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President Trump's 'fire and fury' is the new 'lock her up!'

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Trump is acting as if North Korea’s Supreme Leader Kim Jong Un is just another campaign rival, writes Michael D’Antonio
On the stump Trump was willing to go to unanticipated extremes because his prior work as an entertainer and promoter had taught him that when it came to his most ardent fans, “I could stand in the middle of Fifth Avenue and shoot somebody, and I wouldn’t lose any voters.”
Trump’s fans, who became the base of his voting bloc, reveled in Trump’s unhinged rhetoric because, at least in part, it resonated with their own resentments. When he insulted elites, whom they felt had failed them, Trump claimed to be their voice and they were thrilled by what he said. Trump took office without the kinds of experience or skills that help a president work with Congress, or engage in diplomacy. The result has been abysmal — no legislative accomplishments to speak of beyond the confirmation of a Supreme Court justice and a White House staff that is divided and in many ways ineffective.
In the case of North Korea, which President Obama warned would be his most challenging problem, Trump has acted as if Supreme Leader Kim Jong Un is another rival to be bullied. The difference, of course, is that Kim commands a massive, nuclear-equipped military force that threatens both America’s ally, South Korea, and US territories, like Guam, in the range of its missiles.
When he warned Kim that provocation could lead him to unleash “power the likes of which this world has never seen before, ” Trump implied an attack exceeding the atom bombs that President Truman dropped on Hiroshima and Nagasaki.
Consider the emotional impact Trump’s statement might have on his base, which loves his bombast, and the red line the president drew can be seen as part of his effort to shore up poll numbers that sit at historic lows. However now that Trump is President, his audience also includes Kim Jong Un, and leaders of countries around the world, including North Korea’s only major ally, China.
Faced with a choice between shame and escalation, Kim is likely to escalate. And should a miscalculation lead to fighting, China cannot be expected to abandon the leader who provides a buffer against US-backed Seoul.
With reaction in Congress and world capitals running decidedly against the President, Secretary of State Rex Tillerson struck a different tone, insisting that he sees no “imminent threat” and that “Americans should sleep well at night.” As he reassured the world by pushing America away from the line drawn by the President, Tillerson gave him a bit of face-saving cover by praising his “strong message”
Tillerson’s interpretation of Trump’s outburst was the diplomatic version of a pat on the head for a President who seems more interested in manipulating his political base than in functioning as an effective leader. He is, in effect, telling the world that when it comes to geopolitics, the President is a figurehead and true leadership will come from the Department of State.
In domestic affairs, similar sentiments have been expressed by leaders in Congress who have been trying to advance a legislative agenda while the man in the White House busies himself on social media, where he criticizes fellow Republicans, and at campaign-style rallies.
Trump’s utter failure on Capitol Hill provides further evidence that he is making himself ever-less relevant. For those who care about the safety of the world, and the future of the Republic, this is one ray of light in an otherwise dark landscape.

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