The Borneo Post

With Cold War words, Trump launches into nuclear debate

- December 25, 2016

WASHINGTON: Presidente­lect Donald Trump indicated Friday he did not fear a new arms race and warned the US would match any move by another country to boost its nuclear arsenal, in a spectacula­r new foray into foreign policy.

His stunning — and initially unexplaine­d — use of language reminiscen­t of the Cold War rocked the Washington establishm­ent two days before Christmas, and left Americans baffled by the seemingly mixed messages Trump is sending Russia.

Trump began upping the nuclear rhetoric with a bombshell tweet Thursday calling for America to “greatly strengthen and expand its nuclear capability until such time as the world comes to its senses regarding nukes.”

Anti-proliferat­ion campaigner­s and lawmakers were aghast at the saber-rattling talk, though some observers wondered how much stock to put into Trump’s words — and even whether they may be part of a deliberate strategy to bring about a promised rapprochem­ent with Russia.

Matters were not helped after his aides struggled to come up with a coherent take on what Trump meant, leaving Americans scrambling to make sense of the president-elect’s tweet which, as has often been the case since his election, landed without context or detail.

His remarks came hours after President Vladimir Putin declared Russia needs to “strengthen the military potential of strategic nuclear forces,” and a day after the president-elect met with Pentagon brass.

When asked for clarity, Sean Spicer, the incoming White House press secretary, said Trump would not tolerate other countries increasing their nuclear arsenal without responding.

“There’s a few countries around the globe, Russia being one of them, China, others, that have talked about increasing their nuclear capabiliti­es,” Spicer told the MSNBC news network.

“The president-elect’s point is unless these guys come to their senses and recognise that this is not a smart move, increasing the nuclear stockpile around the globe is not good for anybody, the US is not going to sit back and take it.”

In a subsequent interview on CNN, Spicer warned: “If another country wants to threaten our sovereignt­y or our safety, he will act.”

Early Friday, Trump was quoted telling MSNBC — when asked in an off-air telephone call to clarify his nuclear policy tweet — that his administra­tion had no reservatio­ns about entering ‘an arms race’.

“This morning he told me on the phone, ‘Let it be an arms race. We’ll outmatch them at every pass and outlast them all,’” network host Mika Brzezinksi said. On Thursday, Trump spokesman Jason Miller had tried to nuance Trump’s tweet and claimed he was actually “referring to the threat of nuclear proliferat­ion and the critical need to prevent it — particular­ly to and among terrorist organizati­ons and unstable and rogue regimes.”

The debate marks a jarring departure from the stance of President Barack Obama, who in a famous 2009 speech in Prague called for the eliminatio­n of nuclear weapons.

In 2010, Obama and Russia’s then-president Dmitry Medvedev signed the so-called New START treaty that calls for a significan­t reduction in the nuclear arsenals of both countries.

Ties between Moscow and Washington hit their lowest point since the Cold War under Obama due to the Ukraine crisis and Russia’s military interventi­on in Syria.

But on Friday, Putin said he found ‘nothing unusual’ about Trump’s call to boost America’s nuclear capability.

“During his election campaign he spoke about the necessity of strengthen­ing the nuclear component of the US, to strengthen the armed forces,” the Russian leader told his annual year-end press conference.

Even as the country reeled from his Twitter outburst, Trump sowed further confusion Friday by releasing a copy of what he called a ‘very nice letter’ in which the Kremlin strongman offered him Christmas greetings and called for greater bilateral cooperatio­n.

Trump has often said he admires Putin’s leadership qualities and the US intelligen­ce community concluded that Russia was responsibl­e for cyber attacks ahead of November’s election that sought to tip the balance in favour of the Republican. — AFP

Let it be an arms race. We’ll outmatch them at every pass and outlast them all. — Donald Trump, US preseident-elect

 ??  ?? Trump claps at the USA Thank You Tour event at the Iowa Events Centre in Des Moines, Iowa, US. — Reuters photo
Trump claps at the USA Thank You Tour event at the Iowa Events Centre in Des Moines, Iowa, US. — Reuters photo
 ??  ?? Russian President Vladimir Putin attends his annual end-of-year news conference in Moscow, Russia. — Reuters photo
Russian President Vladimir Putin attends his annual end-of-year news conference in Moscow, Russia. — Reuters photo

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