Bill Mauhroff of Rock Island, Iowa said that Mr. Trump “is destroying the relationships that we have been building as a nation for decades.” Maurhoff, a retired commercial banker who’s voted Democrat his entire life, says America shouldn’t be a “policeman to the world.” But others, like 55-year-old Chris Lint, are having a hard time imagining a world where America is no longer the world’s only superpower. “We are the world power,” Lint said. “To a certain degree, we need to be a police force.” Lint said he has two big concerns, “Kim and Putin,” referring to North Korean leader Kim Jong Un and Russian President Vladimir Putin. “We need to quit coddling dictators,” Lint said.Foreign policy, however, is still taking a backseat to domestic issues. Grant Woodard, a former Democratic operative who worked on Hillary Clinton’s 2008 Iowa campaign, told CBS News “we’re having more of a debate in terms of the economy and how progressive the party really wants to make itself.” Woodard said voters are “mostly focused on healthcare issues and economic issues,” and because of that “there is only so much time” that candidates have to present their arguments on foreign policy.According to Woodard, most Democratic voters agree that China is a rising power, Russia is a threat, and the U.S needs to withdraw from foreign engagements like Afghanistan. But, he said, “I don’t think that many caucus goers are necessarily going to have that be the deciding factor in who they’re going to support.”While some Democratic candidates have put out relatively detailed plans on how they would approach foreign policy, most have kept their focus elsewhere. “I don’t think that they feel the need to really distinguish themselves amongst each other,” Woodard told CBS News about the Democrats’ foreign policy plans. “I think as you get into a general election, you’re always going to hear more about it from a Democratic candidate.”

But some Democratic strategists say that talking about foreign policy is a way to attract Democratic voters debating their many options in a crowded field. John Norris, a longtime Iowa political operative who served as chief of staff for Tom Vilsack during his time as governor of Iowa and Secretary of Agriculture, said he understands “there is a lot of bread-and-butter issues that the candidates want to and need to talk about.”He cautioned, however, that it could be a mistake for the presidential hopefuls to not highlight their views on foreign policy.”I think it is going to be an issue that Iowa caucus goers and voters in general are going to ask to see more examples of competency,” Norris told CBS News. He added that a candidate who can demonstrate “depth on foreign policy has the capacity to win over some Iowa Democratic caucus goers.””There will be greater expectations of the candidates to share with Iowa Democrats an ability to tackle foreign policy issues,” Norris said. “It’s just going to be more critical now than it was six months ago.”

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