Carter to Trump: shun military action, keep country at peace - By Bill Barrow | AP
ATLANTA — Expressing pride in his own record of peace, former President Jimmy Carter warned that President Donald Trump should steer clear of any military action involving Syria or other world hot spots and avoid a nuclear attack at all costs.
“I pray that he would keep our country at peace and not exaggerate or exacerbate the challenges that come up with North Korea, in Russia or in Syria,” Carter said in an interview Wednesday. “I hope he realizes very profoundly as I did, and as other presidents have done, that any nuclear exchange could involve catastrophe for all human beings.”
The 93-year-old former president added that even a lesser military attack “is a dangerous thing” than can spiral out of control.
His remarks come as Trump continues to threaten attacks on Syria in response to a suspected chemical attack on civilians. As recently as Thursday morning, Trump said on social media that an attack would come “very soon or not so soon at all.” Russia has countered that such a move would have “grave repercussions.”
Trump has previously had threatening exchanges with North Korean leader Kim Jong Un but now says he’s in talks about having a summit with Kim. Carter has for decades advocated that the U.S. deal more directly with the insular communist dictatorship.
Carter made his comments as he touted a new book — “Faith: A Journey for All” — in an interview that touched on issues from Trump and the economy to disputes within American Christianity. An outspoken Baptist, Carter argues that Americans are experiencing the long erosion not just of spiritual faith but of confidence in public institutions.
“A lot of folks have lost faith in the superiority of democracy,” Carter told The Associated Press, noting widening wealth disparities, more open discrimination against minorities and immigrants, a political process controlled by money and an endless cycle of wars and international entanglements.
“I pray that he will promote human rights, equality among all people, and that he will value the truth,” Carter said, though he added that the long-term survival of democracy will turn on “the resilience of the American public” and “our constitutional foundation.”
Carter said he still believes world powers can “find a way to live in harmony and peace with people who are our enemies and with whom we have strong differences of opinion.- Read More
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