Wild mustached horses couldn’t drag this president away. Photo: Evan Vucci/AP/REX/Shutterstock On Saturday, White House national security adviser and longtime war enthusiast John Bolton became the first Trump administration official to acknowledge — let alone forcefully — that North Korea had violated UN sanctions when it recently staged a attention-seeking missile test. The national security adviser’s comments, made on the first day of the president’s trip to Japan, seemed to signal U.S. displeasure with North Korea’s latest act of aggression amid the two countries’ hopelessly stalled denuclearization negotiations — or at least they would have been, if he were not John Bolton and a member of President Donald Trump’s administration. Hours later, Trump responded on Twitter to signal that if he had to choose between Kim Jong-un and his adviser with the prominent mustache — he’s going with the militaristic provocateur who has earned him better press (and shares his love of ridiculing political opponents with childish insults). Tweeting from the region most concerned about North Korea’s love of ballistic missile tests, Trump asserted that he, the president, was totally cool with what happened. Downplaying the tests as though they were just some kids shooting off fireworks, Trump noted that…