The Signal

President to stress global stability

-

North Korea’s sixth, and most powerful, nuclear test Sept. 3.

In his speech, Trump is likely to call on U.N. members to block any economic assistance to Kim’s government.

Trump will deliver his message in the cavernous General Assembly hall — think high-end opera house, quiet before the curtain rises. Trump will speak on a rostrum with a background of green marble.

Delegates from the 193-member United Nations do not applaud during speeches given by world leaders. That can be a disorienti­ng experience for many politician­s. Trump, who has continued to hold political rallies since his election, thrives especially when there’s a palpable crowd reaction.

Even though the room will be quiet as Trump speaks, it’s a tough crowd — especially for Trump, who has criticized the United Nations.

The president is likely to promote the idea that each country should respond to its own needs — and the needs of its citizens — above all others.

Trump, the aide said, is not interested in nation-building, or spreading democracy with the power of the U.S. military — but is interested in fostering global stability.

Some U.N. members have questioned Trump’s “America First” approach during his time in office. Trump announced a withdrawal from the landmark Paris climate agreement, an Obama-era pact to reduce greenhouse gases. He demanded negotiatio­ns on the North American Free Trade Agreement with Canada and Mexico and abandoned the proposed Trans-Pacific Partnershi­p with Asian countries.

Trump’s aides said the president will argue nations can find opportunit­ies to work together on shared threats — in particular, those from North Korea.

Trump spoke by phone Monday with Chinese President Xi Jinping, who is not attending the U.N. General Assembly. The two leaders “agreed to maximize pressure on North Korea through vigorous enforcemen­t of United Nations Security Council resolution­s,” the White House said in a statement.

The United Nations has hit North Korea with a series of sanctions. Trump has questioned the effectiven­ess of the most recent measures, passed Sept. 11, which did not include U.S. requests for an oil import ban and an internatio­nal asset freeze on Kim.

In his speech, Trump is also likely to discuss another nuclear challenge — the Iran deal.

Before meeting with a prominent critic of that Obama-era deal, Israeli Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu, Trump said Monday he is close to making a decision about whether to abandon it. “You’ll see very soon,” he said.

Trump also met Monday with a supporter of the Iran agreement, French President Emanuel Macron. Officials in France have said that killing the Iran deal could set off a nuclear arms race in the Middle East. The other signatorie­s of the deal include Germany, the United Kingdom, the European Union, China and Russia.

Though Trump’s speech will be highly scrutinize­d, few speeches by U.S. presidents at the United Nations are memorable — with the possible exception of President George W. Bush’s address in 2002, rattling the saber at Iraq six months before a U.S.-led invasion.

Leaders from other countries have delivered some of the most memorable U.N. speeches.

Cuban communist leader Fidel Castro spent four and a half hours in 1960 lambasting the United States.

That same year, Soviet Premier Nikita Khrushchev pounded his shoe in protest of a critical speech by a Filipino delegate. In 2006, Venezuelan dictator Hugo Chávez compared Bush to the devil and said the stage “smells of sulfur still.”

Newspapers in English

Newspapers from United States