The comparisons between South Korea’s response to the COVID-19 crisis and the United States’ is relevant. While the size of the two countries varies considerably, both countries are industrialized economies, which reported their first coronavirus case on the exact same day (Jan. 21).
It’s not exactly a secret that South Korea has had more success in stemming the infection rate. In fact, our ally’s success seems to have annoyed Donald Trump — to the point that he keeps trying to argue that officials in Seoul haven’t been as aggressive as the White House.
“[W]e’ve done more testing than South Korea,” the American president said this week. “Now, you’re not going to read that in the newspapers because they don’t like to write things like that. But I’d love you to say that one more time because that’s a big number. We’ve done more than South Korea in a short period of time. We’re doing more now than South Korea, by a lot.”
At a briefing yesterday, Trump repeated the boast, adding that South Korean officials actually called the White House to say that U.S. testing procedures “are amazing.”
It’s possible that this call is real, but it seems unlikely. The Republican has an unsettling habit of describing conversations that only occurred in his mind and presenting them to the public as if they were real. He also loves to point to “anonymous validators” who mysteriously tell him how right he is.









