The
Madman With Nuclear Weapons is Donald Trump, Not
Kim Jong-un
By Mehdi
Hasan
August
09, 2017 "Information
Clearing House"
- For once,
Donald Trump has a point. “We can’t let a madman
with nuclear weapons let on the loose like
that,” he told Philippines President Rodrigo
Duterte, according to the transcript from their
bizarre phone conversation that was
leaked to The
Intercept in May.
The madman the U.S president was referring to,
of course, was North Korean dictator Kim Jong-un.
The madman the rest of us should be worried
about, however, is Trump himself, who — lest we
forget — has the
sole, exclusive
and unrestricted power to launch almost 1,000
nuclear warheads in a matter of minutes, should
he so wish.
Most
nonproliferation experts
— as well as former
President Jimmy Carter
and a number of
former Pentagon
and State Department officials, both Republican
and Democrat — agree that the brutal and
murderous Kim, for all his bluster, is not
irrational or suicidal, but bent on preserving
his regime and preventing a
U.S. attack.
Nuclear weapons are a
defensive, not
an offensive, tool for the North Korean
leadership — which, as Bill Clinton’s defense
secretary William Perry
observed on Fox
News in April, may be “ruthless and … reckless”
but “they are not crazy.”
Got
that? Kim is bad, not mad.
The same cannot be said of The Donald. Think I’m
being unfair? In February, a group of
psychiatrists, psychologists and social workers
wrote to the
New York Times
“that the grave emotional instability indicated
by Mr. Trump’s speech and actions makes him
incapable of serving safely as president.” In
April, another group of mental health experts
told a conference at Yale University’s School of
Medicine that
Trump was “paranoid” and “delusional” and
referred to the president’s “dangerous mental
illness.”
Is it any wonder then that so many
recent
reports suggest
that South Koreans are more worried about Trump
than they are about the threat posed by their
hostile and paranoid neighbor?
Consider Trump’s
reaction this
week to a confidential U.S. intelligence
assessment — leaked to the
Washington Post
— that the DPRK is now able to construct a
nuclear warhead small enough to fit inside its
missiles. “North Korea best not make any more
threats to the United States,” the president
declaimed, in response to a reporter’s question
at his Bedminster Golf Club on Tuesday. “They
will be met with fire and fury like the world
has never seen. He has been very threatening
beyond a normal state. And as I said, they will
be met with fire, fury and frankly power the
likes of which this world has never seen
before.”
How is this not an unhinged response from the
so-called Leader of the Free World? In May, he
said he would be
“honored” to
meet with Kim and praised him as a “pretty smart
cookie.” In August, he took a break from his
golfing vacation to casually threaten nuclear
annihilation of Kim’s country (not even on the
basis of any aggression by the DPRK,
incidentally, but only their “threats”).
Does Trump understand the difference between
escalating and de-escalating a nuclear crisis?
Listen to Republican Senator John McCain, who
has never met a “rogue nation” he did not want
to
bomb, invade or occupy.
“I take exception to the president’s words,”
McCain
said on
Tuesday, adding: “That kind of rhetoric, I’m not
sure how it helps.”
I mean,
just how crazy do you have to be to advocate a
preemptive nuclear strike that even McCain
cannot get behind?
Trump has form, though, when it comes to loose
talk about nukes. During the presidential
campaign, in August 2016, MSNBC host and
ex-Republican congressman Joe Scarborough
revealed that
Trump, over the course of an hour-long briefing
with a senior foreign policy adviser, had asked
three times about the use of nuclear weapons. At
one point during the meeting, according to
Scarborough, the then-GOP presidential candidate
asked his adviser, “If we had them, why can’t we
use them?”
To be so blasé, enthusiastic even, about the
deployment of the ultimate weapon of mass
destruction is a stark indicator of Trump’s
childishness, ignorance, belligerence, and, yes,
derangement.
Here is a president who is impulsive, erratic,
unstable; whose entire life and career have been
defined by a complete lack of empathy. Remember
his strategy for defeating ISIS?
“Bomb the shit out of ’em”
and
“take out their families.”
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So do
you think civilian casualties were on his mind
when he issued his “fire and fury” warning?
Come. Off. It.
Listen to McCain’s fellow Republican super-hawk
Senator Lindsay Graham. “If there’s going to be
a war to stop [Kim], it will be over there,”
Graham told
NBC’s Matt Lauer
last week, recounting a recent conversation he
had with the president. “If thousands die,
they’re going to die over there. They’re not
going to die over here — and he’s told me that
to my face.”
“This is madness,” Kingston Reif, a nuclear
disarmament specialist the Arms Control
Association,
tweeted in
response to Graham’s re-telling of Trump’s
remarks. “Unhinged madness.”
Remember that 72 years ago today, the United
States dropped the second atomic bomb on Japan,
killing around
39,000 people
in Nagasaki. Three days earlier, the first
A-bomb killed around
66,000 people
in Hiroshima. But a nuclear war on the Korean
peninsula would make those strikes on Hiroshima
and Nagasaki look like pinpricks. Experts say
even a conventional war between the U.S. and the
DPRK could kill more than
1 million people;
a nuclear exchange, therefore, might result in
tens of millions
of casualties. Trump’s national security
adviser, H.R. McMaster, has admitted that such a
preemptive strike by the U.S. would be a
“humanitarian catastrophe.”
Does the president care? Graham doesn’t seem to
think so. Trump’s former ghostwriter Tony
Schwartz, who spent 18 months in his company
while working on The Art of the Deal, has called
the president a
“sociopath.” In
fact, one quote more than any other stood out
from
Schwartz’s much-discussed interview with the New
Yorker in July
2016 and, perhaps, should keep us all awake at
night. “I genuinely believe that if Trump wins
and gets the nuclear codes,” said Schwartz,
“there is an excellent possibility it will lead
to the end of civilization.”
We
can’t say we weren’t warned.
This
article was first published by
The Intercept
-
The
views expressed in this article are solely those
of the author and do not necessarily reflect the
opinions of Information Clearing House.