Saturday, August 12, 2017

Trump news on Youtube Aug 12 2017

The Memo Could Trump�s hard line work on North Korea

BY NIALL STANAGE

President Trump�s allies are robustly defending his rhetoric on North Korea, despite the criticism

his words have drawn from other quarters.

The administration�s view is that Trump�s hard line had paid dividends even before he

threatened Pyongyang with �fire and fury� on Tuesday.

Supporters argue it may continue to do so, in part by ratcheting up pressure on China

to rein in its ally.

The Trump camp highlights last weekend�s unanimous vote by the United Nations Security

Council, in which China and Russia joined the United States and others in imposing the

most arduous sanctions yet on North Korea.

The U.S. ambassador to the U.N., Nikki Haley, described those sanctions as �a gut punch

to North Korea� during a Fox News interview on Monday.

Pyongyang intensified the war of words on Wednesday, however.

According to The Associated Press, the North Korean military called Trump's threat a "load

of nonsense" and said that "only absolute force" would work on Trump.

But Walid Phares, a former foreign policy adviser to Trump�s presidential campaign,

argued that �what most impresses the North Korean regime politically is a united U.N.

Security Council position and joint actions by the international community to isolate

Pyongyang.

The last [U.N.] resolution � against North Korea is the kind of development that would

push the dictatorship to slow down its activities.�

Phares added that �a second deterrent is when China takes measures from its side, because

it signals that the only real lifeline for North Korea's economy could be cut.�

On Wednesday, amid heightened tensions on the Korean Peninsula and a North Korean threat

against Guam, Secretary of State Rex Tillerson offered a solid endorsement of Trump�s approach.

�What the president is doing is sending a strong message to North Korea in language

that [North Korean leader] Kim Jong Un can understand, because he doesn�t seem to understand

diplomatic language,� Tillerson told reporters.

Tillerson described the administration�s overall strategy as a "pressure campaign,�

a phrase that State Department spokeswoman Heather Nauert repeated during a media briefing

later in the day.

The basic thrust of that campaign, in the minds of Team Trump, is to pressure China

by raising the specter of instability in the region unless North Korea curbs its nuclear

program.

The prospect of such instability would concern China because it would call its No. 1 goal

� maintaining its economic expansion � into question.

Even some Republicans who have at times been critical of Trump seemed to endorse that approach.

�China should have two options,� Sen. Lindsey Graham (R-S.C.) told "CBS This Morning�

on Wednesday.

�Deal with the nut job in your backyard or realize there will be a war in your backyard.�

Independent experts who are broadly sympathetic to Trump�s approach argue that his rhetoric

provides an important measure of clarity � even as critics worry that it is raising the temperature

to a dangerous level.

�No matter who you are, you understand the president means business in North Korea,�

said Harry Kazianis, director of defense studies at the Center for the National Interest, a

think tank established by former President Richard Nixon.

�The dictator in Pyongyang knows he means business as well.

There is no mistaking what he is talking about here.�

Others noted that the more modulated approaches favored by other recent presidents have not

proven successful.

Then-President Bill Clinton in 1994 concluded a deal that pledged $4 billion in energy aid

to North Korea in return for a promise to slow and eventually dismantle its nuclear

program.

During President Barack Obama�s two terms in the White House, he adopted an approach

known as �strategic patience.�

Despite these efforts, and others by former President George W. Bush�s administration,

Pyongyang has carried out five nuclear tests since 2006.

Last month alone, it twice tested intercontinental ballistic missiles (ICBMs).

Earlier this week, a leaked U.S. intelligence assessment suggested that North Korea had

achieved �miniaturization� � the process by which nuclear warheads small enough to

be carried by ICBMs are made.

�The professional military believe we�re at a turning point,� conservative broadcaster

Hugh Hewitt said, citing recent remarks by Joint Chiefs of Staff Chairman Joseph Dunford,

Army chief of staff Mark Milley and national security adviser H.R. McMaster.

McMaster told Hewitt on his MSNBC show on Saturday that a situation in which North Korea

could menace the United States with a nuclear weapon was �intolerable from the president�s

perspective.�

Trump, Hewitt told The Hill, �used very blunt and provocative language, which is very

different from the language used by President Obama, Bush or Clinton.

But their language didn�t accomplish anything.�

There are plenty of people who fear that Trump�s language could accomplish all the wrong things,

however.

Sen. Bernie Sanders (I-Vt.) described the president�s remarks as �bombastic� on

Wednesday, the same word that Sen. Dianne Feinstein (D-Calif.) used the previous day.

Republican Sen. John McCain (Ariz.) told a radio station in Arizona Tuesday that Trump

appeared to be making threats that he could not follow through on and was increasing the

chances of a �serious confrontation� by doing so.

Democratic National Committee Chairman Tom Perez went further Wednesday, attacking Trump

for �recklessly live-tweeting threats of nuclear war from his private golf course.�

Others took a more nuanced view.

Former Ambassador Christopher Hill said that Trump�s approach was �obviously not presidential

and very concerning coming so soon after [the] appointment of an adult as chief of staff�

� a reference to John Kelly, who has recently replaced Reince Priebus in the White House.

Hill, who served as ambassador to South Korea under Bush and has participated in North Korea

nuclear negotiations, added that the �focus needs to be on North Koreans,� not Trump�s

tone.

Communicating via text while traveling in Eastern Europe, Hill emphasized that the �basic

problem is that the [North Koreans] won�t give up nukes.

We need to work with � not outsource to � Chinese and reassure allies South Korea

and Japan.�

But there is no sign of the administration backing down from its position.

Defense Secretary James Mattis issued another warning to North Korea on Wednesday.

Pyongyang, he said, �should cease any consideration of actions that would lead to the end of its

regime and the destruction of its people.�

The Memo is a reported column by Niall Stanage, primarily focused

on Donald Trump�s presidency.

For more infomation >> The Memo Could Trump's hard line work on North Korea - Duration: 7:26.

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Zakaria Tries To Insult Trump, Accidentally Admits That Kim Jong Un Hates US Because He Watches CNN - Duration: 13:51.

Zakaria Tries To Insult Trump, Accidentally Admits That Kim

Jong Un Hates US Because He Watches CNN

CNN seems to have one job nowadays, make liberal Americans angry about President Trump.

All they do is show one side of the story and insult him day in and day out.

CNN's Zakaria insulted President Trump's 'bluff' against North Korea.

He went on to brag that Kim Jong Un probably watches CNN and therefore knows that Trump's

words are not to be trusted.

"What you have in Donald Trump is something absolutely extraordinary.

You have the president of the United States essentially threatening a preemptive or a

preventive nuclear war in Asia, not in response to a North Korean strike, but in response

to North Korea's rhetoric, the fact that they're disrespecting the United States.

I mean, it is staggering," said Zakaria.

"In this case, what we have is the art of the bluff.

This is what Trump does all the time.

He's got amazing stuff on Obama he's going to reveal.

Nothing.

He's going to move the embassy to Jerusalem, nothing.

He's going to recognize Taiwan, nothing," ranted Zakaria.

"And my fear is the North Koreans have watched Donald Trump.

I think at some level; I sometimes wonder whether Trump thinks that the North Koreans

don't get CNN, so they don't know what's going on," said Zakaria.

"But they know.

They watch this guy make empty threats for much of his life and for a lot of his presidency.

It's very worrying," said Zakaria.

Maybe that's a sign they shouldn't spend all hours trying to make this President

and

this country

look bad!

For more infomation >> Zakaria Tries To Insult Trump, Accidentally Admits That Kim Jong Un Hates US Because He Watches CNN - Duration: 13:51.

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Former CIA Director of Operations: It's Trump's job to be the "bad cop" - Duration: 0:59.

For more infomation >> Former CIA Director of Operations: It's Trump's job to be the "bad cop" - Duration: 0:59.

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Trump Military Solutions Are Now Fully In Place, Locked And Loaded - Duration: 4:54.

Trump Military Solutions Are Now Fully In Place, Locked And Loaded

by Tyler Durden

Confirming yesterday's report that the Pentagon is now prepared for a "preemptive strike",

or response to any provocative action by North Korea, moments ago president Trump took the

verbal war of words with Kim Jong-Un into the fourth day when he tweeted that "military

solutions are now fully in place,locked and loaded,should North Korea act unwisely. Hopefully

Kim Jong Un will find another path!"

To underscore his point, Trump moments ago retweeted the US Pacific Command's tweets

from Thursday night, in which it said: "#USAF B-1B Lancer #bombers on Guam stand ready to

fulfill USFK�s #FightTonight mission if called upon to do so"

Earlier on Friday, the North Korean government�s official newspaper said that the US mainland

could be �reduced to ashes at any moment� as tensions between the two countries continue

to mount. The Rodong Sinmun, an official mouthpiece of Kim Jong-un�s ruling Workers� Party,

said the �reckless and hysteric� behavior of Donald Trump would be to blame if the US

is attacked.

The Trump administration has been �seized with anxiety and terror� following North

Korea's successful testing of a long-range missile, the newspaper claimed, saying �US

military warmongers are running amok�.

�It is a tragedy that the reckless and hysteric behaviors may reduce the US mainland to ashes

[at] any moment,� it continued, according to KCNAWatch.

Ominously, the newspaper also said that it was the �steadfast will� of North Korea

to �put an end to the hostile moves of the US� and vowed that the communist state will

�win the final victory in the stand-off with imperialism and the US�. �The US

and its vassal forces will dearly pay for the harshest sanctions and pressure and reckless

military provocations against the DPRK,� it added.

As a reminder, on Thursday NBC reported the Pentagon yesterday unveiled a plan for a preemptive

strike on North Korean missile sites with bombers stationed in Guam, once Donald Trump

gives the order to strike. Echoing what we said yesterday that war "under any analysis,

is insanity", the preemptive strike plan is viewed as the "best option available" out

of all the bad ones: "There is no good option," a senior intelligence official involved in

North Korean planning told NBC News, but a unilateral American bomber strike not supported

by any assets in the South constitutes "the best of a lot of bad options."

The attack would consist of B-1 Lancer heavy bombers located on Andersen Air Force Base

in Guam, a senior acting and retired military officials told NBC news.

�Of all the military options � [President Donald Trump] could consider, this would be

one of the two or three that would at least have the possibility of not escalating the

situation,� retired Admiral James Stavridis, former Supreme Allied Commander Europe and

an NBC News analyst, said.

Separately, Defense Secretary James Mattis said military strategists at the Pentagon

have a military solution in place to address the growing threat emanating from North Korea,

but they are holding their fire in favor of ongoing diplomatic efforts. The Pentagon chief

said any military option would be a multilateral one involving a number of regional powers

in the Pacific. �Do I have military options? Of course, I do. That�s my responsibility,

to have those. And we work very closely with allies to ensure that this is not unilateral

either � and of course there�s a military solution,� Mattis told reporters en route

to meet with senior leaders in the technology sector in Seattle and California.

However, as the Washington Times reports, Mattis reiterated that the administration�s

diplomatic efforts to quell tensions on the peninsula remained the top priority for the

White House.

�We want to use diplomacy. That�s where we�ve been, that�s where we are right

now. and that�s where we hope to remain. But at the same time, our defenses are robust�

and ready to take on any threat posed by the North Korean regime, Mattis said.

Unfortunately with every passing day that see rising verbal escalation - and now that

China has explicitly warned the US not to strike first - the possibility of a diplomatic

resolution grows increasingly more unlikely.

For more infomation >> Trump Military Solutions Are Now Fully In Place, Locked And Loaded - Duration: 4:54.

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Trump: US 'Locked & Loaded' Against North Korea - Duration: 1:57.

For more infomation >> Trump: US 'Locked & Loaded' Against North Korea - Duration: 1:57.

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POTUS Trump On Kim Jong-Un: 'He Will Truly Regret It, He Will Regret It Fast'(VIDEO)! - Duration: 1:16.

For more infomation >> POTUS Trump On Kim Jong-Un: 'He Will Truly Regret It, He Will Regret It Fast'(VIDEO)! - Duration: 1:16.

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Trump: Threat might not have been tough enough - Politics New Today - Duration: 3:33.

For more infomation >> Trump: Threat might not have been tough enough - Politics New Today - Duration: 3:33.

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ULTIMA HORA!!!!: DONAL TRUMP(EEUU) INVADE A VENEZUELA! - HOY 12-08-2017 - Duration: 0:43.

For more infomation >> ULTIMA HORA!!!!: DONAL TRUMP(EEUU) INVADE A VENEZUELA! - HOY 12-08-2017 - Duration: 0:43.

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American News | Combative Trump Pulls His Punches for One Man: Putin | H34 TV - Duration: 8:26.

American News | Combative Trump Pulls His Punches for One Man: Putin | H34 TV

For more infomation >> American News | Combative Trump Pulls His Punches for One Man: Putin | H34 TV - Duration: 8:26.

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Mark Taylor August 12, 2017 - THE TRUMP PROPHECY: WHAT'S COMING NEXT PART 3 - Mark Taylor Prophecy - Duration: 29:23.

Mark Taylor August 12, 2017 - THE TRUMP PROPHECY: WHAT'S COMING NEXT PART 3 - Mark Taylor Prophecy

For more infomation >> Mark Taylor August 12, 2017 - THE TRUMP PROPHECY: WHAT'S COMING NEXT PART 3 - Mark Taylor Prophecy - Duration: 29:23.

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American News | Trump Threatens Venezuela With Unspecified 'Military Option' | H34 TV - Duration: 4:47.

American News | Trump Threatens Venezuela With Unspecified 'Military Option' | H34 TV

For more infomation >> American News | Trump Threatens Venezuela With Unspecified 'Military Option' | H34 TV - Duration: 4:47.

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President Trump's Pastor Gives Trump A Shocking Order Kill Kim Jong Un! - Duration: 11:49.

President Trump's Pastor Gives Trump A Shocking Order Kill Kim Jong Un!

Tensions are rising between the United States and North Korea.

President Trump shocked the mainstream media with statements that Kim Jong Un will be met

with "fire and fury" if he continued to make threats against the United States.

President Trump's long time pastor Robert Jeffress took Trump's words a step further

and encouraged the President to assassinate Kim Jung Un.

"When it comes to how we should deal with evil doers, the Bible, in the book of Romans,

is very clear: God has endowed rulers full power to use whatever means necessary — including

war — to stop evil.

In the case of North Korea, God has given Trump authority to take out Kim Jong-Un,"

said Pastor Jeffress in an interview on The Brody File.

"I'm heartened to see that our president — contrary to what we've seen with past

administrations who have taken, at best, a sheepish stance toward dictators and oppressors

— will not tolerate any threat against the American people," said Jeffress.

"When President Trump draws a red line, he will not erase it, move it, or back away

from it.

Thank God for a President who is serious about protecting our country," said Jeffress.

Do you think the Pastor's comments are going too far or is he spot on?

What do you

think

President

Trump should do?

For more infomation >> President Trump's Pastor Gives Trump A Shocking Order Kill Kim Jong Un! - Duration: 11:49.

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Obamacare is cracking up Republicans Trump lashes out at McConnell after GOP donor files fraud lawsu - Duration: 3:58.

Obamacare is cracking up Republicans Trump lashes out at McConnell after GOP donor files

fraud lawsuit

Many GOP lawmakers have campaigned and won elections over the years on the promise to

scrap the Affordable Care Act, former President Barack Obama�s signature achievement that

expanded health insurance coverage to millions of people.

But to do it involved taxing wealthy households, pharmaceutical companies, and medical device

manufacturers while extending tax credits to low-income earners � in other words,

the kind of stuff Republicans abhor.

As frustration among Republicans grows over the party�s failure to scrap Obamacare,

one Republican donor decided to sue the GOP � accusing it of racketeering and fraud.

President Donald Trump seems equally frustrated, taking to his beloved Twitter for a second

time in as many days to lash out at Senate Majority Leader Mitch McConnell, berating

him for his failure to marshal enough support to repeal and replace Obamacare.

�Can you believe that Mitch McConnell, who has screamed Repeal & Replace for 7 years,

couldn�t get it done.

Must Repeal & Replace ObamaCare!� the president tweeted early Thursday morning.

On Wednesday, Trump lashed out at McConnell after the Kentucky Republican appeared to

suggest in a speech Monday the president lacks the political experience to understand how

Congress works.

�Our new president, of course, has not been in this line of work before,� McConnell

said, according to ABC affiliate WCPO.

�I think he had excessive expectations about how quickly things happen in the democratic

process.�

On Thursday, Trump�s main mainstream media ally Fox News joined the president in lashing

out at McConnell and congressional Republicans.

Americans are so sick of these career politicians and their line of work and that�s why they

elected Donald Trump,� conservative author, commentator and former New York Lt. Gov. Betsy

McCaughey told Fox Business.

�While Congress is dithering about keeping its promise to repeal [Obamacare] President

Trump is keeping his promises with rapid-fire speed.�

Hardline Republican anger against McConnell spiked after Senate Republicans failed last

month to pass the so-called �skinny repeal� of Obamacare, a watered-down version of a

previous Senate bill whose vote was postponed in early July because it didn�t have enough

support.

But the revised bill didn�t pass after three Republicans opposed it in a dramatic July

28 Senate vote.

So far, the Republicans have offered only legislation that would increase the number

of uninsured Americans.

Congressional budget analysts estimated that the �skinny repeal� would have caused

16 million Americans to lose health insurance over the next decade, fewer than the 22 million

people estimated to lose their health insurance under the previous Senate bill.

The more aggressive American Health Care Act of 2017 that passed the House in May would

cause 23 million people to lose health insurance.

If the ACA were to be repealed without a replacement, 32 million people would lose health insurance,

according to the congressional budget office.

So there you have it: Republicans have offered up four takes on repeal and replace and none

of them increase the number of insured Americans or keep the same numbers as Obamacare.

As far as finding a way to actually cover all Americans or implement measures to lower

the world�s highest prices for health care?

Good luck with that under the current political climate.

For more infomation >> Obamacare is cracking up Republicans Trump lashes out at McConnell after GOP donor files fraud lawsu - Duration: 3:58.

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Venezuela reacciona a la declaración de Trump sobre la opción militar - Duration: 0:43.

For more infomation >> Venezuela reacciona a la declaración de Trump sobre la opción militar - Duration: 0:43.

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Trump Defends 'Locked & Loaded' Comment If North Korea Acts - Duration: 2:33.

For more infomation >> Trump Defends 'Locked & Loaded' Comment If North Korea Acts - Duration: 2:33.

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Trump Ready To Deport Democratic Senator's Family Because Of Illegal Status - Duration: 15:30.

Trump Ready To Deport Democratic Senator's Family Because Of Illegal Status

As President Donald Trump enforces new immigration laws or the ones on the books, the Democrats

are losing their minds.

They oppose every law that confronts their open borders agenda.

They even go so far as to not enforce, or at least Obama did not, current immigration

laws.

Which makes the illegal aliens think they can do whatever they want and get away with

it.

Take the curious case of Kevin de Leon who is currently serving in the California State

Senate.

He actually said that half of his family is illegally in the United States.

He recently admitted that his family has false documents they use to evade the law.

His supporters and other Democrats don't want to accept the fact that his family is

here illegally in our country.

However, everyone is equal before the law.

Proud Patriots cites Kevin de Leon:

"I can tell you half of my family would be eligible for deportation under [President

Donald Trump's] executive order, because if they got a false Social Security card,

if they got a false identification, if they got a false driver's license prior to us

passing AB60, if they got a false green card, and anyone who has family members, you know,

who are undocumented knows that almost entirely everybody has secured some sort of false identification.

That's what you need to survive, to work.

They are eligible for massive deportation."

I'm sorry but the law applies to everyone, no matter their job or wealth.

It's too bad that his family decided to stay in our country illegally.

If they had all the documents, they wouldn't be facing deportation right now.

De Leon family committed a crime and they should face

the consequences.

Do

you agree?

For more infomation >> Trump Ready To Deport Democratic Senator's Family Because Of Illegal Status - Duration: 15:30.

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[8/11/2017] Trump administration's mixed messages on North Korea - Duration: 4:07.

Trump administration's mixed messages on North Korea.

At a time when nuclear war with North Korea seems a possible - if distant - threat, you'd

think everyone would want the US administration to be on the same page.

But in recent weeks, statements from President Trump and his top officials appear to directly

contradict each other.

President Trump's latest outburst - that the US military was "locked and loaded" ready

to deal with North Korea - came just hours after his Defence Secretary Jim Mattis attempted

to cool tensions by saying that diplomatic efforts were succeeding.

Here are some of the other mixed messages we've heard since North Korea's intercontinental

ballistic missile (ICBM) test on 28 July.

Military action.

US Secretary of State Rex Tillerson said North Korea's ICBM launch last month was a "new

escalation of the threat" and warned that Washington would "never accept a nuclear-armed

North Korea".

He said "global action is required" and warned that any nation that provided economic or

military benefits to the North was "aiding and abetting a dangerous regime".

President Trump celebrated action of a monetary kind when the UN agreed new sanctions against

Pyongyang.

But it was only days before he was boasting about America's military might and warning

of "fire and fury" if North Korea threatened the US.

Then, after North Korea said it was preparing missile strikes on the US island territory

of Guam, he took it up a notch again - saying the regime of Kim Jong-un should be "very,

very nervous".

He said the regime would be in trouble "like few nations have ever been" if they do not

"get their act together".

In the meantime, however, his defence secretary was cautioning that armed conflict would be

"catastrophic" and insisting diplomacy was bearing fruit.

"The American effort is diplomatically led, it has diplomatic traction, it is gaining

diplomatic results," Gen Mattis said.

Blaming China.

President Trump has repeatedly criticised China for continuing to trade with Pyongyang.

"So much for China working with us," the US president tweeted the day after North Korea

claimed to have tested its long-rang missile.

At the end of July, he again said he was "very disappointed" with China for not doing enough

to stop North Korea's weapons programme.

"They do NOTHING for us with North Korea, just talk," he wrote on Twitter.

But back in June, Gen Mattis had praised Beijing's efforts to restrain North Korea's missile

and nuclear activity.

And on 2 August, Mr Tillerson said: "We certainly don't blame the Chinese for the situation

in North Korea."

Seeking regime change.

Mr Tillerson also struck a conciliatory tone after Pyongyang tested a second ICBM and claimed

it could hit the US west coast.

"We do not seek a regime change, we do not seek the collapse of the regime," he said.

"We're not your enemy."

However, just days later Gen Mattis warned North Korea that its actions could usher in

the "end of its regime and the destruction of its people".

The Pentagon chief also said Pyongyang would be "grossly overmatched" in a war against

the US and its allies.

Anything to worry about?

Secretary Tillerson has sought to assure Americans there is no imminent threat, despite the strong

rhetoric from his boss.

On Wednesday, he said the situation had not changed dramatically in recent days and that

Americans "should sleep well at night".

However, top Trump aide Sebastian Gorka told BBC News that Mr Tillerson was not actually

speaking for the White House.

"You should listen to the president," Mr Gorka said.

"The idea that Secretary Tillerson is going to discuss military matters is simply nonsensical.

"It is the job of Secretary Mattis to talk about military options."

For more infomation >> [8/11/2017] Trump administration's mixed messages on North Korea - Duration: 4:07.

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Donald Trump habla acerca de posibles acciones militares a Venezuela / Agosto 11 - Duration: 0:46.

In Venezuela, what options are on the table right now?

We have many options for Venezuela

and by the way, I'm not going to rule a military action

We have many options for Venezuela

this is our neighbor

this is, you know we are all over the world

we have troop all over the world

at places that are very very far away

Venezuela is not very far away

and the people are suffering

and they are dying

we have many options for Venezuela

including a possible military action

is necessary

say...

there will US military operation

We not talk about it, but a military operation, a military option is certainly

Something we could pursue

For more infomation >> Donald Trump habla acerca de posibles acciones militares a Venezuela / Agosto 11 - Duration: 0:46.

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American News | Trump: Kim Jong Un 'will regret it fast' if he attacks Guam, US allies - Duration: 6:03.

American News | Trump: Kim Jong Un 'will regret it fast' if he attacks Guam, US allies | H34 TV

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