Santa Fe New Mexican

Nuclear arsenal story prompts threat by Trump

President suggests targeting NBC over report saying he wanted spike in nukes

- By Peter Baker and Cecilia Kang

WASHINGTON — President Donald Trump threatened on Wednesday to use the federal government’s power to license television airwaves to target NBC in response to a report by the network’s news division that he contemplat­ed a dramatic increase in the nation’s nuclear arsenal.

In a story aired and posted online Wednesday morning, NBC News reported that Trump said during a meeting in July that he wanted what amounted to a nearly tenfold increase in the nation’s nuclear weapons stockpile, stunning some members of his national security team. It was after this meeting that Secretary of State Rex Tillerson reportedly said Trump was a “moron.”

Trump objected to the report in two messages on Twitter later Wednesday and threatened to use the authority of the federal government to retaliate.

He repeated his complaint later in the day, when reporters arrived in the Oval Office to cover his meeting with the Canadian prime minister, Justin Trudeau. “It’s frankly disgusting the way the press is able to write whatever they want to write, and people should look into it,” Trump said.

Asked if he favored limits on what the media can say, he answered, “No. The press should speak more honestly.”

For Trump, attacks on what he calls the “fake news”

industry have been one of the primary metiers of his presidency, a way to ventilate his deep sense of grievance over news coverage of his tenure while energizing a political base that itself is largely hostile to the mainstream media. At one point, he labeled some outlets “the enemy of the American people.”

Although the networks themselves do not hold federal licenses, their individual television stations do. His threat to target NBC drew immediate concerns that he was underminin­g the First Amendment.

“Broadcast licenses are a public trust,” said Tom Wheeler, who until January was chairman of the Federal Communicat­ions Commission, appointed by President Barack Obama. “They’re not a political toy, which is what he’s trying to do here.”

In suggesting that a broadcast network be targeted because of its coverage, Trump evoked the Watergate era, during which President Richard M. Nixon told advisers to make it difficult for The Washington Post to renew the FCC license for a Florida television station it owned. A businessma­n with ties to Nixon filed paperwork to challenge The Post’s ownership of the station. The Justice Department under Nixon also filed antitrust charges against the three major television networks.

In Trump’s case, it may just be an idle threat, the sort of bluster that he has regularly used to keep perceived adversarie­s off balance. Just a day earlier, he suggested using federal tax law to punish the National Football League as part of his campaign against players who kneel during the national anthem, only to have a spokeswoma­n later say he was just making a point.

But Wheeler said it could also be taken as instructio­n to supporters who could act on his behalf. “This sounds to me like another dog whistle for folks to file against the license renewals,” he said. “Clearly it would be a bridge too far for the Trump FCC to move on their own initiative. But if some conservati­ve groups were to take this as their marching orders, it would be an interestin­g situation to see what the Trump FCC did.”

Shortly after the tweets, Sen. Edward J. Markey, D-Mass., wrote a letter to Ajit Pai, the current FCC chairman, urging him to protect First Amendment rights. “I ask for your commitment to resist the president’s request and call on you to publicly refuse to challenge the license of any broadcaste­r because the president dislikes its coverage,” Markey wrote.

Pai, who was designated chairman by Trump, did not respond to a request for comment about the president’s tweet, nor did the White House.

The NBC story said that Trump raised the idea of increasing the nuclear arsenal during a July 20 meeting at the Pentagon. Shown briefing slides illustrati­ng the reduction of nuclear weapons since the 1960s, the president said he wanted a major buildup instead.

National security officials, said to have been surprised by the president’s suggestion, explained that such a move would contravene decades of efforts to curb nuclear weapons and violate several treaties signed by the United States under Republican and Democratic presidents.

The network cited three officials who were in the room but did not identify them. As the meeting broke up, Tillerson was heard making his “moron” comment, NBC said. Tillerson did not deny using the word when asked by reporters last week, but later sent out a spokeswoma­n to deny it on his behalf. In an interview posted Tuesday, Trump said he considered that “fake news” — but also said that, if it were true, he could beat Tillerson in an IQ contest.

Speaking with reporters Wednesday, Trump expressed satisfacti­on with the current size of the nuclear arsenal, if not its condition. “We won’t need an increase,” he said. “But I want modernizat­ion and I want total rehabilita­tion. It’s got to be in tiptop shape.”

Defense Secretary Jim Mattis issued a statement of his own disputing the NBC story. “Recent reports that the president called for an increase in the U.S. nuclear arsenal are absolutely false,” he said. “This kind of erroneous reporting is irresponsi­ble.”

While its members are appointed by the president and confirmed by the Senate, the FCC is a separate agency mandated to act independen­tly from the White House. Trump’s tweet suggested a potential misunderst­anding of how television licenses work.

NBC, like ABC, CBS, Fox and CNN, are television networks that do not license spectrum. But NBC’s parent company, Comcast, does own television stations that do license airwaves from the FCC, as do CBS and Walt Disney, which is ABC’s parent company.

 ?? EVAN VUCCI/THE ASSOCIATED PRESS ?? President Donald Trump talks Wednesday with Canadian Prime Minister Justin Trudeau after he arrived at the White House.
EVAN VUCCI/THE ASSOCIATED PRESS President Donald Trump talks Wednesday with Canadian Prime Minister Justin Trudeau after he arrived at the White House.

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