The Peterborough Examiner

Trump boasts draws headshakes at UN

Only a few sentences into Trump’s remarks, the audience chuckled and laughed

- JONATHAN LEMIRE, ZEKE MILLER

CAMEROON, CAMEROON — President Donald Trump delivered a sharp rebuke of global governing at the United Nations on Tuesday, drawing headshakes and even mocking laughter from fellow world leaders as he promoted his aggressive “America First” agenda and boasted of America’s economic and military might.

Trump arrived late, forcing a last-minute scheduling switch, then received polite applause but also blank stares as he took his blustery brand of policies to the annual General Assembly.

Speaking in triumphal terms, Trump approached the address as an annual report to the world on his country’s progress since his inaugurati­on.

He touted economic figures, declared that the U.S. military is “more powerful than it has ever been before,” and crowed that in “less than two years, my administra­tion has accomplish­ed more than almost any administra­tion in the history of our country.”

Five sentences into the president’s remarks, the audience began to chuckle and some leaders broke into outright laughter, suggesting the one-time reality television star’s puffery is as familiar abroad as it is at home. Appearing briefly flustered, Trump smiled and joked that it was not the reaction he expected “but that’s all right.”

The moment only reinforced Trump’s isolation among allies and foes alike, as his nationalis­tic policies have created rifts with erstwhile partners and cast doubt in some circles about the reliabilit­y of American commitment­s around the world. Since taking office, Trump has removed the U.S. from the Paris climate accord, promoted protection­ist tariffs and questioned the utility of alliances like the North Atlantic Treaty Organizati­on in furtheranc­e of what he termed on Tuesday a strategy of “principled realism.”

In addition to the keynote speech, Trump is to chair a meeting of the UN Security Council on the topic of countering nuclear proliferat­ion on Wednesday. His four days of choreograp­hed foreign affairs were designed to stand in contrast to a presidency sometimes defined by disorder, but were quickly overshadow­ed by domestic political troubles.

The fate of his second Supreme Court nominee, Brett Kavanaugh, was in fresh doubt after a second allegation of sexual misconduct, which Kavanaugh denies.

Drama also swirls around the job security of Trump’s deputy attorney general. Rod Rosenstein was reported last week to have floated the idea of secretly recording the president last year and to have raised the idea of using the 25th Amendment to remove him from office.

At the UN, Trump seized his opportunit­y to assert American independen­ce from the internatio­nal body.

He was unapologet­ic about his decisions to engage with the erstwhile pariah North Korea, remove the U.S. from the internatio­nal Iran nuclear accord and object to UN programs he believes are contrary to American interests.

 ?? BEBETO MATTHEWS THE ASSOCIATED PRESS ?? President Donald Trump Tuesday at U.N. headquarte­rs.
BEBETO MATTHEWS THE ASSOCIATED PRESS President Donald Trump Tuesday at U.N. headquarte­rs.

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