Gulf News

Bolton will shake things up in Washington

Among other things the new US national security adviser is a straight-talking hardliner who will be tough on Tehran

- By Con Coughlin

The appointmen­t of John Bolton as the new US national security adviser sends a clear and unequivoca­l message that the Trump administra­tion means business when it comes to dealing with its enemies. As one of the leading lights of the American neo-conservati­ve movement, which is committed to exporting the virtues of western-style liberal democracy around the globe, Bolton’s arrival at Washington’s Old Executive Building will add a more robust dimension to Donald Trump’s policymaki­ng team.

Not that Lieutenant-General H.R. McMaster, the outgoing national security adviser, was a soft touch. A veteran of the conflicts in Iraq and Afghanista­n, Gen McMaster was himself regarded as something of a hawk, and was in the process of drawing up various policy options for the Trump administra­tion with regard to its dealings with two of the world’s leading rogue states, namely North Korea and Iran.

But as has so often been the case in the Trump White House, the general, for all his considerab­le talents, had reached the point where he no longer enjoyed the president’s favour. According to insiders, Gen McMaster’s fate was decided when he was inadverten­tly quoted at last month’s Munich Security Conference saying that Washington had “incontrove­rtible” evidence of Russian meddling in American politics. He was unaware he was speaking in a forum that had a live video feed, and when his comments were broadcast on television around the world, he found himself in breach of Trump’s golden rule: only the president speaks for the president, particular­ly when it relates to the toxic issue of Russia.

Trump is also reported to have become tired of Gen McMaster’s style of detailed and methodical briefings when providing the president with various policy options. On such technicali­ties are careers made or destroyed at the Trump White House.

So enter Bolton, a veteran of the Bush administra­tion and one of its cheerleade­rs for the 2003 invasion of Iraq and the overthrow of Saddam Hussain. When ambassador to the UN, Bolton made one of his more memorable diplomatic interventi­ons concerning the organisati­on’s effectiven­ess, saying that “if it [the UN building] lost 10 storeys, it wouldn’t make a bit of difference”.

Bolton can now expect to bring his straight-talking, no-nonsense style to his new role as adviser on national security issues, an appointmen­t that should be a serious cause for concern for America’s adversarie­s. Bolton, who has written frequently on global security issues, is particular­ly hawkish with regard to America’s approach to North Korea, and the rogue state’s attempts to acquire a nuclear weapons arsenal capable of striking mainland America. He has argued that previous US diplomatic efforts to persuade the North Korean dictator to adopt a more responsibl­e approach have failed, and that Washington needs to develop a more robust policy, including the use of pre-emptive military action.

Iran is another issue on which Bolton, a staunch supporter of Israel, is a renowned hardliner. A vocal opponent of the Obama administra­tion’s desire to strike a deal with Tehran over its nuclear programme, which he believes is tantamount to appeasemen­t, Bolton will be using his new position to lobby hard for the Trump administra­tion to cancel the deal and hold the Iranians to account for their anti-American stance.

His appointmen­t has inevitably provoked howls of outrage from American liberals, who like to portray him as some kind of Dr Strangelov­e warmonger. The reality, though, is that his job is to serve as adviser. The final responsibi­lity for taking key decisions on war and peace rests with the president. Con Coughlin is the Daily Telegraph’s defence editor and chief foreign affairs columnist.

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