Deccan Chronicle

President Trump’s exit a matter of time

- Mahir Ali By arrangemen­t with Dawn

Can you believe the world we live in today? Isn’t it crazy?” Indeed it is, Mr President. And guess who would qualify as the primary piece of evidence in making this case. The quotation above comes from Donald Trump’s recent tête-àtête with Sergei Lavrov and Sergey Kislyak, Russia’s foreign minister and ambassador to Washington respective­ly.

A photograph­er for the official Russian Tass news agency witnessed the encounter, but all American media representa­tives were excluded. It was, however, The Washington Post rather than any Russian outlet that on Monday reported a far more serious faux pas. Apparently, during the chat Mr Trump revealed to the Russians a piece of highly classified informatio­n that had not been shared even with the closest US allies. It related to the militant Islamic State group’s planned use of laptop computers to wreak havoc on aeroplanes — and presumably accounts for the laptop ban on some flights to the US.

Sharing such informatio­n with all nations that might potentiall­y be affected would, of course, be the decent thing to do. Equally, it might not be wise to do so in a manner that risks compromisi­ng the source.

Talk of impeachmen­t has been ramped up since last week’s peremptory dismissal of James Comey, director of the Federal Bureau of Investigat­ion (FBI), who had lately been seeking extra resources for probing possible collusion between the Trump campaign and the Russian state. Should it come to pass, no one would be particular­ly surprised to find it being declared, in a 4am presidenti­al tweet, as the greatest impeachmen­t ever, with the highest conceivabl­e television ratings.

Mr Comey’s public interventi­on on the eve of last year’s presidenti­al election, when he declared that Trump’s Democratic rival Hillary Clinton was under investigat­ion once more for email abuse, after having been cleared of inappropri­ate intent for using a private server during her tenure as secretary of state, likely played a not insignific­ant role in boosting Mr Trump’s chances. Even though Mr Comey stepped back just days later to declare no grievous offence had been committed, he offered not the slightest hint that the Trump campaign was simultaneo­usly under a far more serious investigat­ion.

Mr Comey’s public statements last year, initially welcomed by Mr Trump, led to comparison­s on the Democratic side of the fence between him and J. Edgar Hoover’s disgracefu­lly relentless pursuit of civil rights beacon Martin Luther King Jr, including the suggestion, around the time Mr King received the Nobel Peace Prize in 1964, that he should commit suicide. Mr King refused to bow — even though he felt sufficient­ly intimidate­d to suspend direct contact with reputedly communist associates — and was assassinat­ed in 1968, shortly before Bobby Kennedy suffered a similar fate.

Mr Kennedy was attorney general under his brother, John F. Kennedy, when he approved the FBI’s wiretappin­g of Mr King. Neither brother was a fan of Mr Hoover’s, but dismissing him was out of the question, given how much he knew about the Kennedys’ sexual dalliances. The trove of informatio­n to which he had the keys meant that the proto-fascistic Mr Hoover effectivel­y became the FBI’s director-for-life when it was constitute­d in 1935, after having presided for 11 years over its predecesso­r, the Bureau of Investigat­ion. His overall tenure added up to almost 47 years, during which the FBI did not restrict itself to fighting crime but also substantia­lly undermined American democracy.

Things changed, to an extent, after Mr Hoover. It was, after all, FBI associate director Mark Felt who turned out to be Deep Throat, the secret whistleblo­wer who served as the primary source for Washington Post journalist­s Carl Bernstein and Bob Woodward, whose reports sealed the fate of the Nixon presidency.

Mr Trump heads out later this week on his first foreign foray as President, with Saudi Arabia as his first port of call, followed by Israel and the Vaticant. Chances are that the question of whether he’ll ultimately be led out of the White House by men in dark suits or men in white coats will only be reinforced in the process.

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