For subscribers

US exceptionalism is dead, no matter who wins the election

No matter the president, the US will no longer meet the world as moral beacon or crusader, but as just another great power pursuing selfish interests.

Sign up now: Get ST's newsletters delivered to your inbox

The eschatology of American democracy first became dubious during the first Trump term, says the writer.

The eschatology of American democracy first became dubious during the first Trump term, says the writer.

PHOTO: REUTERS

Andreas Kluth

Google Preferred Source badge

A facile way to frame the future of American foreign policy is to set up two scenarios as a binary choice. If Donald Trump returns to the White House, the United States becomes isolationist. If Mr Joe Biden wins re-election, the US remains broadly internationalist.

That framing neglects a change that may be less obvious but more consequential for other countries, a shift that will keep playing out no matter who wins in November: For the first time in its 2½ centuries, the US will stop looking at the world through the lens of its own exceptionalism, and behave as just another great power using its awe-inspiring might to serve a narrow self-interest.

See more on