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THE ISLAMIC REPUBLIC OF JAPAN
Standing beside Volodymyr Zelensky in Ankara on Wednesday, Donald Trump told reporters that an American aircraft carrier had been fired on by “the Islamic Republic of Japan.” One hundred and eleven missiles, he said, launched at the USS Abraham Lincoln by a nation he meant to call Iran and instead called Japan. A NATO summit. A sitting American president. A close ally sitting three feet away, waiting for the sentence to end so the actual conversation about Patriot missiles could continue.
He was talking about Iran. He said Japan.
By the standard the last four years have trained us to apply, this should have been the story of the week. Instead it is a punchline that will not survive the weekend, filed alongside a hundred other Trump slips that get laughed off before the next news cycle buries them.
The 25th Amendment lives in the Constitution as a mechanism, not a metaphor. Section 4 exists so that a president who can no longer discharge his duties can be removed by his own cabinet and vice president. For four years, that section was cited constantly, not as a hypothetical but as a diagnosis. Joe Biden confused the president of Egypt with the president of Mexico. He froze mid-sentence during a debate. He was described by his own Justice Department as a well-meaning elderly man with a poor memory, and that description became a national referendum on his fitness for office. Commentators who had spent months insisting he was “the best Biden ever” were forced into humiliating retreats when the tape did not cooperate. Books were written. A campaign ended.
None of that reckoning was unwarranted. A president’s capacity to think clearly matters, and the public had a right to ask hard questions before an election, not after one.
But the standard was never really about capacity. It was about which team held the microphone.
Trump has his own ledger of these moments, and it did not begin this week. In January of 2024, campaigning against Nikki Haley, he confused her with Nancy Pelosi, twice, in the same speech, and warned voters about an attack that never happened at a location that was fictional.
The coverage lasted a day. Cable panels debated normal aging in mild, philosophical tones, the same tone that had been almost entirely absent when the subject was Biden. Naming an ally’s aircraft carrier attacker as an ally is a stranger error than mixing up two politicians in the same party, and it will get less scrutiny, not more, because the man who said it commands a media apparatus built for exactly this purpose: to metabolize his errors into jokes and everyone else’s into indictments.
The complaint here is not that Trump misspoke. Everyone misspeaks. Fatigue, syntax, a long day of talking, these produce slips in every human being who has ever stood in front of a microphone for decades. The complaint is that an entire political and media apparatus spent years treating an opponent’s slips as proof of incapacity and now treats the same category of error, committed by their own man, as beneath comment.
This is not a defense of the cognitive decline framework as it was applied to Biden. It is an indictment of its selective application now. If confusing two nations at a NATO summit is disqualifying, it was disqualifying in 2024 and it is disqualifying today. If it is a forgivable human slip, it was forgivable then too. The rule cannot change shape depending on whose mouth the words came out of. A standard that bends to protect the speaker was never a standard. It was a weapon, and weapons only fire in one direction.
The people who spent four years building a legal theory out of Joe Biden’s stutters now wave off a president who renamed an ally’s aircraft carrier attacker after his ally, live, at a NATO summit. The Islamic Republic of Japan does not exist. But the double standard that let this pass without a fraction of the scrutiny once demanded for less does. That is the real gaffe, and unlike Trump’s, nobody is rushing to correct it.