The Trump Doctrine
Making Nuclear Weapons Usable Again
By Michael T. Klare, Tomgram, Nov. 19, 2017
The year was 1950, the Korean War was underway, and the person in
question was General Douglas MacArthur who, in terms of pure megalomania
and self-regard, was surely the Donald Trump of his moment. As it
happened, the general was gunning not just for Koreans but for a
Democrat by the name of Harry Truman, a president who would, in the end,
act as a commander in chief should. In a move deeply unpopular in its
moment, he would dismiss his war commander (whom he dubbed “Mr. Prima
Donna”) only to watch MacArthur come home to a 19-mile New York City ticker-tape parade (and 3,000 tons of dropped paper) seen by more than seven million cheering spectators.
The Korean War was subsequently fought to a draw without atomic
weapons, belts of cobalt, or anything else that might, in the end, have
led to a global nuclear conflagration, in part because a president was
able to corral an over-the-top general. Almost three quarters of a
century later, the question, when it comes to that same peninsula and
those same weapons, is: Who could corral a president with a yen to use
them and the “sole authority” to do so? We’re talking here about a man who, in the 2016 election campaign, wondered
aloud to MSNBC’s Chris Matthews why in the world, when it came to
nuclear weapons, we would be “making them” if we weren’t planning on
using them? ...
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