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Trump spooked Pentagon with almost-sent N. Korea tweet

- The New York Times

WASHINGTON — US President Donald Trump spooked the Pentagon leadership with a tweet that — had it been sent — North Korea would have read as a sign of an imminent US attack, journalist Bob Woodward said in an interview that aired Sunday.

Mr. Woodward, whose new book

Fear: Trump in the White House hits book stores on Tuesday, described the incident in the interview with CBS as the most dangerous moment of Mr. Trump’s nuclear standoff with North Korea.

“He drafts a tweet saying ‘We are going to pull our dependents from South Korea — family members of the 28,000 people there,’” Mr. Woodward said on CBS Sunday Morning, referring to families of US troops stationed on the Korean peninsula.

‘SENSE OF PROFOUND ALARM’

The tweet never was sent because of a back-channel message from the North Koreans that they would view it as a sign the US was preparing to attack, according to CBS.

“At that moment there was a sense of profound alarm in the Pentagon leadership that, ‘My God, one tweet and we have reliable informatio­n that the North Koreans are going to read this as ‘an attack is imminent.’”

US tensions with North Korea have subsided since Mr. Trump and North Korean leader Kim Jong Un met in Singapore on June 12.

Mr. Kim recently expressed his “unwavering faith” in Mr. Trump, and the US president on Sunday praised the North Korean for staging a huge military parade in Pyongyang without the customary display of nuclear missiles.

But the earlier brinkmansh­ip between the two nuclear-armed states — including Mr. Trump’s threat on Sept. 19 last year to “totally destroy North Korea” — had sent tensions soaring.

In his book, Mr. Woodward portrays the US president as uninformed and impulsive to the point of recklessne­ss, with White House aides at times removing documents from his desk to keep him from taking rash actions.

Mr. Woodward’s descriptio­n of that situation as an “administra­tive coup d’etat” echoes that of an anonymous senior administra­tion official who spoke, in a recent op-ed, of a “quiet resistance” to Mr. Trump.

Asked what he had concluded, Mr. Woodward told CBS: “That people better wake up to what’s going on.” —

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