The Fourth Strategy? Just one sunk American destroyer, just one group of hostage diplomats, just one loss of hundreds of billions of dollars caused by a blockade of international trade routes would become a political catastrophe for the President of the United States. With the beginning of Donald Trump’s second presidential term, the world has encountered a unique diplomatic problem, one that has not really appeared for at least a century. The question is how to deal with him, and how to resist his pressure or, calling things by their proper names, his bullying. For many years we were told about a supposedly bullying, aggressive American diplomacy that respected no one. Yet it was harsh but still operated within certain limits. Even the aggressive George W. Bush, in his confrontation with the so-called “axis of evil,” and Joe Biden, who declared a struggle against the “axis of autocracies,” observed at least the formal courtesies of diplomatic communication. They tried, at least ...