It doesn't take a Machiavelli to figure out the purpose of Asia tour by any shrewd US presidents; they all have one thing in common - create conflict out of thin air, use scare-mongering tactics to foment further animosity by selling arms to potential parties... And this is Trump's way of making America great by creating new jobs (current job situation in USA is at an all time best in the last 17 years!) and ramping up manufacturing...New arms plant are going up in Texas while other facilities are expanding their operations.
Trump happy with S. Korea buying more US arms as he fuels North nuke scare
RT : 7 Nov, 2017
President Donald Trump is acting as a door-to-door salesman for
US defense producers, pitching contracts to Japan and South Korea by
talking up the bogeyman of Pyongyang’s nukes.
During
his ongoing visit to Seoul on Tuesday, Trump welcomed South Korea’s
plans to purchase billions of dollars’ worth of American military
hardware. The visiting president said he learned from his aides that the
“amount of equipment and things you will be ordering from the
United States will substantially increase, and therefore bringing the
trade deficit down, which is very important to our people.”
“We have trade deficits with numerous countries and we don't want trade deficits, so we appreciate that very much,” Trump said, as cited by Yonhap news agency, after a one-on-one meeting with South Korean President Moon Jae-in.
Trump made a similar pitch during the previous leg of his Asian tour.
Following a meeting with Japanese Prime Minister Shinzo Abe, the
American leader said US weapons will help shoot down North Korean
ballistic missiles.
Abe “will shoot them out of the sky when he completes the purchase of lots of additional military equipment from the United States,” Trump said in Tokyo. “The
prime minister is going to be purchasing massive amounts of military
equipment, as he should. And we make the best military equipment by
far.” The latest claim provoked some snickering in Russia, with
Deputy Prime Minister Dmitry Rogozin, who oversees the nation’s defense
sector, tweeting “Oh, really?” in response.
Trump advocated the Japanese arms deal as having a two-pronged effect. “It’s
a lot of jobs for us, and a lot of safety for Japan, and other
countries that are likewise purchasing military equipment from us, that
frankly a year ago or two years ago were not,” Trump said.
The
next destination for Trump will be America’s global frenemy China,
which would be an unlikely customer for the US defense industry – but he
will still be able to promote American weapons in Vietnam and the
Philippines later in the trip.
Trump’s
arms sales pitch is reinforced by an ongoing crisis over North Korea’s
missile and nuclear programs. Pyongyang has made considerable advances
in both areas this year, leading to months of heated rhetoric. Trump
dubbed North Korean leader Kim Jong-un “rocket man” and repeatedly
warned that the US would rather use military force than live under the
threat of a possible missile attack by Pyongyang. North Korea, which
insists that it needs a nuclear deterrence to protect itself from
American aggression, has responded with equally insulting and hostile
statements.
On the home front, Trump used the perceived North Korean threat to
justify additional defense funding before Congress. In a letter to
Congress Speaker Paul Ryan, he argued on Monday that the Pentagon would
need an additional $4 billion to counter Pyongyang.
“This
request supports additional efforts to detect, defeat, and defend
against any North Korean use of ballistic missiles against the United
States, its deployed forces, allies, or partners,” Trump wrote.
Trump’s
mantra on North Korea is that the “era of strategic patience” by the US
ended when he entered the White House. The stance was criticized this
week by John Kerry, who served as secretary of state under President
Barack Obama. Kerry said Trump’s rhetoric might lead to “the risk of tweeting yourself or insulting yourself into a position where something happens.”
“It’s
given North Korea a reason to say, ‘Hey, we need a bomb, because if we
don’t have a bomb, we’re going to not be able to protect ourselves and
they’ll come after us,’” Kerry said in an interview with CNN’s chief international correspondent, Christiane Amanpour.
Selected Comments:
# Armani, Versace, Channel use Hollywood movie stars to sell their
products to the masses. Lockheed Martin, BAE Systems use presidents to
sell their products to other governments. It's called marketing.
# All the fear mongering, does wonders for arms sales.
What a rotten disgusting country !
Donal Trump is the bottom of the the barrel.
# It's hard to believe that after all these decades of buying arms from
the U.S. that South Korea does not now have enough of them. Trump, with
his Queens accent and his brash behavior, reminds me of Al Capone
pushing a local, friendly mobster to buy more Tommy guns.
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