For the better part of the year, Donald Trump has insisted, in multiple forums, that North Korea hasn’t engaged in any recent missile testing, despite multiple examples of North Korean missile testing. Late last week, the American president tweaked his position, but only a little.
“[T]hey are short-range missiles, and many people have those missiles,” Trump said, adding that the recent launches involve “very standard missiles.”
It was a strange argument. For one thing, the Republican was effectively admitting that his recent assertions about the absence of tests was wrong. For another, according to our South Korean allies, the latest North Korean tests have featured a new kind of missile, not “very standard” ones.
But even putting those relevant details aside, the question of whether “many people have those missiles” is beside the point. “Many people” aren’t facing U.N. Security Council resolutions, but Trump’s friend in Pyongyang is — and according to Trump administration officials, North Korea is violating those resolutions with its missile tests.
But when a reporter noted to Trump on Friday, in reference to the North Korean missile launches, “You don’t sound too spun up about it,” the Republican replied, “Nope. Not at all.”
Trump’s passivity is hard to understand. The Wall Street Journal published a report the other day pointing to evidence that North Korea’s scientists “have ramped up production of long-range missiles and the fissile material used in nuclear weapons.”









