Trump's 'fire and fury' rhetoric drags the US to North Korea's level - but he may have an ulterior motive
Alex Wong/Getty Images
It took just over two hours for North Korea to respond with exactly what Trump warned against, a threat against a US territory.
A statement from North Korea then threatened to strike Guam, a US territory in the Pacific home to large naval and Air Force bases if the US offered any provocation. The statement specifically singled out the US's fleet of strategic bombers in Guam, which had overflown the Korean peninsula the day before.
While no military exchange followed the verbal flurry, Yun Sun, a senior associate at the Stimson center, said that damage may have been done to the US's credibility, diplomatic, and moral high ground.
"There is a striking and interesting similarity between Trump's 'fire and fury' comment and North Korea's popular threat to turn Seoul into 'a sea of fire and a pile of ashes'," Sun told Business Insider.
Sun said that since North Korea traffics in over-the-top threats regularly, it may recognize Trump's threat as a bluff, "but it raises a dangerous scenario where Kim Jong Un continues to defy US threats."
Essentially, Trump has backed himself into a corner with his threat against Kim. If he ignores North Korea's response, then the US loses credibility. If he follows through with the "fire and fury," then the US enters into a gruesome and potentially nuclear war that threatens millions of civilian lives.
"If Trump chooses to react to it verbally, it downgrades US to the same level as North Korea. If Trump chooses to react to it with actions, it sends everyone onto a war path," said Sun.
Frank Aum, a former senior adviser on North Korea for the Department of Defense, agreed with Sun's assessment.
"Trump's language is irresponsible and escalatory. It sets a redline and expectation that gives Trump little room to wiggle out without looking foolish," Aum told Business Insider.
However, Aum suggested an ulterior motive for Trump's brash statement: Putting China on notice.
Carlos Barria/Reuters
Trump "is threatening a war to get China to clamp down harder on North Korea's behavior. It's a risky maneuver," said Aum, who concluded that increasing threats or military pressure on North Korea had no real effect.
Whatever the intention, Trump's fiery threats fly in the face of traditional diplomacy, though diplomacy has also been ineffective in dealing with North Korea for decades.
But most countries agree, "the best approach to deal with North Korea's inflammatory rhetoric is to ignore it and focus on the real actions" to pressure North Korea, said Sun. "A spat is not going to solve the problem."
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