The Asian Age

Woodward’s book is a scam: Trump

US Prez: Quotes are made up... I don’t talk the way I’m quoted

- JEROME CARTILLIER

US President Donald Trump on Friday slammed veteran investigat­ive journalist Bob Woodward’s damning portrayal of the inner workings of his administra­tion as a “scam” based on made- up quotes.

The book, combined with an incendiary unsigned article in the New York Times by a senior member of Trump’s administra­tion, has sparked yet another crisis for the White House and provided fuel for critics who argue that Trump is unfit for office.

“The Woodward book is a scam. I don’t talk the way I am quoted. If I did I would not have been elected President. These quotes were made up. The author uses every trick in the book to demean and belittle,” Mr Trump tweeted.

“I wish the people could see the real facts - and our country is doing GREAT!”

Drawing on hundreds of hours of interviews, the respected White House chronicler describes a coalition of like- minded aides plotting to prevent the president from destroying the world trade system, underminin­g national security and sparking wars.

Mr Woodward’s is not the first unflatteri­ng investigat­ion into Mr Trump’s White House, but has been particular­ly resonant coming from the man who together with Carl Bernstein authored the Watergate expose that brought down Richard Nixon.

US President Donald Trump on Friday slammed veteran investigat­ive journalist Bob Woodward’s damning portrayal of the inner workings of his administra­tion as a “scam” based on made- up quotes.

The book, combined with an incendiary unsigned article in the New York Times by a senior member of Trump’s administra­tion, has sparked yet another crisis for the White House and provided fuel for critics who argue that Trump is unfit for office.

“The Woodward book is a scam. I don’t talk the way I am quoted. If I did I would not have been elected President. These quotes were made up. The author uses every trick in the book to demean and belittle,” Trump tweeted.

“I wish the people could see the real facts — and our country is doing GREAT!”

Drawing on hundreds of hours of interviews, the respected White House chronicler describes a coalition of like- minded aides plotting to prevent the president from destroying the world trade system, underminin­g national security and sparking wars.

Woodward’s is not the first unflatteri­ng investigat­ion into Trump’s White House, but has been particular­ly resonant coming from the man who together with Carl Bernstein authored the Watergate expose that brought down Richard Nixon.

Since Watergate, Woodward has been one of the most respected living US journalist­s, and an authority on modern US Presidents who drew praise from Trump himself in 2013 for his work on Obama.

While the journalist does not name his sources, he says he spoke with many people currently or formerly working for Trump, discussing not just the President’s personalit­y but also major policy debates regarding North Korea and Afghanista­n.

Woodward describes Trump regularly insulting key members of his own team, who are in turn contemptuo­us of the president.

The president is alleged to have described Attorney General Jeff Sessions -- who angered him by recusing himself from oversight of the Mueller probe into Russian collusion in the 2016 presidenti­al election - — as “mentally retarded” and a “dumb Southerner.”

The president is quoted as likening former chief of staff Reince Priebus to “a little rat,” and telling his 80year- old secretary of commerce, Wilbur Ross, “I don’t trust you... You’re past your prime.”

The book also depicts Trump aides working to head off potential foreign policy disasters, taking more measured steps after the president suggested assassinat­ing his Syrian counterpar­t and stealing an order that would have cancelled the US- South Korea trade agreement.

Revelation­s from the book were supported by the unsigned article in The New York Times published Wednesday, which said that “unsung heroes” were quietly working within the administra­tion to frustrate the president’s “worst inclinatio­ns.”

A “whodunnit?” style guessing game has raged in the corridors of power and on social media over the identity of the author, prompting nearly every cabinet- ranked member of the government to deny involvemen­t.

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