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Opinion

You don’t have to worship Trump to feel hopeful at his victory

On issues from gender to the Iran deal, his instincts and ideas have been proven shrewder than those of his opponents

November 12, 2024 14:00
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READING, PENNSYLVANIA - NOVEMBER 04: Republican presidential nominee, former President Donald Trump takes the stage during a campaign rally at the Santander Arena on November 04, 2024 in Reading, Pennsylvania. With one day left before the general election, Trump is campaigning for re-election in the battleground states of North Carolina, Pennsylvania and Michigan. (Photo by Chip Somodevilla/Getty Images)
3 min read

Colonel John Boyd was one of the greatest military strategists you’ve probably never heard of. A genuine Top Gun who graduated first in his fighter aircraft class, he revolutionised combat aviation, developed a theory of how to comprehensively unsettle any opponent’s decision-making processes and was the architect of America’s stunning victory in the first Gulf War in 1991.

He summed up the secret of his success quite simply: “People, Ideas, Machines, in that order!” For Boyd, even in the uniquely technically complex area of how to develop and deploy jet fighters, personnel mattered more than any other consideration.

The same truth applies even more so in politics. The machinery of government – departmental budgets, legislative plans, procurement frameworks – matters if you’re going to achieve change. But not as much as ideas, the animating purpose of your cause. And not even they matter as much as choosing the right people.

On that basis, there is reason to be more optimistic about the Trump Presidency than many have so far been willing to allow. One of his first, and most important, appointments has been the choice of Elise Stefanik to be his Ambassador to the United Nations. That is good news for Israel, for Israel’s friends, and the wider West.