Trump's 'truthful hyperbole' on US foreign policy

Published April 28, 2016
Republican presidential candidate Donald Trump addresses the crowd during a campaign rally at the Indiana Farmers Coliseum on April 27, 2016 in Indianapolis, Indiana. ─ AFP
Republican presidential candidate Donald Trump addresses the crowd during a campaign rally at the Indiana Farmers Coliseum on April 27, 2016 in Indianapolis, Indiana. ─ AFP

By his own admission years ago, Republican presidential front runner Donald Trump likes to speak with “truthful hyperbole” at times. Here's what that mix of reality and exaggeration looked like in the Republican presidential contender's foreign policy pronouncements on Wednesday.

About IS

Trump: Islamic State militants are “making millions and millions of dollars a week selling Libya oil. And you know what? We don't blockade. We don't bomb. We don't do anything about it. It's almost as if our country doesn't even know what's happening, which could be a fact and could be true.”

The hyperbole: The prospect of the militant Islamic State (IS) group controlling and profiting from Libyan oil is a concern, not today's reality.

While IS affiliates in Libya have taken swaths of territory and attacked petroleum facilities, they have not yet been able to export oil in any significant quantity.

Last month, a panel of United Nations experts reported that while IS "does not currently generate direct revenue from the exploitation of oil in Libya, its attacks against oil installations seriously compromise the country's economic stability".

On Wednesday, Martin Kobler, the UN envoy to Libya, said in Cairo that he is concerned by recent IS incursions into Libya's oil region, calling them a "grave assault" on the economy.

To date there is no evidence that the militants are operating oilfields they have attacked.

Related: Islamic State risk for Libya's troubled oil sector

About Egypt

Trump: The Obama administration "helped bring the Muslim Brotherhood to power" in Egypt.

The hyperbole: Yes and no.

The Obama administration did abandon longtime US ally Hosni Mubarak, a move that led to his ouster and the political rise of the Muslim Brotherhood, which was the most well-organised of Egypt's opposition groups.

But the administration did not directly help the Brotherhood come to power.

It sought to work with the country's first democratically elected president, the Brotherhood's Mohammed Morsi, but eventually became frustrated with his erratic rule and pointedly decided not to call his removal by the military a "coup".

On Iran nuclear deal

Trump: On reaching the nuclear deal with the Iranians, "We watched them ignore its terms even before the ink was dry."

Iran has met all of its obligations under the deal to sideline its nuclear program in exchange for relief from sanctions. But that's not the whole story.

By conducting ballistic missile tests, Iran arguably defied a UN Security Council resolution that enshrines the nuclear deal.

That resolution calls on Iran not to test ballistic missiles designed to carry nuclear weapons. Iran argues its missiles are not made for nuclear payloads and the resolution merely urged it not to conduct the tests.

The US disagrees and calls the tests a violation of the resolution ─ but not of the nuclear deal itself.

Related: Iran deal: Trump says Obama is like a ‘baby’

About US trade deficit

Trump: "Our manufacturing trade deficit with the world is now approaching $1 trillion a year."

The hyperbole: Even "approaching" $1 trillion is a stretch.

The trade deficit in goods was $759 billion in 2015, according to the Census Bureau.

It's basically been flat for five years and remains below its prerecession peak of $837bn in 2006.

The deficit in goods tends to grow in more prosperous times, as US consumers buy more things, including imports. In this shakier period, a trajectory reaching $1tr any time soon seems improbable at best.

Also Read: Gulf money would quit US if Trump wins: UAE billionaire

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