Trump’s ‘Art Of The Deal’ Was Always ‘The Art Of War’

- June 4, 2026
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Treasury Secretary Scott Bessent acknowledged Wednesday that he threatened to “kick ass” during a heated confrontation last year, while firmly denying reports that he threatened to punch the now-acting Director of National Intelligence “in the face.”

The unusual exchange emerged during a Senate Finance Committee hearing, where Sen. Thom Tillis (R-NC) pressed Bessent about reports surrounding a confrontation between the two Trump administration officials during the summer of 2025.

According to Bessent, one key detail in the widely circulated account was inaccurate.

While he denied threatening.

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Seijah Drake was born in Boston, MA, where she developed a penchant for writing early on and a passion for politics in college. After college she worked briefly for a conservative media in New York before relocating to the Greater D.C. Area to pursue a career in political marketing. She now resides in the free state of Florida.

11 minute read

Sun Tzu wrote “The Art of War” as a manual for winning without wasting blood, time, or treasure. It is not a book about rage or destruction. It is a book about discipline, foresight, deception, and leverage. Its central idea is simple. The highest form of victory is achieved before the fighting begins. When force is required, it should be decisive, brief, and carefully prepared. When force can be avoided, it should be avoided. War, for Sun Tzu, is a continuation of statecraft by other means, and statecraft that ignores the logic of war invites ruin.

President Trump’s second term has revived an old argument. His critics describe his governing style as erratic, impulsive, and destabilizing. His supporters see something else. They see a deliberate pattern of uncertainty, pressure, and sudden resolution that repeatedly disadvantages adversaries and fractures coalitions. The question is whether that pattern is accidental. The better explanation is that it is strategic. Trump is governing in a way that closely tracks the deepest principles of Sun Tzu’s “The Art of War.”

This is not speculation untethered from evidence. Trump has directly referenced Sun Tzu in the past, including quoting the line that the supreme art of war is to subdue the enemy without fighting. More importantly, his second-term actions repeatedly align with Sun Tzu’s framework in ways that are difficult to dismiss as coincidence. Across trade, energy, borders, alliance management, and military operations, the same logic appears again and again. Confusion is not a failure of planning. It is the plan.

Sun Tzu begins by insisting that victory is decided before the battle. War is won by calculation, alignment, and preparation. Leaders who improvise under pressure lose. Leaders who front-load decisions and seize initiative force their opponents into reaction. Trump’s second term opened with exactly this approach. On day one, the administration released an extraordinary volume of executive actions in a tightly sequenced rollout. Regulatory freezes, hiring freezes, policy reversals, and institutional resets were deployed immediately. This was not governing by drift. It was governing by pre-commitment. The field was frozen so it could be measured, and measured so it could be reshaped.

This emphasis on early calculation continued throughout 2025. Executive action was used to set baselines before opponents could organize litigation, messaging, or coalition resistance. Sun Tzu describes this advantage as making many calculations before the fight. Trump’s method was to decide early, move fast, and deny adversaries the comfort of predictable process. That discomfort is not a bug. It is leverage.

Sun Tzu’s second great warning is about cost. Prolonged conflict drains nations. There is no instance, he writes, of a country benefiting from long war. Trump’s second term shows a consistent obsession with burn rate. The creation of the Department of Government Efficiency reflects this logic. Bureaucracy is treated as logistics. Waste is treated as a vulnerability. Efficiency is not merely fiscal policy. It is strategic discipline.

The same logic governs foreign aid pauses, workforce attrition plans, and program reviews. Sun Tzu would recognize the principle immediately. Do not fight with resources you cannot justify. Do not sustain commitments that weaken you more than they weaken your opponent. By forcing review before continuation, Trump reasserts control over national energy, fiscal exposure, and administrative sprawl. This is not isolationism. It is cost-aware statecraft.

The most famous chapter of “The Art of War” is Attack by Stratagem. Here, Sun Tzu argues that the highest form of victory breaks the enemy’s plans and alliances rather than smashing armies. Trump’s trade strategy fits this doctrine with remarkable precision. Tariffs are not deployed as blunt punishment. They are used as adjustable pressure. Rates rise, then pause. Exceptions are carved. Deadlines shift. Negotiations open and close. Coalitions strain under uneven exposure.

Canada, Mexico, China, the EU, Japan, and South Korea all experienced this pattern. Pressure was applied, then modulated. Temporary truces were announced, then revised. This constant movement prevented adversaries from settling into a stable opposition strategy. Multilateral actors suffer most under this approach because consensus requires predictability. Trump denies it to them. The Greenland episode illustrates this logic with unusual clarity. When Trump publicly raised the possibility of Greenland becoming a U.S. territory, European leaders reacted with disbelief and irritation. Yet the strategic effect was unmistakable. The Arctic, long neglected by Europe despite growing Russian and Chinese activity, suddenly became a defense priority. Capitals that had ignored the region began discussing basing, patrols, and collective responsibility. Nothing had changed on the map. What changed was attention. A few words from Trump forced allies to confront terrain they had chosen to overlook. In Sun Tzu’s terms, this was an attack on complacency rather than territory, breaking strategic drift without firing a shot.

The same method appears even more starkly in Trump’s approach to NATO. By stating plainly that the U.S. might not defend countries that failed to meet their treaty obligations, Trump introduced uncertainty into an alliance that had grown accustomed to automatic guarantees without reciprocal effort. Critics called this reckless. The outcome proved otherwise. Every NATO member moved to meet its obligations. Burden sharing, long discussed and endlessly delayed, became immediate. Sun Tzu teaches that alliances are targets before armies. By reshaping incentives and forcing allies to act in their own defense, Trump strengthened the alliance by making it real. This is the ultimate Sun Tzu victory, alignment achieved not through force, but through calibrated doubt that compels responsibility.

This is what Sun Tzu means by subduing the enemy without fighting. It does not mean that force is never used. It means that force is reserved for the precise moment when it is least expected and most likely to succeed, as seen in Venezuela. The vast majority of time, no troops are mobilized, and no missiles are fired. Yet outcomes still change. Supply chains realign. Concessions are made. Framework agreements emerge. The battlefield is economic, but the logic remains martial.

Sun Tzu insists that a wise commander first makes himself impossible to defeat. Only then does he look for opportunities to win. Trump’s second-term border and energy policies reflect this logic of tactical disposition. Declaring a border emergency, deploying military support, restoring detention and enforcement policies, and accelerating physical barriers all serve the same purpose. They harden the line. They reduce vulnerability. They deny easy exploitation. The result is measurable. Illegal border crossings have collapsed to almost zero, demonstrating that the strategy did not merely signal resolve but achieved operational control.

Energy policy follows the same pattern. By declaring an energy emergency and accelerating domestic production, the administration reduces exposure to external leverage. Sun Tzu repeatedly warns against fighting while dependent on fragile supply lines. Energy independence is not merely economic policy. It is strategic insulation. The outcome is again measurable. Gas prices have fallen to record lows, putting real money back in the pockets of consumers and reinforcing the link between strategic insulation and domestic prosperity.

Tempo is another core Sun Tzu concept. Energy, in his terms, is momentum. It is the ability to strike as one body and keep the opponent off balance. Trump’s governing tempo has been relentless. High-velocity action overwhelms opponents’ capacity to respond coherently. Litigation lags. Messaging fragments. Institutional resistance becomes reactive rather than directive.

This tempo is paired with sequencing. Freeze, then move. Rescind, then replace. Shock resets are followed by consolidation. Sun Tzu emphasizes that surprise and rhythm transform force. Trump applies that lesson to governance.

Sun Tzu’s targeting doctrine warns against attacking strength directly. Instead, strike weak points and supply nodes. Trump’s focus on fentanyl policy illustrates this principle. By framing fentanyl as a weapon of mass destruction and linking trade pressure to supply-chain accountability, the administration targets a critical vulnerability rather than diffuse criminal networks. Closing de minimis import loopholes follows the same logic. Small channels become pressure points precisely because they were previously ignored. The effects have been rapid and concrete. Fentanyl deaths are now declining sharply, and trade pressure applied through these same chokepoints helped cut the U.S. trade deficit roughly in half within just seven months, translating strategic leverage into measurable national gains.

Maneuvering, Sun Tzu warns, is dangerous if it creates desperation. A trapped enemy fights harder. Wise commanders leave exits. Trump’s tariff pauses and exceptions function as modern exit ramps. Compliance pathways are left open. Adversaries are pressured but not cornered. This preserves leverage while reducing escalation risk.

Variation in tactics is another Sun Tzu constant. Rigid doctrine loses. Trump’s willingness to delay enforcement, adjust rates, and alter sequencing reflects adaptive control rather than indecision. Timing becomes a weapon. The delay of the TikTok ban is best understood in this light. Forcing a binary outcome when conditions are not optimal violates Sun Tzu’s advice. Buying time can be victory.

Terrain matters deeply to Sun Tzu. Borders are terrain. Energy geography is terrain. Trade chokepoints are terrain. Trump’s second term is obsessed with shaping terrain to favor U.S. action. Physical barriers, detention capacity, port scrutiny, and domestic resource development all narrow the field on which adversaries can operate.

Sun Tzu’s doctrine of situations teaches that different conditions demand different rules. Trump’s frequent use of emergency authorities reflects this situational framing. By defining the ground, he unlocks tools and unifies action. Critics call this norm-breaking. Sun Tzu would call it command.

The clearest demonstration of Sun Tzu logic in Trump’s second term came with the June 2025 Iran operation, known as Operation Midnight Hammer. The strike embodied deception, surprise, and information control with textbook clarity. Decoy bomber movements were detected while the actual strike package moved undetected. Communications were tightly restricted. Disclosure was limited even within government. Public messaging oscillated between diplomacy and warning. A second example followed in Venezuela with the capture of Nicolás Maduro. Here again, pressure was applied quietly and unevenly, intelligence was compartmentalized, and the decisive move arrived only after the regime’s options had narrowed. The operation avoided prolonged confrontation, relied on surprise rather than spectacle, and achieved regime decapitation without a drawn-out conflict. In Sun Tzu’s terms, the enemy was defeated not by constant blows, but by waiting until his position became untenable and striking at the moment of maximum advantage.

The result was strategic shock. Adversaries were unprepared. Allies were uncertain. Timing remained opaque until the moment of execution. Sun Tzu writes that all warfare is based on deception and that victory belongs to those who strike where the enemy is unprepared. Midnight Hammer and Operation Absolute Resolve were not improvisation. They were doctrine executed.

Equally important was what followed. Escalation was contained. A ceasefire with the Iranian regime was announced rapidly. Objectives were limited. In Venezuela, the outcome was even clearer. Following Maduro’s capture, the interim leadership moved quickly to stabilize the state, reopen channels with Washington, and reposition Venezuela as a partner rather than an adversary. Sanctions relief discussions, energy coordination, and security cooperation replaced confrontation. This restraint reflects Sun Tzu’s warning against acting from anger. Fire, he says, must be used carefully and with foresight. Trump’s use of force was sharp, bounded, and disciplined, decisive enough to change leadership behavior, restrained enough to convert victory into alignment.

Finally, Sun Tzu closes with intelligence. Foreknowledge wins wars. Trump’s emphasis on vetting, screening, and information control at entry points reflects this priority. You do not open gates you cannot monitor. You do not negotiate blind. Human intelligence and institutional awareness precede action.

Taken together, these patterns form a coherent picture. Trump’s second term is not chaotic. It is adversarial. It is strategic. Confusion is cultivated because confusion fractures coalitions. Uncertainty is maintained because predictability benefits opponents. Pressure is applied with exits because domination without destruction is the goal.

Sun Tzu is not a prophet of brutality. He is a theorist of economy, discipline, and foresight. Trump’s second-term statecraft aligns with that tradition. He governs as if politics is war by other means, and as if war should be won before it is fought.

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