The White House dropped a 33-page National Security Strategy on Thursday that reads like an economic and geopolitical wish list for President Donald Trump's vision of American dominance. The big headline? Growing the U.S. economy from $30 trillion today to $40 trillion sometime in the 2030s, all while beefing up military might, tech leadership, and basically everything that falls under "national security."
A New Western Hemisphere Playbook
The document introduces what it calls a Trump Corollary to the Monroe Doctrine—think of it as the 19th-century "stay out of our hemisphere" policy, but with a transactional, America-first twist for modern times. The administration wants the Western Hemisphere locked down tight enough to stop mass migration at the source, get governments cooperating against drug cartels and narco-terrorists, keep hostile foreign powers from buying up strategic assets, protect supply chains, and maintain access to key locations.
It's an assertive stance that puts U.S. economic and strategic interests front and center when dealing with neighbors and rivals alike.
Bringing Manufacturing Back Home
Under Secretary of State Jacob Helberg framed the manufacturing piece in historical terms: "As Alexander Hamilton argued in our republic's earliest days, the United States must never be dependent on any outside power for core components—from raw materials to parts to finished products—necessary to the nation's defense or economy. The future belongs to makers."
The strategy points to the administration's tariffs as tools for bringing critical industries back to American soil and unleashing domestic energy production. This independence push aligns perfectly with warnings from the Select Committee on Strategic Competition that China's grip on critical minerals represents a serious national security vulnerability.
Securing The Indo-Pacific And Supply Chains
The document makes clear that keeping the Indo-Pacific region free and open isn't just about geopolitics—it's about protecting the supply chains and sea routes that American commerce depends on. The strategy aims to prevent foreign actors from disrupting the U.S. economy while ensuring freedom of navigation through vital waterways and access to critical materials.
NATO Gets A Much Higher Bill
Here's a number that'll make headlines: NATO countries have reportedly agreed to increase their defense spending from 2% to 5% of gross domestic product. That's a massive jump, and the strategy frames it as part of helping European allies protect their own freedom and security while "renewing Europe's civilizational confidence and Western identity."
Winning The Technology Race
The strategy also stakes America's claim to leadership in the technologies that'll define the next generation—AI, biotech, and quantum computing. The document argues that investing in emerging tech and basic science now is essential for maintaining prosperity, competitive advantage, and military supremacy down the road. The goal is making sure American technology and standards shape how the world develops these crucial capabilities.
Richard Haass, president of the Council on Foreign Relations, has previously cautioned that the $38 trillion national debt itself poses a national security threat—a tension that any ambitious economic expansion plan will have to navigate.