Intelligence Squared debate: Trump and US national security

President Donald Trump and Nikki Haley at the United Nations.
President Donald Trump attends a meeting on the global drug problem at the United Nations (UN) with UN Ambassador Nikki Haley a day ahead of the official opening of the 73rd United Nations General Assembly on September 24, 2018 in New York City.
Spencer Platt|Getty Images

For the United States, tensions are rising with both allies and adversaries. Rogue states are racing to master new technologies and create weapons of mass destruction. And faith in international institutions is seemingly deteriorating. What does this all mean for U.S. national security?

Staged in the Intelligence Squared "unresolved" format, five foreign policy experts argue "for" or "against" a number of motions revolving around some of America's most pressing national security issues, including: Is NATO no longer fit for purpose? Is the Russia threat overblown? And, is it time to take a hard line on Iran?

MOTIONS:

NATO Is No Longer Fit For Purpose.

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FOR: "NATO expansion, which was all designed just to keep NATO alive, has failed miserably. It's turned Eastern Europe into a real mess, and we're now more deeply involved in Eastern Europe than ever when we should be either pivoting to Asia or spending the money here in the United States." —John Mearsheimer, political science professor, University of Chicago.

AGAINST: "Ask yourselves: would the U.S. be better able to protect its interest and help solve the challenges of the future without willing and capable allies standing by its side? Think about it: if NATO did not exist today, we would be racing to invent it." —Derek Chollet of The German Marshall Fund of the United States & former U.S. Assistant Secretary of Defense.

The Russia Threat Is Overblown:

FOR: "Putin's Russia, anyone's Russia, should be America's number one national security partner in the world. Washington squandered that opportunity after 1991, and it's continued to squander it today by inventing or provoking threats residing in Russia, which do not exist." —Stephen Cohen, emeritus professor of Russian Studies and Politics, New York University & Princeton University.

AGAINST: "I notice that a few individuals up here probably don't want to maintain NATO, and they're oddly the ones who believe that Russia isn't a threat." —Reuel Gerecht, senior fellow, The Foundation for Defense of Democracies & former CIA Case Officer.

It's Time To Take A Hard Line On Iran:

FOR: "It is time to take a harder line on Iran. They are the top state sponsor of terrorism in the world. They are destabilizing neighboring governments. They're arming Hezbollah and Hamas. They are keeping Bashar Al-Assad in power and doing a lot of the murderous work of that horrible war." —Kori Schake, deputy director-general, International Institute for Strategic Studies.

AGAINST: "The hawks believe that you can get really tough with the Iranians, and you can beat them into giving up nuclear weapons forever. I don't think that's going to happen." —John Mearsheimer, political science professor, University of Chicago.