OPINION
JAMELLE
BOUIE
Trump Is Losing It
Feb. 13,
2024
Jamelle
Bouie
By Jamelle
Bouie
Opinion
Columnist
https://www.nytimes.com/2024/02/13/opinion/trump-campaign-biden-aging.html
It is
unclear whether Donald Trump has forgotten the precise nature of NATO or
whether he ever fully grasped it in the first place.
What is
clear, however, is that Trump — who ostensibly spent four years as president of
the United States — has little clue about what NATO is or what NATO does. And
when he spoke on the subject at a rally in South Carolina over the weekend,
what he said was less a cogent discussion of foreign policy than it was
gibberish — the kind of outrageous nonsense that flows without interruption
from an empty and unreflective mind.
“One of the
presidents of a big country stood up and said, ‘Well, sir, if we don’t pay, and
we’re attacked by Russia, will you protect us?’” Trump said, recalling an
implausible conversation with an unnamed, presumably European head of state.
“‘You didn’t pay? You’re delinquent?’” Trump recounted responding. “‘No, I
would not protect you. In fact, I would encourage them to do whatever the hell
they want. You gotta pay. You gotta pay your bills.’”
The former
president’s message was clear: If NATO members do not pay up, then he will
leave them to the mercy of a continental aggressor who has already plunged one
European country into death, destruction and devastation.
Except NATO
isn’t a mafia protection racket. NATO, in case anyone needs to be reminded, is
a mutual defense organization, formed by treaty in 1949 as tensions between the
United States and the Soviet Union hardened into conflict. “The parties agree
that an armed attack against one or more of them in Europe or North America
shall be considered an attack against them all,” states Article 5 of the North
Atlantic Treaty.
According
to the terms of an agreement reached last year, member states will work to
spend at least 2 percent of national G.D.P. on military investment.
But let’s
set this bit of fact-checking aside for a moment and look at the big picture.
It is not
just that Trump is ignorant on this and other vital questions; it is that he is
incoherent.
Consider
his remarks at a recent gathering of the National Rifle Association in
Harrisburg, Pa. “We have to win in November, or we’re not going to have
Pennsylvania. They’ll change the name. They’re going to change the name of
Pennsylvania,” Trump said.
Who,
exactly, is going to change the name of Pennsylvania? And to what? I don’t
know. I doubt Trump does either.
Or consider
the time, last November, when Trump confused China and North Korea, telling an
audience of supporters in Florida that “Kim Jong Un leads 1.4 billion people,
and there is no doubt about who the boss is. And they want me to say he’s not
an intelligent man.”
There was
also the time that Trump mistook Nikki Haley, his former ambassador to the
United Nations, for Nancy Pelosi, the former speaker of the House.
“Nikki
Haley, you know they, do you know they destroyed all of the information, all of
the evidence, everything, deleted and destroyed all of it. All of it, because
of lots of things like Nikki Haley is in charge of security. We offered her
10,000 people, soldiers, National Guard, whatever they want. They turned it
down. They don’t want to talk about that. These are very dishonest people,”
Trump said, repeating his false claim that Pelosi was responsible for the
failure of Capitol security on Jan. 6.
If you
would like, you can also try to make sense of the former president’s recent
attempt to describe a missile defense system:
“I will
build an Iron Dome over our country, a state-of-the-art missile defense shield
made in the U.S.A.,” Trump said, before taking an unusual detour. “These are
not muscle guys here, they’re muscle guys up here, right,” he continued,
gesturing to his arms and his head to emphasize, I guess, that the people
responsible for building such systems are capable and intelligent.
“And they
calmly walk to us, and ding, ding, ding, ding, ding, ding. They’ve only got 17
seconds to figure this whole thing out. Boom. OK. Missile launch. Whoosh.
Boom,” he added.
I assume
Trump is describing the pressure of actually manning a missile defense system.
Even so, one would think that a former president — currently vying to be the
next president — would at least try to be a little more articulate.
But this
gets to one of the oddest things about this election cycle so far. There is no
shortage of coverage of President Biden’s age, even if there’s no evidence that
his age has been an obstacle to his ability to perform his duties. Indeed, it
is plainly true that Biden has been an unusually successful president in areas,
like legislative negotiations, that require skill and mental acuity.
Coverage of
Biden’s age, in other words, has more to do with the vibes of an “elderly”
president — he isn’t as outwardly vigorous and robust as we would like — than
it does with any particular issue with his performance.
In contrast
to the obsessive coverage of Biden’s age, there is comparatively little
coverage of Trump’s obvious deficiencies in that department. If we are going to
use public comments as the measure of mental fitness, then the former president
is clearly at a disadvantage.
Unfortunately
for Biden, Trump benefits from something akin to the soft bigotry of low
expectations. Because no one expected Trump, in the 2016 election, to speak and
behave like a normal candidate, he was held to a lower effective standard than
his rivals in both parties. Because no one expected him, during his presidency,
to be orderly and responsible, his endless scandals were framed as business as
usual. And because no one now expects him to be a responsible political figure
with a coherent vision for the country, it’s as if no one blinks an eye when he
rants and raves on the campaign trail.
It’s not
that there aren’t legitimate reasons to be concerned about Biden’s age. He is
already the oldest person to serve in the Oval Office. The issue here is one of
proportion and consequence. Biden may be unable to do the job at some point in
the future; Trump, it seems to me, already is.
One of
those is a lot more concerning than the other.
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