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International News Title: Muzzle Trump or it’s the end of the world as we know it Heres the good news about the crisis over North Korea. We are not going to war. Donald Trump is not going to nuke Pyongyang, reckless, rhetorical threats to the contrary. Nor is North Koreas Kim Jong Un going to nuke Guam. Yes, I know the president just threatened to meet any more North Korean threats to the United States with fire and fury like the world has never seen. This is the kind of extreme military rhetoric by a U.S. president the world has never seen, except by Harry S. Truman before bombing Nagasaki. Kim responded by threatening a pre-emptive strike against Guam, a U.S. territory with American military bases. But a pre-emptive war is not on the horizon, with one key caveat: My prediction may soon reverse if Trumps team cant muzzle the president. For months, observers have warned that Trumps tweets and careless comments could endanger our country in a crisis. Trumps words were no doubt perceived by Kim as a warning of a likely pre-emptive attack on North Korea, which led to his dangerous riposte on Guam. But the president also undercut his own team which was making some important progress in putting the squeeze on Pyongyang. Only last week, the U.S. ambassador to the United Nations, Nikki Haley, pushed through the harshest sanctions yet against North Koreas nuclear program, with China and Russia on board. These sanctions could cut North Koreas foreign earnings, which fund its military, by a third. Much more needs to be done to ensure enforcement of U.N. sanctions, to curb North Koreas export of workers, and to pursue U.S. secondary sanctions against foreign banks that help the North. The model (despite differences) should be the sanction policy that forced Iran to the nuclear bargaining table. In tandem with the sanctions push, Secretary of State Rex Tillerson had made a key statement aimed at reassuring Kim. He said America does not seek a regime change or collapse, or an accelerated reunification of the two Koreas. Tillerson also said, We do not seek an excuse to send our military north of the 38th parallel. In other words, despite competing statements from different Trump-team officials, the nucleus of a smart North Korea policy was emerging: aggressively pursuing sanctions and compliance from Beijing, moving at a much faster pace than President Barack Obama did with Iran, while trying to reassure Kim of U.S. intent. The goal: to get North Korea to stop testing missiles and nukes and return to the bargaining table. Then, Trump casually and without consultation blew it up. Tillerson, reportedly blindsided, tried to walk things back, saying nothing had changed and Americans should sleep well at night. Trump clearly misunderstands the presumed target of his rhetoric, whom he thinks he can bully into better behavior. However, Kim, whos mainly concerned with staying in power, already knows that an attack on the U.S. would be suicidal, says Scott Snyder, the Council on Foreign Relations top Korea expert. But the young leader is making a major miscalculation by using threats in a more provocative way than we saw (Soviets) doing in the Cold War. This escalation of threats could provoke Kim into doing something rash, which might in turn persuade Trump to order military retaliation. From such rhetoric and miscalculations, a war could begin. The best advice Ive heard, from the Atlantic Councils Robert Manning, a veteran of past negotiations with Pyongyang, is: Stop getting hysterical every time they (the North Koreans) do something. Trump should make clear, as part of an overall policy, that any use of WMD would result in a massive American reaction. But beyond that, his team needs to press behind the scenes for a broader, tougher sanctions regime, involving European and Asian allies. The fire and fury episode sends a warning of where Trumps loose tongue could lead. That prospect presents a more immediate danger than does Pyongyang. Poster Comment: Post Comment Private Reply Ignore Thread Top Page Up Full Thread Page Down Bottom/Latest Begin Trace Mode for Comment # 1.
#1. To: Willie Green (#0)
#2. To: hondo68 (#1)
This is all a bunch of crap just to get more funding for the pentagon and other government agencies. You would think that the american people would finally figure this system out. The media's job is to do exactly what they are doing, "promote it".
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