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Trump’s ‘Last Warning’: What It Means for Asia’s Security Landscape

Daniel Kim Views  

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하만주
Haman-ju, Washington Correspondent

President Donald Trump’s message on the 31st (local time) amounted to a near-ultimatum that could shake the foundations of the international security order. He said he would end the war with Iran within two to three weeks and withdraw U.S. forces regardless of any agreement with Tehran. “Our goal was to eliminate its nuclear capability, and we achieved that,” he declared. He also told European allies they must “learn to fight on your own,” and urged beneficiary states to secure the Strait of Hormuz themselves. Taken together, the remarks signal a weakening of the unilateral patronage model of Pax Americana that has underpinned the post‑World War II order.

The reverberations are already being felt across the Middle East. Israel warned that a unilateral U.S. early exit would allow Iran’s core military capabilities to remain intact and deepen regional instability. Gulf partners, including the United Arab Emirates, have demanded more than a ceasefire — they want the complete dismantling of Iran’s weapons systems. But Trump’s focus is squarely on “America First.” With domestic opposition to foreign wars that cost American lives growing, alliances are shifting from automatic triggers for intervention to instruments of selective engagement driven by U.S. national interest.

That shift forces a hard question: is U.S. military involvement on the Korean Peninsula still an immutable given? The old assumption that “an alliance equals security” no longer holds. History draws a stark contrast between the tragedies of overreliance on allies and the benefits of self-reliance. The fall of Afghanistan in August 2021 is a case in point. Former Afghan special forces commander Sami Sadat called the collapse a “political failure” in a New York Times op‑ed. The agreement with the Taliban reached during Trump’s first term effectively provided a political rationale for withdrawal, and President Ashraf Ghani’s flight accelerated state collapse.

By contrast, Ukraine followed a very different path. Early on, most experts expected Kyiv to fall within weeks to overwhelming Russian force. But President Volodymyr Zelenskyy held the line, and popular determination to resist became the decisive factor that mobilized Western support. What many assumed would be a short war has stretched into more than four years, and Ukraine’s ability to defend its sovereignty grew out of a national resolve to stand and fight. The divergent outcomes in Afghanistan and Ukraine demonstrate that leadership and public will are the starting points of security.

The Korean Peninsula faces the persistent asymmetric threat posed by North Korea’s nuclear forces. In an era of rising Trump-style isolationism, the safety net we need is not a single line of defense but a layered deterrent architecture.

First, leaders and citizens must cultivate a firm security mindset; without internal cohesion, no alliance can provide credible deterrence. Second, the U.S.-ROK alliance should remain the cornerstone, but strategy must be flexible and expand practical security cooperation with partners such as Japan and other regional allies. Third, reinforce the United Nations Command (UNC) framework established after the UN’s founding — it is a vital institutional mechanism for coordinating international intervention in a crisis.

Trump’s remarks are not mere rhetoric. They amount to a warning that the era in which alliances alone could deter aggression is over. Peace depends less on others’ goodwill than on the ability to defend oneself and on the institutional structures that sustain that ability. The best safeguard against war combines internal resolve with a multilayered deterrent system.

Daniel Kim
content@tenbizt.com

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