President Donald Trump strongly
indicated he would not renew the Iranian nuclear deal, in a forceful first
speech before the international body. He forcefully
defended the United States and condemned North Korea and Iran in his first
speech before the United Nations General Assembly, hailing “strong, sovereign
nations” and urging fellow world leaders to “put your countries first,” while
trying to strike a cordial tone on the international alliances he had
previously criticized.
“As president of the
United States, I will always put America first,” he said. “The United States
will always be a great friend to the world and especially to its allies, but we
can no longer be taken advantage of or enter into a one-sided deal in which the
United States gets nothing in return.”
Trump’s speech Tuesday
was an important test on the world stage, as the U.N. grapples with
international crises, including North Korea’s growing nuclear program,
terrorism and climate change.
“Rocket Man is on a
suicide mission for himself and for his regime,” Trump said, referring to his
nickname for North Korean leader Kim Jong Un.
He then said the U.S.
“will have no choice but to totally destroy North Korea” if the regime does not
tamp down its nuclear development and if it threatens the U.S. and its allies. In a clear nod to his
conservative base, Trump pledged to “crush the loser terrorists” and “stop
radical Islamic terrorism.”
He also strongly
indicated that he would not remain in the Iranian nuclear deal, which is up for
renewal next month, calling it “one of the worst and most one-sided
transactions the U.S. has ever entered into” and “an embarrassment.”
Trump’s speech
presented another opportunity to push his “America First” foreign policy
vision, this time in front of an international body he has often maligned.
During his presidential
campaign, Trump regularly criticized the United Nations for mismanagement and
ineffectiveness. And in December, he referred to it as “a club for people to
get together, talk and have a good time.”
On Monday, he pledged
to “make the United Nations great,” a nod to his campaign slogan. “The main message is
‘make the United Nations great.’ Not ‘again.’ Make the United Nations great,”
Trump told reporters. “Such tremendous potential, and I think we’ll be able to
do this.”
In his speech Tuesday,
Trump celebrated the international alliances formed after World War II, a sharp
contrast from his campaign rhetoric.
Yet he remained
critical of the United Nations’ role and fiercely put forth his “America First”
platform, boasting at the beginning of his scripted remarks that “the United
States has done very well since Election Day.”
The reaction to Trump’s
speech among the world leaders in the room was “muted at best” and “stone
faced,” according to a press pool report from The New York Times’ Peter Baker.
At the conclusion of the president’s remarks, there was “fuller, polite
applause, though not rousing or enthusiastic.”
While in New York,
Trump has been speaking with world leaders gathered for the U.N. meeting. On
Monday, he met with Israeli Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu to discuss peace
in the Middle East, which Trump has boasted he can reach, as well as the Iran
nuclear agreement, which Netanyahu fiercely opposes.
“You’ll see very soon,”
Trump told reporters, when asked if the U.S. would stay in the agreement. Later in the day, Trump
met with French President Emmanuel Macron, with climate change as one topic of
contention. Macron has been trying to convince Trump to reverse the decision he
made earlier this year to withdraw the United States from the Paris climate
agreement.
According to the White
House, the two leaders “discussed how best to protect the environment while
promoting economic growth.”
Trump’s busy week has
not gone without a hitch.
Ahead of his meeting
with Macron, Trump told reporters that he wants a military-style parade down
Pennsylvania Avenue in Washington on July Fourth, referring to the French
Bastille Day parade he saw during his July visit to Paris on the invitation of
Macron. Trump said Monday that he admired France’s display of “military might.”
Trump also took the
time to promote one of his New York real estate properties before giving
remarks at a meeting about U.N. reform.
“I actually saw great
potential right across the street, to be honest with you,” Trump said,
apparently referring to his Trump World Tower property near the United Nations.
“And it was only for the reason that the United Nations was here that that
turned out to be such a successful project.”

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