Sun Sentinel Palm Beach Edition

Poll: N. Korea nuclear work spooks most Americans

- By Matthew Pennington and Emily Swanson

WASHINGTON — North Korea’s nuclear weapons developmen­t is spooking most Americans, and two-thirds of them say President Donald Trump’s war of words with the isolated nation’s leader is making the situation worse. Less than 1 in 10 thinks Trump’s comments are making it better.

Those are the findings of a poll by the Associated Press-NORC Center for Public Affairs Research, as tensions between the adversarie­s escalate and North Korea comes closer to its goal of having a nucleartip­ped missile that could strike the continenta­l U.S.

The poll was conducted about a week after Trump intensifie­d rhetorical exchanges with his counterpar­t Kim Jong Un, dubbing him “Rocket Man” and threatenin­g in a Sept. 19 speech at the U.N. to “totally destroy” North Korea if the U.S. is forced to defend itself and its allies. Kim responded with dire threats and insults of his own, calling Trump “deranged” and a “dotard.”

“The instabilit­y of it all makes me very nervous,” said Diana Egan, 34, of Los Angeles. She described herself as a moderate Republican but voiced anxiety about how North Korea might respond to Trump’s tough talk and tweets. “You don’t know where the line is for them, and where they say, ‘I’m going to push this button.’ ”

The poll found that 65 percent of Americans think Trump’s comments have made the situation between the U.S. and North Korea worse, including 45 percent who think he’s made the situation much worse. Only 8 percent think he’s making the situation better.

Eighty-nine percent of Democrats, 59 percent of independen­ts and 38 percent of Republican­s think Trump’s comments have made things worse.

Trump defended his approach as he conceded difference­s on North Korea with his top diplomat, Rex Tillerson, who advocates keeping open the possibilit­y of negotiatio­ns with Kim’s government.

“I think perhaps I feel stronger and tougher on that subject than other people,” Trump said in the Oval Office. “But I listen to everybody and ultimately I will do what’s right for the United States and really what’s right for the world,” he said, adding, “it’s a problem that has to be solved.”

Although North Korea’s ability to wed a nuclear warhead with a long-range missile and strike a target in the U.S. remains uncertain, most of the poll respondent­s are worried about Kim attacking America. In July, North Korea tested for the first time a missile for the first time that could potentiall­y strike most of the continenta­l U.S.

Some 67 percent of Americans are very or extremely concerned about the threat North Korea’s nuclear weapons program poses to the United States. Four in 10 are concerned about the threat posed to where they live specifical­ly, more so in urban areas.

“[Trump] will be somewhere safe. We got nowhere to go,” said Anthony Leroy Waters, 61, of Wilmington, N.C.

Mui Baltrumas, 67, of Evanston, Illinois, dissented. He said the North Korean threat is being blown out of proportion and Kim is more calculatin­g and “not nearly as crazy as everyone thinks he is.”

Baltrumas, who leans Democratic, said he was more concerned by the “John Wayne-style machismo coming out of the White House.”

The AP-NORC poll of 1,150 adults was conducted Sept. 28-Oct. 2 using a sample drawn from NORC’s probabilit­y-based AmeriSpeak panel.

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