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    Fellow Americans,

    Our approach to foreign policy is rooted in a single, guiding conviction: America's strength abroad begins with strength at home, and our leadership in the world must reflect the same principles that define our covenant with you—clarity of purpose, humility in action, accountability to the people, and an unwavering commitment to the national interest without entanglement in endless wars or ideological crusades. We will govern ourselves with disciplined realism, not reckless idealism or isolationist retreat. The United States will remain the indispensable nation, but we will do so by leading through strength, example, and strategic restraint rather than through overextension or moral posturing.

    First, we will rebuild and modernize the foundations of American power so that our foreign policy is never again constrained by weakness or debt. The Micro-Fee Prosperity Plan's trillions will be used to restore our industrial base, secure critical supply chains, invest in next-generation energy independence, and strengthen our military readiness—not for endless conflict, but for credible deterrence that makes war less likely. We will end the hollowing out of our defense industrial capacity and ensure our armed forces remain the most capable, best-equipped, and best-led in the world. This is not militarism; it is prudence. A strong America is the greatest force for peace because adversaries respect strength, allies trust it, and our own citizens deserve to know their sons and daughters are never sent into harm's way under-equipped or under-supported.

    Second, we will pursue a foreign policy of strategic clarity and selective engagement. We will clearly define vital national interests—protecting the homeland, preventing the emergence of hostile hegemons in critical regions, safeguarding freedom of navigation and global commerce, and upholding alliances that serve mutual benefit—and we will defend those interests with resolve. Where interests do not align with vital stakes, we will decline to intervene militarily, avoiding the quagmires that have drained our resources and our moral authority. We will end nation-building abroad and focus instead on nation-preserving at home. Our alliances will be revitalized, not as charities or protectorates, but as partnerships of equals with shared burdens and shared resolve. NATO partners will be held to their commitments; Indo-Pacific allies will be supported in deterring aggression without expecting America to bear disproportionate costs.

    Third, we will restore economic statecraft as a primary tool of foreign policy. The same innovative revenue mechanisms that fund our domestic renewal will be leveraged to reduce dependence on adversarial supply chains, counter economic coercion, and promote fair trade that serves American workers first. We will use tariffs, incentives, and investment policy to bring critical manufacturing back to our shores, secure rare earths and semiconductors, and build resilient food and energy systems. Diplomacy will be backed by economic leverage, not empty threats or appeasement. We will engage adversaries with strength and realism—competing vigorously where we must, cooperating where we can, and never confusing the two.

    Finally, we will conduct foreign policy with humility, transparency, and accountability to you, the American people. The Citizen's Council will have a formal role in reviewing major foreign commitments, treaty obligations, and military deployments that affect your sons and daughters, your tax dollars, and your security. No endless war will be waged without your voice being heard. No secret deal will be struck behind closed doors. We will speak plainly to the world, act consistently with our values, and always put America first—not as a slogan, but as a governing principle. Our foreign policy will reflect the same covenant we make at home: government exists to serve, protect, and empower the people, not to entangle them in distant conflicts or sacrifice their future for abstract causes.

    This is how we will govern ourselves on the world stage: strong but restrained, clear but not reckless, engaged but not entangled, always accountable to you. We seek not to dominate the world, but to secure a world where America remains free, prosperous, and respected—because a strong, united, and self-confident America is the greatest gift we can give to our children and to the cause of liberty everywhere.

    With steadfast resolve and complete devotion to our national interest,

    The Invisible President
    &
    The Invisible Vice President