On Tuesday, Donald Trump made his début on the world stage—on
the same elegant green-marble dais, donated by Italy after the Second
World War, that he had mocked in a 2012 tweet as ugly. “The 12 inch sq.
marble tiles behind speaker at UN always bothered me,” Trump wrote. “I
will replace with beautiful large marble slabs if they ask me.” Trump’s
thoughts about the United Nations were bigger—and badder—this time
around.
For a body more accustomed to nuanced diplomatic speak, and now yearning
for leadership in an unsettled world, Trump’s bellicose speech was his
America First doctrine on steroids. Indeed, he opened his remarks to
leaders from almost two hundred countries with a litany of his
achievements since Election Day. “Our military will soon be the
strongest it has ever been,” he boasted.
Reads more: Donald Trump’s War Doctrine Débuts on the World Stage | The New Yorker
“Major portions of the world are in conflict, and some, in fact, are
going to hell,” Trump declared. He vowed to “totally destroy” North
Korea if it didn’t abandon its nuclear weapons and the intercontinental
ballistic missiles that deliver them. He came close to calling for
regime change in “reckless” Iran, for policies that “speak openly of
mass murder, vowing death to America, destruction to Israel, and ruin
for many leaders and nations in this room.” Trump called the nuclear
deal—brokered by all the veto-wielding nations of the world body—“an
embarrassment” to the United States, implicily insulting the European
allies that initiated the effort and the Security Council, which
unanimously endorsed it.
He implied a willingness to use military action
in Venezuela “to help them regain their freedom, recover their country,
and restore their democracy.” He blasted Cuba and took sharp digs at
China and Russia.\
The President also delivered a few campaign-style zingers—like his
pledge to “crush loser terrorists.” About North Korea’s Kim Jong Un,
Trump pronounced, “Rocket man is on a suicide mission for himself and
for his regime.”
Trump reportedly insisted, over aides’ objections, that he keep the
reference to the Elton John song in his speech. The line is sure to
become part of U.N. lore—along with the Nicaraguan President Daniel
Ortega’s quip, in 1987, “Remember, President Reagan, Rambo only exists
in the movies,” and the Venezuelan President Hugo Chavez’s insult, the
day after George W. Bush’s 2006 U.N. speech, “The devil came here
yesterday, and it smells of sulfur still.”
Reads more: Donald Trump’s War Doctrine Débuts on the World Stage | The New Yorker
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