North Korea my-button-is-bigger brinkmanship again spotlights Trump’s fixation on size

The following article by James Hohmann with Breanne Deppisch and Joanie Greave was posted on the Washington Post website January 3, 2018:

North Korea said it would reopen a border hotline with South Korea Jan. 3, hours after President Trump said he has a “bigger” nuclear button than Kim Jong Un. (Reuters)

THE BIG IDEA: Following President Trump’s tweets can feel like watching a short man drive a Hummer. His fragile ego is always looking to overcompensate. The latest manifestation of that is downright Napoleonic.

North Korean leader Kim Jong Un said Monday that the United States is “within the range of our nuclear strike and a nuclear button is always on the desk of my office.”

Twelve minutes after Fox News highlighted that quote last night, Trump tweeted: “Will someone from his depleted and food starved regime please inform him that I too have a Nuclear Button, but it is a much bigger & more powerful one than his, and my Button works!”

This isn’t the first time Trump has made a thinly veiled allusion to his manhood. During the Republicans primaries, he gave Marco Rubio the nickname “Little Marco” and the Florida senator eagerly joined him in the gutter. “He’s like 6’2″, which is why I don’t understand why his hands are the size of someone who is 5’2’,” Rubio said during a rally. “Have you seen his hands? And you know what they say about men with small hands!”

Trump brought up the insult during a debate the next night, holding up his hands for the audience to inspect: “Are they small hands? He referred to my hands: ‘If they are small, something else must be small.’ I guarantee you there is no problem. I guarantee you!”

Our in-house fact checkers tabulate that Trump has made 1,950 false or misleading claims over the past 347 days. Many are exaggerations about the hugeness of something he’s taking credit for. For example, Trump has repeated the falsehood that he’s passing “the biggest tax cut ever” at least 53 times, even though his own Treasury Department’s data shows it is the eighth biggest.

“I know the details of taxes better than anybody. Better than the greatest C.P.A.,” Trump told the New York Times last week, one of 24 misleading or false claims he madeduring a 30-minute interview.

— There are many other areas where the 71-year-old has made clear he believes size matters, such as:

His bank account: Trump has long exaggerated his net worth and business success. Rhona Graff, the president’s longtime personal assistant, told Crain’s New York Business last year that the Trump Organization had $9.5 billion in annual revenue. But financial disclosure forms indicate that the company only generates between $600 million and $700 million in annual revenue, less than one-tenth what they claim. The Trump Organization moved from third to 40th on Crain’s list of the largest privately held companies in New York this year, based on public filings.

His buildings: Trump Tower is only 58 floors, but Trump and his company continue to falsely claim that there are 68. He says that his personal penthouse there is 33,000 square feet, but Forbes checked land records and it’s only 10,996. During an interview on Sept. 11, 2001, Trump told a New York television station that the collapse of the World Trade Center meant that this property at 40 Wall Street was no longer the second-tallest building in downtown Manhattan. “Now it’s the tallest,” he said.

Trump questions media reports of inauguration crowd size (The Washington Post)

His crowd sizes: During a phone call on the Saturday morning after he became president, Trump personally ordered the acting director of the National Park Service to produce additional photographs of the crowds on the Mall. Trump also expressed anger over a retweet sent from the agency’s account, in which side-by-side photographs showed far fewer people at his swearing-in than had shown up to see Barack Obama’s inauguration in 2009. During the campaign, he drew huge crowds but still routinely inflatedthe numbers.

His 2016 victory: Trump has said he had “the biggest Electoral College win since Ronald Reagan.” In fact, Obama won more electoral votes in both of his elections. So did Bill Clinton in 1996 and 1992. And George H.W. Bush in 1988. Trump’s electoral college victory actually ranks 46th in 58 elections.

South Korea welcomed an offer of talks by North Korean dictator Kim Jong Un ahead of February’s Pyeongchang Olympics. (Jason Aldag, Simon Denyer/The Washington Post)

— The latest from the Peninsula: “South Korea announced that a long-suspended cross-border hotline with North Korea reopened on Wednesday to pave the way for official talks between the two sides about sending a delegation from the North to next month’s Winter Olympics in the South,” Simon Denyer reports. “North Korea had earlier in the day announced the channel would be reopened, marking an easing of tensions … U.S. officials said they doubt Kim’s sincerity but declared that Washington would not stand in the way, nor would it allow the North to drive a wedge between South Korea and the United States.”

— North Korean dictators have been insulting American presidents for seven decades, but Trump is the first to let their taunts get under his skin. He had scaled back his “fire and fury” rhetoric since the summer at the behest of his foreign policy advisers. Today he’s back to calling the 33-year-old “Rocket Man.” (Kim’s preferred insult for Trump is “dotard.”)

When Hillary Clinton said during the 2016 campaign that Trump could be easily baited by foreign leaders, he shot back on ABC: “I have one of the great temperaments. I have a winning temperament!”

— Is there a method to the madness? The most charitable explanation for Trump’s taunts is that he’s embracing Richard Nixon’s “madman theory” of foreign policy. The idea here is that North Korea is more likely to make concessions if it believes that the threat of United States military action is credible because Trump is crazy enough to use nuclear weapons.

To understand why it’s dangerous for Trump to tweet this way toward Kim, it’s worth revisiting op-eds from this summer by the German Marshall Fund’s Laura Rosenberger(a former director for North Korea policy on the National Security Council) and the Hoover Institution’s Kori Schake(who has worked for Republicans at State, DOD and the White House).

“I guess the president regards this as a show of strength. But as everybody who’s ever been in a first-grade playground recognizes, it’s usually the person who’s most aggressively pounding their chest that is, in fact, the weak one on the playground,” Rep. Jim Himes (D-Conn.), a member of the House intelligence committee, said last night on CNN.

— Susan Glasser has a meaty piece in Politico Magazine about Trump’s foreign policy naivete. “It’s worse than you think,” she argues. Two memorable nuggets:

1. From Trump’s September dinner in New York with leaders of four Latin American countries on the sidelines of the United Nations General Assembly: “‘Rex tells me you don’t want me to use the military option in Venezuela,’ the president told the gathered leaders, according to an account offered by an attendee soon after the dinner. ‘Is that right? Are you sure?’ Everyone said they were sure. But they were rattled. War with Venezuela, as absurd as that seemed, was clearly still on Trump’s mind. … By the time the dinner was over, the leaders were in shock, and not just over the idle talk of armed conflict …

A former senior U.S. official with whom I spoke was briefed by ministers from three of the four countries that attended the dinner. ‘Without fail, they just had wide eyes about the entire engagement,’ the former official told me. Even if few took his martial bluster about Venezuela seriously, Trump struck them as uninformed about their issues and dangerously unpredictable, asking them to expend political capital on behalf of a U.S. that no longer seemed a reliable partner. ‘The word they all used was: ‘This guy is insane.’

2. An unnamed senior European official recounted a “frightening” conversation with Trump son-in-law Jared Kushner, who has an international portfolio that includes trying to negotiate Middle East peace: “Kushner was ‘very dismissive’ about the role of international institutions and alliances and uninterested in the European’s recounting of how closely the United States had stood together with Western Europe since World War II. ‘He told me, ‘I’m a businessman, and I don’t care about the past. Old allies can be enemies, or enemies can be friends.’ So, the past doesn’t count,’ the official recalled. ‘I was taken aback.’”

VIDEO HERE

— Twitter was consumed overnight by Trump’s saber-rattling: 

From a former senior staffer on the National Security Council under George W. Bush:

From the founder of Vox:

“A Twitter spokesperson said in a statement Tuesday night that Trump’s North Korea tweets do not amount to a ‘specific threat,’ and thus do not warrant disciplinary action,” Business Insider reports. “The spokesperson pointed to Twitter’s policy on violent threats and glorification of violence: ‘You may not make specific threats of violence or wish for the serious physical harm, death, or disease of an individual or group of people,’ the rule states.”

From a reporter for the Daily Beast:

seriously beginning to wonder if John Kelly should construct a Truman Show like world around Trump, where all his TVs are tuned into a fake, benign Fox News and his twitter account goes out to a manufactured universe of bot followers.

A Johns Hopkins professor who advised Condi Rice when she was secretary of state:

Spoken like a petulant ten year old. But one with nuclear weapons – for real – at his disposal. How responsible people around him, or supporting him, can dismiss this or laugh it off is beyond me. https://twitter.com/realDonaldTrump/status/948355557022420992 

Virginia’s senator and Clinton’s running mate told POTUS to cut it out:

These childish attacks raise the risk of stumbling into an avoidable war. The President needs to cut it out and get serious about keeping America safe. https://twitter.com/realdonaldtrump/status/948355557022420992 

A Democratic congressman from California touted a bill he’s introduced that would stop Trump from preemptively attacking Pyongyang:

Freaked out by Trump’s tweet threatening nuclear war with ? Support HR 669 / S 200 by Senator @EdMarkey and me. This bipartisan legislation prevents @POTUS from launching a nuclear first strike without Congressional authorization. https://twitter.com/thehill/status/948376645248876544 

Richard Nixon’s White House counsel trained his ire on the congressional Republicans who are enabling Trump:

Trump has regressed from a foolish juvenile to a dangerous infantile. There is a way to tell Trump this behavior as president is unacceptable: Remove elected Republicans at every election, overwhelmingly, whenever and wherever, so long as Trump has power. https://apple.news/AaaLAyWniS_epUq0gqbxwlA 

Trump taunts North Korea: My nuclear button is ‘much bigger,’ ‘more powerful’

President Donald Trump on Tuesday taunted North Korean leader Kim Jong Un, warning Kim about the US’ nuclear capabilities as tensions worsen between the two nations.

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The president of the Ploughshares Fund worried about ripple effects:

Prediction: Trump’s insane tweet will push  away from US towards talks with . Will ripple through US alliances.

The president of the liberal Center for American Progress had to reassure her daughter:

I had to just reassure my teen-age daughter not to panic about nuclear war with North Korea because she read Trump’s tweet. I’m so filled with rage at Donald Trump.

A former GOP congressman who has a syndicated radio show noted that the Democratic approach failed:

The sophisticated media elites scoff at & laugh at Trump’s “My nuclear button is bigger than yours” tweet to Kim Jong Un.

Yea. Because the elite’s sophisticated, brilliant diplomacy with North Korea all these years has worked so well, huh?

And a presidential historian offered a timely flashback:

— Finally, for what it’s worth, there is not actually a button Trump can press to launch nukesThere is, however, a button that lets him order Diet Cokes