hours
or I'm gonna fix that in a month or whatever it is.
It was a long, consistent, serious look at these issues
and trying to figure out how they could be resolved.
I mean, let's just take the Northern Ireland peace process, right?
Let's just take ending apartheid in South Africa and the election of Nelson Mandela.
You know, so many things and then there was on the other side, you know, there was, yeah.
So, how we can learn from that?
So, you're bringing history here, how you can learn from that.
And a little history, personal stories.
Personal stories, yeah.
Yeah.
It makes you accessible. But your journalistic And little history, personal stories. Personal stories, yeah. Yeah.
So it makes you accessible.
But your journalistic motto is truthful, not neutral.
And with that in mind, let's hear this episode's expert question.
It comes from Mike Abramowitz, the director of The Voice of America, who is currently
in limbo while he fights the Trump administration's efforts to dismantle Voice of America and
essentially replace it with one America News Network, which Carrie Lake just announced
today. Let's listen to the question.
So much data exists to show a huge decline in trust in the media over the last 30 years.
And many Americans in particular believe most news organizations are biased.
How do you explain this state of affairs? And what is the one thing that you would suggest news
organizations do to restore a sense of credibility with the American public?
Well, listen, thanks for the question.
It's not just the American public.
But look, it's true that if you look at the trustometer, those figures go down.
It really does break my heart because I strongly believe, whether it's Voice of America, Radio Free Europe, Liberty, etc.
CNN, The New York Times, the FT,
Kara Swisher, whoever it might be, PBS.
There are really important legacy media,
whatever the terminology is, it really annoys me.
But historic journalistic enterprises that have
spent all their time doing the right thing, not being partisan, not being biased, trying
to bring the objective truth, trying to hold power accountable, doing what we do, trying
to reveal the stories of the people who would never be able to be heard if it wasn't for
us.
I think that it's sad that people view us now through a political lens.
I'm not surprised because of the complete explosion of the media.
And the new media is in direct conflict with whatever you want to call us, old media, legacy
media.
I call it the actual media, actual journalism.
And I do draw a line between, and I'm not, you know, it's not negative or positive, but
there is a line between social media and indeed some podcasts, some tabloids, some cable channels
who are distinctly, overtly, and proudly partisan.
And others-
Which drags the rest of us in, in many ways.
Which drags, but we should drag ourselves out and stand up and say, no, we're not part
of that.
We want to tell the truth and tell the stories.
And I will say, Kara, one of the things that potentially, potentially, you know, can perhaps
erode some trust is if we stop doing our job the way we're meant to be doing it, whether
you're in a radio station or a newspaper or one podcast, only if it's a news one, TV, whatever it is,
you have to go into the field and tell the real and actual stories.
The more you sit around and opine from a panel or an armchair, the less actual real news
is getting in.
And so I would say that I reject this idea of us being partisan.
I think we're doing our best to tell the truth and just to keep doing our investigative
and other kinds of journalism and do it really well.
Which is the truthful, not neutral part. How has that lasted? That's really stuck with you.
Well, it has because I... When you say not neutral part. How has that lasted? That's really stuck with you. Well, it has because I can't...
When you say not neutral, what is that?
I say it means you find the truth and you've come to an assessment and you can say that
assessment.
It's called reporting is what I tell people.
I call it reporting as well.
And I think people just got a bit worried because people sometimes in this highly partisan
world that we're in feel that in order to be objective, you have
to do both siderism.
So let me be very clear.
There are huge, huge stories where you have to be really knowledgeable about what you're
seeing and how you describe them.
It's not every story.
It's not necessarily the, I don't know, the local librarian election or whatever it is.
But it is genocide, it is violations of international humanitarian law, it is, you know, besieging
populations, men, women and children, denying them food and water, all of which I witnessed
in Bosnia in the early 1990s and which have formed my worldview and my journalism and
where I know the truth to be.
So I was being pressured by the outside public and world leaders who did not want to get
involved to tell the story that all sides were equally guilty.
Instead, there was one clear side, just like Russia against Ukraine today.
In the 1990s, it was Serbia and the Bosnian Serbs who wanted to create
an ethnically pure, greater Serbia
and carve bits of territory out of Bosnia,
which meant moving civilians,
which meant killing civilians, starving civilians.
That's where I learned, because I was there the whole time
reporting the truth, that I had to tell
the truth and that the truth was not that all sides were equally guilty. It was not
centuries of ethnic hatred. It was a political mission that one side was trying to implement.
Yeah, I think it's a big mistake, including at CNN, to do this both sides thing, especially
with people who aren't credible. And I'm not going to name names, but I think you know
what I'm talking about. Anyway, you don't have to respond
because you still aren't there. I do too, but not like you. We'll be back in a minute.
Harvey Weinstein is back in court this week, and appeals court overturned his 2020 conviction in New York, saying he hadn't gotten a fair trial, and so his accusers must now testify again.
Weinstein has always had very good lawyers, but the court of public opinion was against him. Until now, it seems.
At the beginning of this case, I concluded that Harvey Weinstein was wrongfully convicted and was basically just hung on the MeToo thing.
The commentator Candace Owens, who has previously defended Kanye and Andrew Tate.
Andrew Tate and his brother were actually a response to a misandrist culture.
Women that hated men.
Before Andrew Tate, there was Lena Dunham.
Has taken up Weinstein's cause and it seems to be gaining her followers.
Coming up on Today Explained when Candace met Harvey.
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multiple sites in Pakistan.
This was in response to a terrorist attack in Kashmir that targeted Indian civilians,
which India blames on Pakistan without providing much evidence.
India said it had struck terror camps and that strikes were designated as non-escalatory.
Pakistan called it an unprovoked and blatant act of war and said it had shot down five Indian aircraft in response.
Also has not been verified yet.
How do you see this playing out? Obviously, we're talking about two nuclear powers who fought multiple wars,
so there's a potential for serious bloodshed or not.
Well, look, you know, nobody wants to pour fuel on the fire of such a risky and dangerous
and volatile neighborhood.
But this is a total failure of diplomacy and a failure of leadership that these two countries
for so long have not been able to resolve this crucial issue.
And it also begs the question of they are both American allies and it's possible that
in the previous administrations you would have had the Secretary of State or the Chairman
of the Joint Chiefs or the Defense Secretary or security advisor, flying over there, being in touch,
trying to figure out whether they could and whether they must tamp down any possible further
escalation.
So, again, this is the kind of thing that is really serious.
It could develop into something even more serious.
Nobody wants to even envision that.
They are two nuclear powers, and it's very, very dangerous. But again, both are allies of the United
States and this needs serious diplomacy. Does it have to be the US that does it?
Well, the US has the most influence. Yeah. So the US has the most influence and Trump
is transactional. You know, you don't know. maybe there's a transaction to be held over them both.
But he is transactional and, you know, who knows?
So it's got to be the US involved.
All right.
And others.
Yeah.
But it's very difficult.
Look, who are the neighbors?
You know, you've got Iran, you've got Afghanistan, you know, you've got China.
China has also spoken out against it and has told everybody to calm down.
It can't be in China or Russia or anybody's interest.
India imports a lot of Russian oil.
Russia's very, very integrated with India.
Pakistan very integrated with China.
And this is actually also an interesting question because I'm just thinking out loud.
But if the US seeds global influence and management, right, into every vacuum, something else drops.
So after this famous Munich situation with JD Vance reading his allies the Riot Act
and appearing to turn on a dime from allies
to adversaries, the former British Prime Minister Sir John Major came out and he
said you know I never come out because governments have a hard enough time
talking without ex-prime ministers coming in and telling them what to do
but maybe this time an ex is better talking about the ex, the ex files, better
than a current prime minister and he he said, look, President Xi, President Putin
will be dancing a jig of joy, those were his words,
watching President Trump voluntarily seed
global influence, power, and domination,
the whole America first thing, right?
Right.
And into that vacuum will Trump, China for sure, Russia if it can,
and whoever else. So now we're faced with, okay, well in India, Pakistan, if the US
doesn't pursue it and if others can't, well will these other very
strong trading and diplomatic partners jump in? And what will be the
conclusion and what will be the terms?
China will move right on in there. Everything's been a gift to China, tariffs, everything
else, even if it's hurting their economy. All right, let's keep moving. Gaza and Israel,
I interviewed you for this podcast in October of 2023, less than two weeks after the October
7th Hamas attack. In Israel, since then, Israel has killed over 50,000 Gazans, according to
the Hamas-run health ministry, Israel disputes that. On March 2nd, Israel began a total blockade
of Gaza and residents there at the risk of starvation. How and when does this war end?
You see a permanent Israeli reoccupation as a likely outcome. The cabinet, just for people
who don't know, approved a plan to resume, quote unquote, intensive ground operations
that would involve moving Gazans to the south of the Strip, expanding its buffer zone and having private companies
distribute aid.
I think it's Yair Lapid, the leader of the Israeli opposition, has said that Benjamin
Netanyahu isn't doing everything he can to bring the Israeli hostages back because that
would mean the end of his term.
So talk about both those things.
Well, unfortunately, this crisis, and it's another one we want to talk about in the podcast
because it doesn't have to be like this.
This crisis is so heavily politicized and partisan,
whether it's unfolding on the streets and campuses
of the United States or around the world
and most certainly in the region.
I mean, the latest is that President Trump is apparently,
well, President Trump is coming to the region now,
as we're speaking, and they have said, the Israelis,
that they're gonna start this much expanded
military operation after he leaves the region.
So what they're saying is that they want to pretty much
reoccupy almost all of Gaza.
They want to create huge areas of what they call buffer zones and military security zones.
They want to push, I mean it's about two million Gazans into a piece of territory that amounts
to about a third to a quarter of the enclave.
They're currently, according to overhead satellite imagery, creating some 20 acres
or so of a so-called A depot in the south near Rafa, and they believe that they, you know, are
unobstructed to take this very, very radical new measure. The very radicals who prop up Benjamin
Netanyahu, people who, you know, who you hear, the finance
minister Smotrich, the national security minister Ben Gavir, whose entire, from the very beginning,
their mission has been, reoccupy Gaza, you know, not only get rid of Hamas, but get,
you know, get rid of the Gazans.
And it's a lot happening similar in the West Bank as well.
This is their project.
And unfortunately, it is happening at a time
when Prime Minister Netanyahu
is undergoing a corruption trial.
And all of this, politics, personal situation,
is all happening at the same time.
And again, it's very unclear where the Trump administration will
will fall down on this issue.
I don't mean fall down. I mean, come down on this issue.
What is his relationship with Trump?
Trump is apparently disengaged at what's happening in Gaza.
And part of the reason he fired Mike Walz as head of the NSA, among other things,
is repeatedly because he was upset Walz had been coordinating with Netanyahu for plans to strike Iran.
Does Netanyahu have the green light to do as he wants in Gaza as long as Israel doesn't
hit Iran?
Well, I think they're two very different things.
I'm not surprised President Trump took that action, if that was true, that his own national
security official was planning some kind of attack on a foreign country
that actually Trump is trying to go into negotiations with.
So that in itself, as you know, Bibi Netanyahu
has always tried to make Iran the dominant issue
in the Middle East and has essentially, you know,
constantly wanted basically the US to go and do his
work for him in Iran by blowing up their nuclear plants.
The United States so far has resisted it.
They've resisted under President George W. Bush after the Iraq War.
They've resisted under every president, including President Trump.
Trump wants to go into a nuclear deal with Iran, and we'll see where that leads to.
Remember, he pulled out of the nuclear deal in Iran and we'll see where that leads to.
Remember he pulled out of the nuclear deal in his first term.
Right.
And now he needs to get it back again.
Right, right.
So we're now moving to Europe.
So let's start with the war in Ukraine.
I'm going to go through all the things I'm interested in right now.
Trump is showing impatience with Putin.
The administration signed a mineral deal and approved arms sales to Ukraine for the first
time in Trump 2.0.
Lindsey Graham has a bill that would increase sanctions on Russia and has had broad support in the Senate. Talk about this pivot towards Ukraine
if Putin refuses to engage in serious negotiations. And what happens if the US ends up leaving
Ukraine to its own devices? Can Europe defend Ukraine on its own or itself? And obviously
that would weaken NATO. And then that would put Estonia, Latvia and Lithuania and
Putin's crosshairs.
So the pivot really happened again in that famous Munich summit.
Then there was that disastrous meeting in the White House where Vance and Trump were
kind of beating up on Zelensky, who also didn't handle it well.
If I'd been his ambassador or his spokesman,
I would have said, Mr. President, you speak in an official meeting in your own language
with translators so that you understand exactly what's being said and so that you can respond
in a way that matches the seriousness of the moment. Instead, he was, in a way, Zelensky
flailing around in a language that is, he's
only just learned to speak pretty fluently, but not quite enough.
So that was that.
Interesting.
Then you had this whole business about President Trump, you know, spending several weeks kind
of blaming Ukraine and thinking that they could negotiate with Russia, you know, talking
to Putin before he talked to Zelensky, all of that kind of stuff.
Witkoff going there, his special envoy several times.
Again, Putin talking points, Putin talking points.
Also Mar-a-Lago talking points, how beautiful.
Well, that too, but still, the most generous interpretation is try to draw them in with
honey. Try to draw Russia into a negotiation,
like a Putin-Trump negotiation, with honey.
Unfortunately, it didn't work.
Why?
Because eventually, under American advice, Trump advice,
Zelensky of Ukraine agreed to that ceasefire,
if you remember, and guess who didn't agree to a ceasefire?
Vladimir Putin.
And not only that, kept pounding Ukraine Ukraine and not just anywhere in Ukraine,
Kiev, Odessa, but civilian targets and that pissed Trump off to the point you
remember he sent out a tweet Vladimir stop right and then he started to get
it appears pissed off with Putin because Putin was now revealing
the true Putin.
Everybody had said that Putin doesn't really want a peace.
Putin wants to win and he wants to play out and wait out the West.
He has always believed from the beginning that the West or Ukraine's allies will not
have the stomach to stay in it long enough.
Or there's not enough in Europe, right?
And so he can then do it. Because nationalist parties are surging across Europe. They're in power in it long enough. Or there's not enough in Europe, right? And so you can then do it.
Yeah, you see?
Because nationalist parties are surging across Europe.
They're in power in Italy, in Hungary, they're ruling coalitions in the Netherlands, Finland.
Yeah, but not in Ukraine.
But yes, they're making striking gains in France and Germany.
They could potentially win elections in Romania.
So can Europe then do this with these shifts that are similar to what's happening in our
country back and forth?
So can they defend not just Ukraine, but NATO and their alliance, especially with these
far-right moves across all these countries?
All of this is in play again.
NATO remains absolutely solid.
It waits to see whether its biggest member and its most powerful member of the United States,
what its role will be. It doesn't necessarily think the US will pull out of NATO, but what will its
role be? And it's really thinking right now that, and Europe is, that the West is no longer the West
as we know it. That the West is the United States, then there's the Europe part of the West,
and then there's the rest, so to speak.
The United States and Canada and Australia, if you want to think about the alliance.
But they are, it'll be difficult, they are already moving their spending targets in ways
that they know that they now need to spend a lot more on defense,
and it may come down to them giving the lion's share of aid to Ukraine.
But more importantly, can I just make a personal point?
I was very, very upset.
You know, I've been to a lot of war.
I've covered almost all America's major wars since 1990.
And I probably got a lot more war experience
than JD Vance and Peter Hexeth,
despite their military deployments.
And I'm much older than them.
And the way I see it is we Europeans
are not pathetic freeloaders.
We have come to America's aid time and time again
in the last 35 years.
The first Gulf War when President George W. Bush wanted and was correct to try to get
Saddam Hussein out of Kuwait, Europe and all the allies came to his defense.
After 9-11, Europe and the allies enacted Article 5, an attack on one is an attack on
all, for the very first time in NATO history for defending and protecting the United States of America.
They went to war for the United States with the United States in Afghanistan.
That was the right war at the time.
Then they went to a total misguided war.
Europe shouldn't have done, but they came to America's aid in the 2003 war in Iraq, which now we
know was based on fantasies and lies.
And so we've been helping.
When did America come to our aid in the last 35 years?
We'll be back in a minute. I do want to finish up talking about China.
As you said, opportunities everywhere for China.
Trump's tariffs are already causing obviously major pain to the Chinese economy.
They're lowering interest rates to response.
We've discussed it that China is more than ready to withstand both Scott and I on pivot
talk about that economic fallout in part because the Chinese is don't get much say in the matter. Talks between Chinese and American officials
began this week and the goal is to deescalate and Trump has already said he will lower tariffs.
He's been like a sad weather vane on this issue. There are reports that China is considering
showing slowing exportation of chemical precursors used to make fentanyl, which is something
Trump people want to point to. Taiwanese President Lai Qing-ta has been provoking China, at least rhetorically.
Meanwhile, China is practicing war gains that are so aggressive that General Roland Clark,
the Sith Army commander, said that leaves him speechless.
Give me an overview right now of China, and that's what we'll finish out on.
Where do you see, because that seems to me the person who's going to enter the void
rather significantly across the globe.
So overview is that China believes, Xi Jinping believes, it was slightly different with his
predecessors, but Xi Jinping believes that China's historical role is to lead the world.
So that's clear, whether by trade, military dominance, all of the rest of it. Secondly, somebody who's been considered for a Trump position, Elbridge Colby, I don't
know whether he's going to get confirmed or not, but before all this we had him on the
program quite a lot, and in the Pentagon.
And he was saying, you know, China is most certainly going to be looking at Ukraine and
how Ukraine plays out and the Russia, Ukraine and all those, because they're going to get their kind of marching orders, if you like, from what's allowed
to happen to Ukraine. Everybody believes that China, at one
way or another, is going to move on Taiwan in some form or fashion at
some point. So yes, China has played outside the rules of the game on so many
of the IP, creativity, all
of that kind of stuff, and indeed, in terms of the rules of the international waters,
it has dramatically upped its threat posture in the South China Sea and in that area.
And that's a big issue.
But as you say, it has a much higher pain threshold.
It doesn't respond necessarily
to a democratic will of the people.
And so it has probably a longer time
to take the pain of these tariffs.
And I'm not a business expert,
but you can see from
their psychology and what they say and the way they've played this in the
public, in public, and they're bringing out all sorts of Mao sayings and going
all the way back to sort of nationalist China from, you know, 1950 etc. They are
waging this in a very deliberate manner and as you said, you know, so far
President Trump has said, you know, I'll do this, but I won't do that, etc. and changed
his mind on a few of these things. We'll just see where it ends up.
What is his, I mean, you were sitting next to him and said, Christiane, I'm going to
do what you say, Steve Miller leave or whoever leave, Peter Navarro leave. What's the piece
of advice you would give him? Well look, there are people including my ex on the X-Files who credit Trump with really
bringing this China unfair trade stuff into, in a big way, into the public domain and into
the political domain.
This issue is a genuine and big issue.
The question is, how do you implement it?
I think that the President of the United States
and the President of China,
the two most powerful people in the world,
with the most powerful economies,
the US is still a little bit ahead.
Most powerful militaries, US still a little bit ahead.
But China is rushing to the finish line.
They have to be able to have, again,
some kind of, you know, again, rules of the road.
So what happens when you throw the rules of the road out,
as Trump has sort of said he wants to do,
and recreate them, then where do you have to go to
to create the parameters
around safe and secure trade and economic and military policy?
So I think that it needs a bit of both, you know, toughness and total awareness on what
you need China not to do, but also the ability for both to speak and negotiate
in a way that stops it from A, destroying the global economy,
and B, hurting people,
and C, coming to some dreadful military head.
And if there's no world order, what is the next phase,
and how long till we get there?
From, or what are you calling it? You have to go beyond no world order. What is the next phase and how long till we get there? What are you calling it? You have to go beyond no world order.
Yeah, I mean I think it's being formulated as we speak and we'll see what
happens in these four years because it is the four years of Donald Trump that
we're talking about and who knows who comes or what comes afterwards. But this
is an attempt to reorder the world to America's liking, right?
America first.
And there are some who suggest that the inexorable sort of route forward is to divide the world
into the strongman spheres of influence.
So who are they?
President Trump in the West, President Xi in Asia, and President Putin in Eurasia.
Is that possible?
What will it mean?
It was something that happened a long, long time ago.
And then, we're going back 100 years or more when it was last tried.
And then the whole of our past experience, 80 years, has been the reverse.
And by and large, it's worked.
By and large, it's enriched people, it's brought more peace, interconnectedness is better than
everybody fighting, right?
But it has raised some very tricky issues, and that is trade and protectionism and immigration.
The world has turned against the idea, which was a fundamental idea of the economy, that
people will move in order to make life better for themselves, but also enrich the countries
where they move to.
All of that has been tossed on its head and the question is, who and what are the politics and the
policies that can meet the actual complaints of the time without tipping everything into,
you know, over the edge?
I actually have one last question.
If you had to pick the one person you think is most important in the US foreign policy
area, who would it be?
Ooh, golly.
Besides Trump, you can't say Trump.
Yeah, okay, I won't say Trump.
I'd been hoping for an interview with Mike Walz, but he never gave me one and now he's
out of that position.
I guess, I guess, okay, JD Vance.
Why?
Because he's the one who either is him or he's channeling Trump and also obviously Marco
Rubio is channeling Trump.
But JD Vance is the one who came to Europe 80 years after VE Day, just about, 80 years
into this phenomenal alliance, which has paid dividends for all who are members of it and
basically turned it on its head in one speech.
And in that room, the German defense minister, he's quite an impressive fellow, Boris Pistorius,
he shouted and heckled from the back, because remember what Germany went through.
I mean, this is all 80 years was built to deny and annihilate what the terror that Germany
waged on the world 80 years ago.
He shouted from the room. This is unacceptable
So will it be acceptable? Is it unacceptable?
But I think JD Vance has a very very that's what I'm saying today
You know, I've often been wrong on things but um, that's what I'm saying today. Oh, I like it. I like it good choice
I'm surprised you can reach Mike Walls on signal
today. Oh, I like it. I like it. Good choice. I'm surprised. You can reach Mike Walls on Signal.
Anyway, thank you. And we're not getting into that. All right, Christiane, congratulations on becoming a podcaster. As I said, you jump in the pool. You did it. I'm so proud of you.
And I'm thrilled that you are here. We'll do a trade. I'm still on CNN. You know that. I know
that, but I don't care. Podcasting. You'll love it. You look like you're having fun on that podcast. I can tell.
Yeah, yeah. It's been fun getting it ready.
In a month, you'll be like, I've never had so much fun. You'll see.
Well, Kara, I'll call you if it's the reverse. I'll call you either way.
Trust me, I'll see you soon.
On with Kara's Wisher is produced by Christian Castor-Russell, Kateri Okum, Dave Shaw, Megan
Burney, Megan Cunane, and Kailin Lynch.
Nishat Kurwa is Box Media's executive producer of podcasts.
Special thanks to Eric Litke.
Our engineers are Rick Kwon and Fernando Arruda, and our theme music is by Trackademics.
If you're already following the show, you and your ex will have a wonderful friendship
just like Christian and Jamie Jamie and possibly a podcast. If not, it'll be endlessly contentious.
Go wherever you listen to podcasts, search for On with Kara Swisher and hit follow. Thanks
for listening to On with Kara Swisher from New York Magazine, the Vox Media Podcast Network
and us. We'll be back on Thursday with more.