Trump steps up war of words against North Korea, while his Defense secretary stresses diplomacy
Reporting from WASHINGTON — President Trump reinforced his threat to unleash “fire and fury” on North Korea despite widespread criticism of his bellicosity, saying Thursday that his initial statement maybe “wasn’t tough enough.”
The strong language — Trump used versions of the word “tough” four times during one seven-minute exchange with reporters, while downplaying the potential for negotiations and sanctions — came only hours after Secretary of Defense James. N. Mattis stressed the importance of diplomacy in the increasingly tense standoff with the nuclear-armed state.
“Of course there’s a military solution,” Mattis told reporters en route to a visit to a nuclear submarine base in Seattle, which he said was long-planned. “But what we’re trying to do here is leave it loud and clear … in the diplomatic arena: It is North Korea’s choice. Do you want a much better future — the entire world community is saying one thing — or do you want a much worse future?”
Trump, however, expressed little hope that negotiations could defuse tensions or put an end to North Korea’s program to develop nuclear-armed intercontinental ballistic missiles capable of striking the United States or its allies.
“Sure, we’ll always consider negotiations. But they’ve been negotiating now for 25 years,” he said, addressing reporters from his golf club in Bedminster, N.J., with Vice President Mike Pence beside him.
The statement came in one of two impromptu news conferences Trump held, for just under 30 minutes combined, before and after a security briefing from top advisors. The president is on what the White House is calling a working vacation, a 17-day stay mainly at his club that so far has included long periods out of public view punctuated by a few meetings, provocative tweets and official statements.
Divergent messages from Trump and his top advisors are not uncommon. But they have been a hallmark of his administration’s response to North Korea since Tuesday, when the Washington Post reported on U.S. intelligence assessments that the adversarial nation had produced a miniaturized nuclear warhead compatible with its missiles.
Trump’s initial Tuesday comments, an off-the-cuff warning that threats from North Korean leader Kim Jong Un would be met with “fire and fury like the world has never seen,” prompted Kim to threaten a missile attack on Guam, the island territory of the United States in the Pacific that is home to a huge American military base.
Trump accused his White House predecessors of timidity, of letting Kim get away with such threats without blowback. “It’s about time that somebody stuck up for the people of this country and for the people of other countries,” he said.
“Let’s see what he does with Guam,” Trump said of Kim later, during his second round with reporters. “If he does something in Guam, it will be an event the likes of which nobody’s seen before.”
”It’s not a dare,” the president added. “It’s a statement.”
North Korea on Thursday provided unusual detail about its threat to Guam, saying a plan would be ready for Kim’s approval by mid-August.
The state-run Korean Central News Agency reported on a statement that the government in Pyongyang is “seriously examining the plan for an enveloping strike at Guam through simultaneous fire of four Hwasong-12 intermediate-range strategic ballistic rockets in order to interdict the enemy forces on major military bases on Guam and to signal a crucial warning to the U.S.”
The statement quoted a North Korean general, Kim Rak Gyom, as saying of Trump, “Sound dialogue is not possible with such a guy bereft of reason and only absolute force can work on him.”
The general dismissed Trump’s threat of “fire and fury” as a “load of nonsense.”
Trump seemed to be betting that strong words lodged against Pyongyang would go further than the diplomatic actions undertaken by his administration, going so far as to express uncertainty in them to reporters. He also contradicted himself, alternately dismissing and promoting the possibility of influencing Kim’s behavior with a new set of sanctions that was approved unanimously last week in the United Nations Security Council.
“Probably, it will not be as effective as a lot of people think it can be,” he said in his first exchange with reporters.
“Big impact,” he declared about an hour later.
The president’s belligerent language, in matching rhetoric used by Kim, has heightened anxiety and fear among Americans and allies about a nuclear confrontation with a volatile adversary. Trump again declined to rule out a first strike, reiterating his policy of refusing to discuss future military plans.
At another point, he used vague and sharp language to demand that North Korea “get their act together,” or “they’re going to be in trouble like few nations ever have been in trouble in this world.”
Asked to provide reassurance to Americans concerned by the heated words between the two countries, Trump pointed to the strength of the military. He again spoke of the nuclear threat, not climate change, as the greatest one the world faces, and said he would be announcing a plan next week to add billions of dollars to the nation’s missile defense.
The president had tweeted falsely Wednesday that he already upgraded the nation’s nuclear arsenal, when in fact President Obama launched a modernization effort in 2014 and Trump has not had a significant impact on that undertaking over the last seven months.
Trump also renewed hints that he may pull out of the international accord that dismantled Iran’s nuclear program, a promise he made on the campaign trail that has unsettled allies, including Europeans, China and Russia, that helped negotiate it.
“It’s a horrible agreement,” Trump said. But the Iranians “are not in compliance with the agreement and they are certainly not in the spirit of the agreement in compliance, and I think you’ll see some very strong things taking place if they don’t get themselves in compliance.”
Mattis’ remarks on North Korea were nearly the opposite of Trump’s. Although he did not take threats of force off the table, he made it clear that diplomacy was the first option.
“You can see the American effort is diplomatically led, it has diplomatic traction, it is gaining diplomatic results, and I want to stay right there right now,” Mattis told reporters traveling with him in Silicon Valley. “The tragedy of war is well enough known, it doesn’t need another characterization beyond the fact that it would be catastrophic.”
He walked a fine line in reconciling those comments with the commander in chief’s, saying earlier that Trump is the one elected by the American people.
“You can see his diplomatic effort to try to stop it,” Mattis said. “He’s just showing the concern he has.”
The disconnect within the executive branch was highlighted in a radio interview that one of Trump’s most fervent aides in the administration’s nationalist wing, Sebastian Gorka, gave to the BBC on Thursday. The relatively junior advisor downplayed the influence of Cabinet member Rex Tillerson, the secretary of State who had urged Americans to “sleep well at night” amid the North Korea standoff.
“You should listen to the president. The idea that Secretary Tillerson is going to discuss military matters is simply nonsensical,” Gorka said in a recording reported by the Washington Post.
“It is the job of Secretary Mattis, the secretary of Defense, to talk about the military options, and he has done so unequivocally,” Gorka added. “He said, ‘Woe betide anyone who militarily challenges the United States,’ and that is his portfolio. That is his mandate. Secretary Tillerson is the chief diplomat of the United States, and it is his portfolio to handle those issues.”
For more on Politics and Policy, follow me @noahbierman
Get the latest news from the nation’s capital on Essential Washington >>
More to Read
Get the L.A. Times Politics newsletter
Deeply reported insights into legislation, politics and policy from Sacramento, Washington and beyond. In your inbox three times per week.
You may occasionally receive promotional content from the Los Angeles Times.