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Trump's 'man of steel' posture will make America great again
Mint Bangalore
|February 13, 2025
Learn from the past: Metal tariffs will injure the US and its allies
If you want to reduce international trade and foreign relations to chest-beating displays of dominance, sooner or later you're going to end up fighting about steel.
Hard, unbending, corrosion-resistant and essential to making macho artifacts like skyscrapers, cars and armaments, the metal is associated with images of strength.
US President Donald Trump echoed that imagery in a photoshopped image last year showing himself as Superman, the 'Man of Steel,' on his Truth Social account.
Other autocratic leaders have had the same idea.
Georgian revolutionary Iosif Vissarionovich Dzhugashvili chose the Russian word for steel when he came up with the name by which he is best-known: Stalin.
When Fascist Italy struck a military alliance with Nazi Germany three months before the start of World War II, Mussolini dubbed it the "pact of steel."
Make no mistake, however: Trying to protect the US steel and aluminum industries for nation-building is a doomed project that will make America weaker.
Tariffs of 25% on imported metal that Trump promised to unveil will be as ineffective in fostering domestic production as his 2018 round of restrictions.
Since those actions, US production capacity for aluminum has fallen by 32%, while steel is down 3.6%.
Why expect a different result?
This story is from the February 13, 2025 edition of Mint Bangalore.
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