Letters from an American - June 20, 2024
Episode Date: June 21, 2024Get full access to Letters from an American at heathercoxrichardson.substack.com/subscribe...
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Hi folks, Heather Cox Richardson is traveling today. I'm her assistant, Nicholas Doublefield,
and I'll be reading the letter today.
June 20, 2024. Yesterday, in North Korea, Russian President Vladimir Putin and North
Korean leader Kim Jong-un signed a security partnership
between their countries that said they would provide mutual assistance in case of aggression.
The two authoritarian leaders essentially resurrected a 1961 agreement between North
Korea and the Soviet Union. According to the North Korean news agency, the agreement also calls for the two countries
to work together toward a just and multipolar New World Order.
The United States and other Western allies have been concerned for two years about the
strengthening ties between the two countries.
Putin needs weapons for the war in Ukraine, and in exchange, he might provide not
only the economic support Kim Jong-un needs, North Korea is one of the poorest countries in Asia,
but also transfer the technology North Korea needs to develop nuclear weapons.
In the New York Times today, David Sanger pointed out that Putin and China's leader
Xi Jinping have
partnered against the West in the past decade, but have always agreed that North Korea must not be
able to develop a nuclear weapon. Now, it appears, Putin is desperate enough for munitions that he
is willing to provide the technologies North Korea needs to obtain one, along with missiles to deliver it.
Meanwhile, Joby Warwick reported yesterday in the Washington Post that Iran has launched
big expansions of two key nuclear enrichment plants, and leaders of the country's nuclear
program have begun to say they could build a nuclear weapon quickly if asked to do so. On X, security analyst John
Wohlstahl recalled the 2015 Joint Comprehensive Plan of Action, JCPOA, that successfully limited
Iran's nuclear program and that Trump abandoned with vows to produce something better. Wohlstahl
noted that diplomacy worked when wars and promises of a better deal could not.
Still, the meeting between Putin and Kim Jong-un is a sign of weakness, not strength.
As The Telegraph pointed out, just 10 years ago, Putin was welcomed to the G8, now the G7,
by the leaders of the richest countries in the world.
now the G7, by the leaders of the richest countries in the world.
Now he has to go cap in hand to the pariah state of North Korea, it pointed out.
National Security Communications Advisor John Kirby added that Russia is absolutely isolated on the world stage.
They've been forced to rely, again, on countries like North Korea and Iran.
Meanwhile, Ukraine just organized a successful peace summit in Switzerland that had more
than 100 countries and organizations sign up to support President Zelensky's vision
for a just peace.
In that same press conference, Kirby noted that the U.S. is delaying planned deliveries of foreign
military sales to other countries, particularly of air defense missiles, sending the weapons to
Ukraine instead. Also today, the U.S. emphasized that Ukraine can use American-supplied weapons
to hit Russian forces in Russia. This is at least partly in response to recent reports that Russia is pulverizing
Ukrainian frontline cities to force inhabitants to abandon them. Ukraine can slow the barrage
by hitting the Russian airstrips from which the planes are coming. China, which declared a
no-limits partnership with Russia in February 2022, just before Russia invaded Ukraine, kept distant from
the new agreement between Russia and North Korea. Tang Zhao of the Carnegie Endowment for International
Peace told Lori Chen and Joss Smith of Reuters, China is careful not to create the perception
of a de facto alliance among Beijing, Moscow, and Pyongyang, as this will not be helpful for China to maintain
practical cooperation with key Western countries. Greg Turode, Jerry Doyle, and Lori Chen published
an exclusive story in Reuters tonight, reporting that in March, for the first time in five years,
delegates from the U.S. and China resumed semi-official
talks about nuclear arms, although official talks have stalled.
The Office of President of the Republic of Korea, ROK, Yun Suk-yool, condemned the agreement.
It's absurd that two parties with a history of launching wars of invasion, the Korean
War and the war in Ukraine, are now vowing mutual
military cooperation on the premise of a preemptive attack by the international community that will
never happen, it said. An ROK national security official added that the government, which has
provided humanitarian aid to Ukraine, will now consider supplying weapons. This is no small threat.
ROK is one of the world's top 10 arms exporters. In the U.S., John Kirby told reporters that while
cooperation between Russia and North Korea is a concern, the U.S. has been strengthening and
bolstering alliances and partnerships throughout the Indo-Pacific region
since President Joe Biden took office. It brokered the historic trilateral agreement
between the Republic of Korea, Japan, and the United States, launched AUKUS, the trilateral
security partnership between Australia, the United Kingdom, and the U.S., and expanded cooperation with the Philippines.
On Tuesday, at a joint press conference with U.S. Secretary of State Antony J. Blinken in
Washington, D.C., NATO Secretary General Jens Stoltenberg explained the cooperation between
Russia and North Korea like this. Russia's war in Ukraine is propped up by China, North Korea, and Iran, he said.
They want to see the United States fail. They want to see NATO fail. If they succeed in Ukraine,
it will make us more vulnerable and the world more dangerous.
To that, the bulwark today added journalists and Applebaum's comments about the determination of those countries to disrupt liberal democracies.
Dictators, she said, are betting that Trump will be the person who destroys the United States.
Whether he makes it ungovernable, whether he assaults the institutions so that they no longer function,
Whether he assaults the institutions so that they no longer function. Whether he creates so much division and chaos that the US can't have a foreign policy anymore.
That's what they want.
And that's what they're hoping he will do.
Trump himself is a more and more problematic candidate.
This week, author Ramin Satuta, who has a new book coming out soon about Trump's
transformation from failed businessman to reality TV star on the way to the presidency, has told
reporters that Trump has severe memory issues, adding that he couldn't remember things. He
couldn't even remember me. Trump is supposed to participate in a debate with President Biden on June 27th.
And while Biden is preparing as candidates traditionally do, with policy reviews and
practice, Trump's team has been downplaying Trump's need for preparation, saying that
his rallies and interviews with friendly media are enough. With new polls showing Biden overtaking the lead in the presidential contest,
right-wing media has been pushing so-called cheap fakes, videos that don't use AI but
misrepresent what happened by deceptively cutting the film or the shot. Social media has been
flooded with images of Biden appearing to bend over for no apparent reason at a D-Day commemoration.
The clip cuts off both the chair behind him and that everyone else was sitting down too.
Another, from the recent G7 summit, appears to show the president wandering away from a group of leaders
during a skydiving demonstration.
In fact, he was walking toward and speaking to a parachute jumper who had just
landed but was off camera. A third appears to show Biden unable to say the name of Homeland
Security Secretary Alejandro Mayorkas. In fact, he was teasing Mayorkas. And the film cuts off
just before Biden says his name. On Monday, June 17th, Judd Legum of Popular Information produced a deep report on how the
right-wing Sinclair broadcast group has been flooding its local media websites with these
and other stories suggesting that President Biden is mentally unfit for office. Legum noted that
these stories appeared simultaneously on at least 86 local news websites Sinclair owns. Finally, today,
in the New York Times, Charlie Savage and Alan Foyer reported that two of Judge Eileen Cannon's
more experienced colleagues on Florida's federal bench, including the chief judge, a George W.
Bush appointee, urged her to hand off the case of Trump's retention of classified documents
to someone else when it was assigned to her. They noted that she was inexperienced,
having been appointed by Trump only late in his term, and that taking the case would look bad
since she had previously been rebuked by a conservative appeals court after helping Trump
in the criminal investigation that led to the
indictment. She refused to pass the assignment to someone else. Trump's lawyer's approach to the
case has been to try to delay it until after the election. Judge Cannon's decisions appear
to have made that strategy succeed. Letters from an American was produced at Soundscape Productions,
Dedham, Massachusetts. Recorded with music composed by Michael Moss.