Chicago Sun-Times

AT U. OF C., HALEY SAYS TRUMP TWEETS MAKE UN JOB ‘ INTERESTIN­G’

- BY MITCHELL ARMENTROUT Staff Reporter Email: marmentrou­t@suntimes.com Twitter: @ mitchtrout

Have you ever woken up to a tweet from President Donald Trump that caught you off guard?

The impromptu social media declaratio­ns keep Nikki Haley on her toes as the U. S. ambassador to the United Nations, and she has had plenty of those mornings.

“More times than I can tell you,” she told David Axelrod on Thursday night during a forum at the University of Chicago’s Institute of Politics.

“This clearly is a president who likes social media, and so for everybody that doesn’t like his tweets, it’s not going to stop. It’s who he is, it’s what he does,” she said.

Axelrod asked if Trump’s triggerfin­ger tweets make her job harder.

“It makes it interestin­g,” Haley said to bursts of laughter.

The ambassador, whose uncle George Haley is a professor emeritus of Spanish literature at the University of Chicago, touched on a range of internatio­nal affairs issues during the hourlong talk, including peace negotiatio­ns between Israel and Palestine that are being led by the president’s son- in- law, Jared Kushner.

Axelrod pressed Haley on when their peace proposal would be presented.

“I think they’re finishing it up,” she said.

On North Korea, Haley said “all options are on the table” if dictator Kim Jong Un doesn’t terminate the country’s nuclear program.

She claimed the recent apparent easing of tension between North Korea and South Korea evidenced by the rogue nation’s participat­ion in the Olympics was just “public relations damage control” as a result of economic sanctions crippling North Korea.

“It was a sign of desperatio­n, not national pride,” Haley said.

Haley said Trump gave her a foreshadow­ing of at least one of his signature Twitter monikers before hitting “send.” She recounted talking to the president last fall before he addressed the U. N. General Assembly, and counseling him to temper expectatio­ns.

“I said, ‘ Mr. President, you need to understand this is a serious crowd. They’re not going to rally, they’re not going to cheer. That’s just not who these people are, so don’t take it the wrong way. Just think of it as a church.”

Then, according to Haley, the president asked: “What do you think about me saying ‘ Little Rocket Man’ in the speech?” in reference to his now- infamous nickname for Kim Jong Un.

“I said, ‘ Well, it’s kind of a formal crowd. Um, it would be different,’ ” Haley recalled. “He said, ‘ I think it’s catchy.’ ” And it stuck right away. “I have an African president that I met with right after [ the speech], and he’s not even using Kim’s name. He’s calling him ‘ Little Rocket Man,’ ” Haley said. “It works.”

 ??  ?? U. S. ambassador to the UN Nikki Haley
U. S. ambassador to the UN Nikki Haley

Newspapers in English

Newspapers from United States