Boston Herald

Trump’s actions speak louder than words

- By MARC A. THIESSEN Marc A. Thiessen is a syndicated columnist.

During a single visit to Asia, President Trump embraced not one, not two, but three dictators. He became the first American president to set foot in North Korea, where he praised his “great friendship” with North Korea’s despotic leader, Kim Jong Un; he held another cringe-worthy press availabili­ty with Russian President Vladimir Putin, where Trump joked about Russia’s electoral interferen­ce; and he met with Chinese President Xi Jinping, calling him “one of the great leaders in 200 years.” Oh, and before leaving, he said that he would be willing to meet Iran’s leaders with “no preconditi­ons.”

If Barack Obama had done any of this as president, conservati­ves would be howling with outrage. So why are they not angry with Trump? Simple. Because unlike Obama, Trump is taking a hard line with North Korea, Russia, China and Iran. And what he does matters a lot more than what he says.

Obama tried to meet with Iran’s president, Hassan Rouhani, but the Iranian leader rejected his request. Nonetheles­s, Obama cut a nuclear deal that gave the regime billions of dollars in sanctions relief — money Iran then used to fuel terrorism and Shiite expansioni­sm across the Middle East.

Obama was famously caught on an open microphone in 2012 telling then-Russian President Dmitry Medvedev that he would have “more flexibilit­y” after the election (“I will transmit this informatio­n to Vladimir,” Medvedev replied).

Trump, by contrast, has given his tyrannical interlocut­ors virtually nothing. In North Korea, Trump has showered Kim with undeserved praise but has not lifted sanctions, unfrozen North Korean assets or granted Pyongyang diplomatic recognitio­n.

In his Putin meeting last week, Trump made unseemly jokes about “fake news” not being a problem in Russia. But he has also approved a massive arms and aid package for Ukraine; expelled Russian diplomats; authorized multiple rounds of new sanctions against Moscow for everything from election interferen­ce to treaty violations; withdrawn from the Intermedia­teRange Nuclear Forces Treaty; persuaded NATO allies to increase their defense investment­s; and twice bombed Putin’s ally, the Assad regime, for Syria’s use of chemical weapons against civilians. And before the Putin meeting, Trump announced that he is considerin­g imposing new economic sanctions to block constructi­on of the Nord Stream 2 pipeline that would allow Russia to increase flows of natural gas to Germany.

In China, Trump might have praised Xi as “great” for declaring himself “president for life,” but he has also punished China for its theft of American intellectu­al property by imposing 25% tariffs on $250 billion worth of Chinese goods after China backtracke­d on a trade deal. And Trump has made clear that he stands ready to impose tariffs on an additional $300 billion in Chinese goods if China does not reach an agreement soon.

Regarding Iran, Trump has expressed a willingnes­s to meet with Iran’s leaders, but he has also withdrawn from Obama’s disastrous nuclear deal and imposed crushing sanctions that that reduced Iran’s oil sales by 88% and drained Iran of 40% of its government revenue, according to the State Department.

It’s unclear whether Trump’s combinatio­n of hard-line policies and soft rhetoric will work. As for conservati­ves, so long as Trump does not capitulate on substance, most are willing to give the president some leeway when it comes to personal diplomacy with butchers such as Kim.

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