Trump's foreign strategy still rests heavily on courting autocrats
By Tracy Wilkinson, Los Angeles Times
Published: September 2, 2024, 6:00am
SAN SALVADOR, El Salvador When El Salvadors autocratic president, Nayib Bukele, celebrated his inauguration this summer, guests of honor included Donald Trump Jr., Tucker Carlson and Rep. Matt Gaetz, the firebrand Republican from Florida.
The right-wing celebrities attended the swearing-in ceremony at the Salvadoran National Palace, joined in the sumptuous black-tie dinner that followed and posed for numerous photos with Bukele, who wore a gold-embroidered black suit somewhere between a military uniform and a Nehru jacket.
I came because something remarkable is happening here, Carlson later gushed to Bukele during an interview for the former Fox News hosts podcast.
Youre the most popular elected official in the world provable fact, Carlson added as the two sat amid elephant ear plants on Bukeles verdant patio.
Honored to be at @nayibbukele s inauguration to support a leader willing to fight the globalist for the benefit of his people, Trump Jr. wrote on Twitter, now known as X, after emerging from a one-on-one meeting at the palace with Bukele. We need more like him.
More:
https://www.columbian.com/news/2024/sep/02/trumps-foreign-strategy-still-rests-heavily-on-courting-autocrats/