When you think about a country beefing up its national security, you might think about missiles, tanks, submarines, or cyber defense. For Trump, it looks a little different. Last month, the Trump administration implemented furniture tariffs, including a 25 percent tariff on upholstered furniture and kitchen cabinets (as of January 1, they will increase to 30 and 50 percent, respectively); as well as a 10 percent tariff on softwood lumber. On top of the furniture tariffs, there are the 25 percent tariffs on medium- and heavy-duty trucks that went into effect last Saturday.
These tariffs were authorized under Section 232 of the Trade Expansion Act of 1962, which allows the president to impose tariffs on imports deemed a threat to national security. In other words, we have to be on the lookout for killer kitchen counters and heat-sinking sofas. Tongue-in-cheek remarks set aside, Trump's manipulation of Section 232 is more than merely about the economic costs of tariffs, as furniture outlet IKEA deciding to hike furniture prices in response to Trump's furniture tariffs illustrates. There are major national security implications for what Trump is doing.
As the American Trucking Associations pointed out, Trump's truck tariffs will increase costs for carriers, increase operational costs for fleets, reduce freight volumes, and disrupt the integrated North American supply chain. Keep in mind that national security is not solely about militaries. National security depends on robust logistics, well-functioning supply chains, and a healthy economy. When logistical readiness is diminished, supply chain resilience is eroded (see Supply Chain Today chart below), and the weak rationale creates policy uncertainty and subsequent delay in investments. In short, what Trump's tariffs on trucks do is undermine national security.
While furniture and lumber tariffs do not have the same impact on logistics or the supply chain, they certainly weaken the economy. As the National Association of Home Builders brings up in its analysis, Trump's tariffs will likely raise housing and construction costs (up to an additional $10,000 per home), strain supply chains that already heavily depend on imports, exacerbate a housing shortage, and hamper the domestic building sector when domestic production is unable to meet demand. This is even more nonsensical given that about half of U.S. lumber imports come from Canada, a long-standing ally and trade partner. Similar to the truck tariffs, national security flows from economic strength, resilient supply chains, and robust global ties. What the furniture tariffs do is weaken those essential foundations.
When all is said and done, Trump is not making the United States safer. He is making it weaker. By weaponizing "national security" to justify his blatant protectionism, his administration undermines the very pillars on which true national security rests: a strong economy, reliable supply chains, and trusted alliances. Instead of fortifying our defenses, his tariffs drive up costs, strain critical industries, and alienate long-standing partners. National security is built on openness, cooperation, and resilience, which is similar to what I argued last year about how free trade improves national security. If the actual goal is to keep the United States secure, weakening economic foundations and global partnerships is not strength. It is protectionist stupidity.

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