HomeWorldTrump’s ad hoc foreign policy sparks confusion among allies and aides amid chat leak and shifting agendas

Trump’s ad hoc foreign policy sparks confusion among allies and aides amid chat leak and shifting agendas

From group chats on strikes to Oval Office clashes, Trump’s impulsive national security style exposes divisions in administration and erodes diplomatic clarity.

March 26, 2025 / 15:40 IST
Story continues below Advertisement

US President Donald Trump’s unorthodox and impulsive approach to foreign policy has again come under scrutiny after a Signal group chat used by top national security officials to discuss a strike on Houthi militants in Yemen was inadvertently leaked — exposing internal disagreements, policy contradictions, and the administration’s increasingly improvised decision-making structure, the Wall Street Journal reported.

The incident revealed how key decisions, including military action, are now often debated informally via nongovernment messaging apps, bypassing traditional channels like the National Security Council or the State Department. The group chat, dubbed the “Houthi PC small group,” became public after Atlantic Editor in Chief Jeffrey Goldberg was mistakenly added to it.

Story continues below Advertisement

Trump defends Waltz, downplays breach
President Trump downplayed the security breach, insisting the strike was “totally successful” and standing by National Security Adviser Mike Waltz, who created the group. “Mike Waltz does not need to apologise,” Trump said.

While previous administrations relied on careful interagency deliberation, Trump has centralised decisions around a small circle of loyalists, many of whom lack senior government experience. The result has been a foreign policy driven by personal instinct and transactional thinking, often without regard for complexity or long-term consequences.