The Sunday Guardian

Explodes like an IED in Washington Beltway

It is not that this Improvised Editorial Device’s salacious tidbits are necessaril­y true.

- CLEO PASKAL NEW DELHI

Michael Wolff’s new book about the Donald Trump presidency, Fire and Fury, has exploded like an IED (Improvised Editorial Device) inside the Washington Beltway. It’s not that the book’s salacious tidbits are necessaril­y true. Many errors have already been called out, and Wolff was careful to give himself cover at the start of the book.

Wolf wrote: “Many of the accounts of what has happened in the Trump White House are in conflict with one another; many, in Trumpian fashion, are baldly untrue. These conflicts, and that looseness with the truth, if not with reality itself, are an elemental thread of the book. Sometimes I have let the players offer their versions, in turn allowing the reader to judge them. In other instances I have, through a consistenc­y in the accounts and through sources I have come to trust, settled on a version of events I believe to be true.” Oh, ok then. But at this point, the contents of the book are not the story. It’s all about the fallout. That’s where we can see who are the winners and losers from the publicatio­n of a book that may be even less accurate than the infamous “Trump Dossier”. One of the big losers is domestic harmony in the Trump family. President Trump clearly values his immediate family, and has given relatives roles in his administra­tion. The book takes direct aim at inner family relations, in the most personal ways possible. It implies Donald Trump thinks his sons are not the sharpest knives in the drawer. That Trump’s daughter Ivanka questions her father’s abilities and makes fun of his hair.

That there are problems with the marriage between Trump and his wife Melania. And much, much more. It is a textbook for sowing distrust, hurt and debilitati­ng miscommuni­cations at the core of the administra­tion.

The biggest single loser is Trump’s former strategist Steve Bannon. Bannon had already left the administra­tion, but was still running the highly influentia­l Breitbart news. He was also trying to lead a campaign to unseat Republican Congress members whom he thought were part of the “corrupt Washington swamp” and replace them with more members of the “Trump Army”. This failed spectacula­rly in the recent Alabama Senate race, in which Bannon’s candidate lost what had been a rela- tively safe Republican seat, to a Democrat.

In Fire and Fury, Bannon is quoted as implying that a meeting attended by one of Trump’s sons with Russians was potentiall­y treasonous. These factors and others resulted in Trump strongly and openly criticisin­g Bannon. That in turn led to Bannon being kicked out of Breitbart and losing important financial backers. Bannon apologised to Trump’s son and has not criticised Trump himself. Regardless, the TrumpBanno­n break has meant some fracturing and deflation of the Make America Great Again ( MAGA) movement, and a weakening of Bannon. The first winner is obviously Wolff, who stands to make millions from the book, thanks in large part to the free coverage President Trump gave him with his tweets and threatened injunction.

A much more important winner is China. With Bannon sidelined, one of the strongest voices pushing for “standing up to China” has been muted.

Bannon was consistent in questionin­g Chinese trade practices and expansioni­st policies, both of which he viewed as direct threats to the United States, and the “free world”. He was also heavily involved in trying new approaches to combating Islamist terror. As were many of the candidates he was supporting, and many of the writers he had at Breitbart. Beijing will be happy that Bannon has taken a hit.

Other big winners are the Democratic Party and the Republican establishm­ent. Anything that hurts Trump is, of course, good for the Democrats, especially leading into the midterm elections. And anything that weakens the generals or key communicat­ors of the Trump Republican­s, like Bannon, is often good for the Republican establishm­ent. From the point of view of MAGA supporters, this has been a great week for the DC swamp monsters.

However, counter- intuitivel­y, another winner might be the prospects of a second term Donald Trump presidency. By getting this brutal and personal early on, it might sap opposition ammunition before 2020 and inure the public to this sort of attack. It also shears away people, like the kind of candidate supported by Bannon in Alabama, who might alienate traditiona­l Republican­s voters.

Fire and Fury isn’t particular­ly reliable, or groundbrea­king, but it has amplified existing currents, and brought that turbulence to the surface. The book may have spurred Trump to openly lash out at Bannon, but he was already angry with him over Alabama, and more. And Bannon is not going to just disappear. The book highlights and exacerbate­s a political moment in time. But this week’s losers may be next election’s winners. Cleo Paskal is The Sunday Guardian’s North America Special Correspond­ent.

 ??  ?? Michael Wolff.
Michael Wolff.
 ??  ?? Cover of Fire and Fury.
Cover of Fire and Fury.

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