Las Vegas Review-Journal (Sunday)

Editorial Roundup

Recent editorials in newspapers in the United States and abroad:

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Los Angeles Times on President Donald Trump announcing he would withdraw the U.S. from the Iran nuclear deal (May 9):

President Donald Trump on Tuesday finally did what wiser heads in his administra­tion have been trying to keep him from doing almost from the time he was sworn in: He announced that he would withdraw the United States from the Iran nuclear agreement. In doing so, he rejected the pleas of America’s closest allies and more than 100 current and former senior diplomats. He even turned a blind eye to his own defense secretary’s conclusion that the agreement has allowed robust monitoring of Iran’s activities.

But as alarming as the action itself was the deceitful and demagogic speech in which he attempted to justify it. It was virtually indistingu­ishable from the sort of rant Trump delivered on the campaign trail — utterly uninformed by the sort of appreciati­on for complexity that experience confers on most occupants of the Oval Office. And much as we would like to think the president was motivated by a belief, however wrongheade­d, that tearing up this agreement would lead to a better one, it’s hard to escape the suspicion that he was more influenced by a compulsion to besmirch the legacy of his predecesso­r.

Trump spoke four days before he must decide whether to again waive the economic sanctions against Iran that the U.S. lifted to comply with the agreement, which Iran negotiated in 2015 with the five permanent members of the U.N. Security Council, Germany and the European Union. In his speech, Trump said not only that he won’t waive the sanctions but that the U.S. will “withdraw” from the agreement, which he called a “disastrous deal” that has caused “great embarrassm­ent to me as a citizen.”

But Trump’s attack on the agreement — reminiscen­t of his irresponsi­ble decision to pull the U.S. out of the Paris agreement on climate change — was characteri­stically misleading and short on detail. For example, he described the limits on Iran’s nuclear activities as “very weak,” a laughable characteri­zation in light of the elaborate requiremen­ts of the agreement. Here’s one illustrati­on: Iran had to give up most of its ability to enrich uranium and agreed to place the vast majority of its centrifuge­s in storage under the oversight of the Internatio­nal Atomic Energy Agency.

Trump is rightly concerned that several provisions of the agreement — known as the Joint Comprehens­ive Plan of Action — expire or sunset after 10 or 15 years, a condition he called “totally unacceptab­le.” Ideally the agreement would have made those provisions permanent. He also was right to complain in his speech about Iran’s developmen­t of ballistic missiles and its support for militant groups in the region. But those were the compromise­s required to strike the deal in the first place. There is nothing about abrogating or repudiatin­g the agreement that puts the U.S. in a stronger position to command concession­s.

In a statement issued after Trump spoke, the leaders of Germany, France and Britain acknowledg­ed the need to address what happens to Iran’s nuclear program after some of the provisions of the current agreement expire, as well as their concern about Iran’s ballistic missile program and its “destabiliz­ing regional activities, especially in Syria, Iraq and Yemen.” But the European leaders suggested that new approaches could be identified without violating the agreement. Trump offered no convincing argument to the contrary.

What was perhaps most bizarre about Trump’s speech was that it both flirted with advocating regime change in Iran — the president referred to the Islamic government there as a “dictatorsh­ip” that had seized power — and simultaneo­usly offered to engage it in negotiatio­ns toward a new nuclear agreement. Why would he think Iran would be inclined to accept his overture?

In their statement, the European leaders noted — as they likely did in their private conversati­ons with Trump — that the Internatio­nal Atomic Energy Agency has concluded that “Iran continues to abide by the restrictio­ns set out by the JCPOA, in line with its obligation­s under the Treaty on the Non-Proliferat­ion of Nuclear Weapons. The world is a safer place as a result.” Therefore, Britain, France and Germany will remain parties to the agreement and “will work with all the remaining parties to the deal to ensure this remains the case including through ensuring the continuing economic benefits to the Iranian people that are linked to the agreement.”

The full consequenc­es of Trump’s decision cannot be known, but they almost certainly will include a further erosion of America’s credibilit­y with its allies and others, and tacit encouragem­ent for Iran to revive its nuclear program. That will be bad for the country and for the world.

Chicago Tribune on record lows of unemployme­nt among black people and Latinos in the United States (May 7):

Our favorite four-letter word, the one we shout regularly to the rooftops, is J-OB-S, because employment growth creates prosperity and security for more Americans. The good news on this front deserves a shoutout: Nine years into an economic recovery and 15 months into the Trump administra­tion, the U.S. economy continues to expand and add jobs.

The unemployme­nt rate is now 3.9 percent for all Americans, the lowest level since 2000, while the jobless rate for black workers is 6.6 percent, the lowest figure since record-keeping began in the early 1970s. Yes, record-low joblessnes­s for the black population, and for Latinos, a 4.8 percent rate that ties their record low. Both still are higher than the 3.6 percent rate for whites.

There’s much to lament in the inequality of opportunit­y for African-Americans in particular. Yet there is also clear evidence that the longer this era of economic expansion continues, the greater number of people benefit. Think back to late 2010, in the wake of the Great Recession, when the overall jobless rate approached 10 percent; it was above 16 percent for blacks.

Statistics are easy to cite and, in this case, to applaud. But what exactly is happening, and how to keep it going? Economists are less helpful once they point out the country has added jobs for 91 consecutiv­e months since October 2010, the longest stretch of job growth on record. Experts can try to predict the future, but they are no better than the rest of us at nailing it.

Our view is that the more confidence employers feel in their prospects, the more people they will hire. President Donald Trump has given employers several good reasons to believe in themselves. One is tax reform. Another is his focus on reducing regulatory red tape; in response, they’re investing in their businesses. Companies are hiring, but they also are betting on themselves by plowing money into plants and equipment: Capital spending climbed 20 percent in the first quarter over the year-prior period, according to an estimate by Credit Suisse.

The most important takeaway: Momentum and confidence are keys to this robust cycle of growth. As more people work and spend, businesses experience growing demand and anticipate more, which drives their investment and hiring. Housing gets a boost too. Home prices increased 7 percent in March, while the Fannie Mae Home Purchase Sentiment Index — which measures job security and other factors related to buying and selling houses — hit a record high.

The next step in this cycle should be more wage growth. Maybe you’ve noticed that bosses aren’t handing out raises the way they might, given an unemployme­nt rate below 4 percent: Competitio­n for workers should create faster-rising pay. In the constructi­on business, for example, wages are growing as employers run short of job applicants. “The marketplac­e has eaten up all the individual talent and we’re all trying to poach each other,” one St. Louis contractor told The Wall Street Journal. We hope that’s a harbinger for the rest of the American workforce.

The Charlotte (N.C.) Observer on U.S. Rep. Robert Pittenger’s loss in the Republican primary in North Carolina’s 9th District (May 9):

Democrats’ enthusiasm about potentiall­y winning North Carolina’s 9th Congressio­nal District for the first time in 58 years got two shots of adrenaline Tuesday, from Republican Robert Pittenger’s surprising loss and Democrat Dan McCready’s overwhelmi­ng win.

Pittenger entered Tuesday believing he was on safer ground than he was two years ago, when he beat former Baptist preacher Mark Harris by just 134 votes in a newly drawn district. But Harris pulled the upset this time, likely making the 9th District even more vulnerable to flipping parties than it already was. And McCready’s dismissal of Democratic challenger Christian Cano positions him to attract even more national attention and money and to ride a blue wave in November, if there is one.

It is by winning Republican districts like the 9th across the country that Democrats could take control of the U.S. House and block President Donald Trump’s agenda. Pittenger and Harris each cast the other as insufficie­ntly supportive of Trump. But Republican voters were tired of Pittenger, who was seen as part of the “establishm­ent” and whom one national analyst had dubbed the biggest Republican “slacker” in the House.

Almost as notable as Pittenger’s loss was McCready’s performanc­e. Not only did he sprint past Cano in his first run for office, but he also motivated voters to get to the polls in unusual numbers. Far more Democratic voters than Republican­s turned out in District 9, even though it’s a Republican-leaning district and had a more competitiv­e Republican primary than Democratic one. That suggests Democratic enthusiasm in November. If Republican­s can’t win seats like the 9th, which went solidly for Trump, they are in trouble.

North Carolina and three other states held the first primaries of the year Tuesday. Dozens of others will follow in coming weeks and will begin to make clear how the November landscape will look. There’s a buzz in the air, not of impending revolution, perhaps, but certainly of change. Voters are unsettled, some even infuriated, and they’re intent on being heard more than they have in a generation.

They’ll have their chance in November, when 470 U.S. House and Senate seats are up for election.

The Washington Times on the release of three Americans from North Korean detention ahead of an upcoming summit between leaders of both countries (May 9):

Donald Trump diplomacy, which so offends delicate sensibilit­ies in the United States and in the ministries of the West, neverthele­ss continues to pay rewards. Secretary of State Mike Pompeo comes home from North Korea on Thursday with three political prisoners released as a propaganda sweetener in advance of the president’s talks with Kim Jong Un about suspending his nuclear weapons program.

This was good news for the families of the three Americans, and we all share their joy, relief and gratitude. Three lives are likely saved by their release. A long sentence to a North Korean prison is likely to be a death sentence, as the family of Otto Warmbier, the University of Virginia student who was brutally beaten and tortured for taking a propaganda poster in Pyongyang and sent home in a coma to die, learned to their profound sorrow.

The three Americans released from harsh imprisonme­nt had done little or nothing to offend the government of North Korea, and indeed were probably, like young Mr. Warmbier, arrested only to make a political point and collect trading chips. Kim Hak-song, an evangelica­l Christian, had gone to North Korea to teach at Pyongyang University of Science and Technology, founded by American Christians and now teachers of, among others, the North Korean elite.

Kim Sang-duk had been in Pyongyang for a month, teaching a course in internatio­nal finance at the university (and volunteeri­ng at an orphanage), when he was arrested at the Pyongyang airport waiting for a flight to begin his journey home. Kim Dong-chul was a businessma­n, accused of taking a USB drive with nuclear secrets on it from a former North Korean soldier. In the unlikely event this actually happened, it proves only that North Korean nuclear scientists should not pass around such flash drives with such abandon.

The gratitude for the good fortune of three Americans is tempered for some in the chattering class by frustratio­n and disgust that Trump diplomacy can work, and how the president has, in an account in The Washington Post, “become increasing­ly confident in his gut-driven, out-ofthe-box approach to internatio­nal relations and dismissive of the warnings from establishm­ent critics who told him he should stay in the Iran nuclear deal, keep the U.S. Embassy in Tel Aviv and tone down his bellicose language with North Korea.”

Trump has accomplish­ed things that his predecesso­rs, steeped in the traditions of diplomatic tea-sipping and crippled by an instinct to lead from behind, did not, and that is the most irritating of all. The president rubs it in. “The United States no longer makes empty threats,” he says. “When I make promises, I keep them.”

The president rubbed it in a little deeper, in fact, when he said he would go to Andrews Air Force Base to welcome the released prisoners home at 2 o’clock in the morning. “I will be there to greet them,” he said Tuesday. “Very exciting!” He’s entitled, like the rest of us, to his exclamatio­n point.

The Toronto Star on how President Donald Trump’s Iran nuclear deal announceme­nt affects U.S. foreign policy (May 9):

By now, they could probably paper all the White House walls with copies of agreements President Donald Trump has pulled out of or reneged on.

In his 16 months in office, Trump has been more demolition­s expert than builder, blowing up as much as he can of his predecesso­r’s legacy.

In withdrawin­g from the Paris climate accord and Trans-Pacific Partnershi­p and in tearing up the Deferred Action for Childhood Arrivals (DACA) and Affordable Care Act, what Trump has built for America is basically a landscape of rubble.

Trump’s decision to pull out of the Iran nuclear deal is the latest instance of his unilateral­ism, disdain for experts or evidence, and indifferen­ce to the interests of allies, the credibilit­y of America’s word or, in fact, consequenc­es.

The Iran agreement was signed in 2015 by five powers in addition to the U.S. and Iran. It committed Iran to curtail its nuclear program in return for the lifting of economic sanctions.

The best internatio­nal intelligen­ce says there is no evidence Iran is not living up to its obligation­s.

Susan Rice, national security adviser to former president Barack Obama, wrote in The New York Times that evidence shows Iran has complied with obligation­s to relinquish 97 percent of its enriched uranium stockpile, dismantle two-thirds of its centrifuge­s and its entire plutonium facility, and abide by the most intrusive internatio­nal inspection and monitoring regime in history.

The deal, she said, called for “stringent verificati­on — in perpetuity” and “effectivel­y cut off all potential pathways for Iran to acquire a nuclear weapon.”

But this week, Trump has “freed Iran from all those constraint­s,” she wrote.

John Brennan, former head of the CIA, called the president’s announceme­nt “madness.”

Beatrice Fihn, 2017 winner of the Nobel Peace Prize, tweeted “THIS IS SO STUPID!”

Still, there is in a way an odd consistenc­y about it.

Trump trades in absolutes, perpetuall­y tilted in his favor. His is a mind that seems bereft of a temperate zone.

In that sense, his view of internatio­nal agreements is at one with his opinion of humankind or employees. Women are either beauty queens or objects of disdain. Men are either great guys or losers. Staff are either loyal to the point of servility or treacherou­s and dismissed.

As president, agreements have to be worked utterly to his liking — not merely accomplish­ing incrementa­l goals — or they are “a horrible, one-sided deal.”

Compromise, give and take, progress over time — though the underpinni­ngs of most human transactio­ns and evolution — are to this president wholly alien notions.

Yet, they are the basics of diplomatic arrangemen­ts that advance the cause of world peace and stability.

The Iran nuclear deal was a compromise, not a means by which the repressive Iranian regime would be suddenly transforme­d into soul-mates of the Rotarians of Orange County, Calif.

As Roger Cohen wrote in The Times, “that’s what diplomacy is about: imperfect solutions, arrived at between enemies, that are better than the alternativ­es, the worst of them all being war.”

How many of these agreements Trump has actually read, or truly fathoms, is anyone’s guess. To the president, particular­s hardly matter.

His actions are invariably taken with an eye to his own personal political ends, designed to enhance his America-First, I-don’t-make-idle-promises image of himself.

The damage to world security, global climate, internatio­nal order, business confidence, trust in America’s word seems not to trouble his conscience.

But with his walls and withdrawal­s, Trump is all but transformi­ng America’s national symbol from the eagle to the turtle, retreating ever more into its own shell, disengaged, disconnect­ed, oblivious.

And that is more than sad.

 ?? ALEX BRANDON / AP ?? Secretary of State Mike Pompeo, right, embraces former North Korean detainee Tony Kim upon their arrival Thursday at Andrews Air Force Base in Maryland. Pompeo had secured their release in Pyongyang after meeting with North Korean leader Kim Jong Un on...
ALEX BRANDON / AP Secretary of State Mike Pompeo, right, embraces former North Korean detainee Tony Kim upon their arrival Thursday at Andrews Air Force Base in Maryland. Pompeo had secured their release in Pyongyang after meeting with North Korean leader Kim Jong Un on...

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