Donald Trump boasted to reporters earlier this week about the state of his policy toward North Korea. “[T]here’s no missile testing, there’s no nothing,” the Republican said.
Yeah, about that….
North Korea fired two short-range missiles early Thursday local time, according to U.S. and South Korean officials.
South Korea’s presidential office said in a statement that “a meticulous assessment by South Korea and the U.S.” found both devices were a new type of short-ranged ballistic missile.
This is getting a little embarrassing. In April, about a week after a North Korean missile launch, Trump inexplicably bragged, “There’s been no tests. There’s been no nothing.”
In May, the American president again insisted, “There have been no ballistic missiles going out,” which is only true if one overlooks the ballistic missiles North Korea keeps launching.
In June, Trump again said there’s been no “ballistic missile testing,” despite, you know, all the ballistic missile testing.
Circling back to our earlier coverage, the president’s strange rhetoric comes against a backdrop in which John Bolton, his own White House national security adviser, concluded that there’s “no doubt” the North Korean missile launches violated U.N. Security Council resolutions. Soon after, Pat Shanahan, Trump’s then-acting Defense secretary, came to the same conclusion.
Their boss, meanwhile, doesn’t seem to care. It’s worth considering why.
At face value, this may seem like a clumsy attempt at diplomacy: Trump is so desperate to reach some kind of nuclear agreement with Kim Jong-un that he’s willing to defend North Korea’s antics, no matter how provocative.









