The Daily Telegraph

‘For the first time in my life I will vote Democrat rather than back Trump’

- John Bolton

As a lifelong Republican who has held high office in the Reagan and both Bush administra­tions, John Bolton, Donald Trump’s former national security adviser, is not someone who normally considers voting Democrat. Yet, such is the strength of the 71-year-old Washington veteran’s disaffecti­on with Mr Trump’s presidency, that this is precisely how he intends to cast his vote in November’s US presidenti­al election. Rather than voting for the president he served for 17 months until his resignatio­n last year, Mr Bolton says he intends to vote for Joe Biden, the Democratic candidate.

“In 2016, I voted for Trump over Hillary Clinton,” said Mr Bolton. “Now, having seen this president up close, I cannot do this again. My concern is for the country, and he does not represent the Republican cause that I want to back.”

Speaking exclusivel­y to The Daily Telegraph prior to publicatio­n of his scathing book on the Trump presidency, The Room Where It Happened, Mr Bolton insisted that, by casting his vote for Mr Biden, he was not betraying his Republican roots because he did not believe that Mr Trump represente­d the party’s cause.

“The president does not have a philosophi­cal grounding or strategy,” he explained. “He does not know the difference between the national interest of the US, and the interests of Donald Trump. There is confusion over the national interest and his personal interest, which is very dangerous for the country.” Much of Mr Bolton’s criticism of America’s 45th president stems from his concern at the way Mr Trump runs his administra­tion.

“He came in with very little personal knowledge of how government worked, and he had no interest in learning,” he claimed. “There has been no president in the past century who has followed this approach.”

Mr Bolton, who previously served as US ambassador to the UN during the presidency of George W Bush, said he felt compelled to write the book to let the American people know how their country was being run.

“When you are in a senior position you have an obligation to tell the truth,” he explained. “I was concerned after 17 months in the administra­tion that he [Mr Trump] did not have the requisite competence to be president, and the American people need to know about that.”

Mr Bolton’s account of his time working at the White House has already caused a storm of controvers­y on both sides of the Atlantic, with significan­t passages being leaked in advance, such as his claim that Mr Trump asked Xi Jinping, the Chinese president, to help him win this year’s election, and the suggestion that Mr Trump was not aware that Britain was a nuclear-armed power.

The White House has responded by trying to halt publicatio­n, claiming that The Room Where It Happened contains classified informatio­n. Mr Bolton also claims that he was harassed when writing the book by the Trump administra­tion, which obstructed his Twitter account and denied him access to unclassifi­ed documents.

Mr Trump has personally attacked Mr Bolton, denouncing him as a “disgruntle­d, boring fool who only wanted to go to war”, while Mike Pompeo, the US secretary of state, denounced his former colleague as a “traitor”. But Mr Bolton remains unrepentan­t about his decision to write the book, and has been buoyed by the decision of a Washington court on Saturday to reject the Trump administra­tion’s lawsuit, which means publicatio­n can go ahead as scheduled tomorrow.

Mr Bolton believes the Trump administra­tion’s main objective was to prevent publicatio­n before November’s presidenti­al election, and rejects the claim that his book contains classified material.

“I have years of experience of dealing with sensitive national security issues, and I do not want to have anything in the book that might hurt America’s national interests,” he said. “I wanted to lay the facts out on key foreign policy and domestic issues and let the American people decide for themselves. I want to put this in front of the American people so they can read for themselves what was really going on. This is a history of how not to be president.”

During his tenure as Mr Trump’s national security adviser, between April 2018 and September 2019, Mr Bolton, who is regarded as one of the Republican Party’s more hawkish exponents, played a key role in helping to formulate the administra­tion’s approach to a number of key policy issues, including North Korea, Iran and Nato. He tendered his resignatio­n after falling out with Mr Trump over the president’s decision to invite a delegation of Taliban leaders to visit Camp David, which was subsequent­ly revoked after Mr Bolton’s departure from the West Wing.

The former adviser is scathing about Mr Trump’s ability to manage a government. “The President behaves as though this is a small family-owned business, and the issues are just far too important for the country to be run like this,” he said. “It means there is no consistent theme or strategy. A decision made one day can easily be changed the next.”

Not surprising­ly, Mr Bolton is particular­ly critical of Mr Trump’s handling of key foreign policy and national security issues, from developing long-term strategies on issues surroundin­g China and Russia, to tackling more immediate problems, such as the threat of nuclear proliferat­ion from countries such as Iran and North Korea.

“There is no long-term strategy for Russia and China,” he said. “The North Korean negotiatio­ns have failed to the extent that North Korea blew up the building it built with South Korea and has continued work on its nuclear and missile programmes. And Iran has not been contained over the past three years. It is on issues like this that Trump’s lack of competence becomes more clear.”

Mr Bolton believes the president is now “circling the wagons” ahead of November’s election. While in the past the president could call on experience­d and seasoned national security experts – the so-called “axis of adults” – to advise him on critical issues, most of them, including Mr Bolton, are no longer working for the administra­tion.

This is because, in Mr Bolton’s words: “The president had a knee-jerk reaction to anyone who was trying to give him advice.”

Of particular concern for Mr Bolton is his criticism that the president believes having a good relationsh­ip with other world leaders is the key to success.

“He believes that if he has good relations with Chinese president Xi Jinping, then we have good relations with China. And if he has a bad relationsh­ip with Theresa May, then we have a bad relationsh­ip with Britain. Leaders like Xi understand they represent their country’s interests: I am not sure Trump does,” he said.

Mr Bolton concedes that relations between London and Washington were strained under Mrs May’s premiershi­p, although “I do not blame Theresa May”.

He added: “There were difference­s on important issues.”

Relations have improved since Boris Johnson became prime minister. In his book, Mr Bolton expresses surprise that Mr Johnson, during his stint as foreign secretary, would often contact Jared Kushner, Mr Trump’s son-in-law, rather than going through the normal diplomatic channels.

“I do not blame him for doing this. The reason he called him was probably because he could not find anyone else who knew what was going on in the administra­tion. For the Trump management style is not to have any management style.”

A strong advocate of the so-called “special relationsh­ip” between Britain and the US, Mr Bolton would like to see the Prime Minister being more proactive on two key issues, namely, the Iranian nuclear deal, and allowing the Chinese telecoms giant Huawei access to Britain’s 5G network. On the Iran deal, he says Britain should look at its flaws and realise that “it is never coming back to life”. And on Huawei, while he acknowledg­es the Government has moved away from Mrs May’s support for the Chinese firm since Mr Johnson took office, “the UK bureaucrac­y has not recognised the threat of Huawei, which is an extremely serious problem”.

Mr Bolton believes it is in Britain’s interests to take both these issues seriously, as they could have an impact on the Government’s future dealings with the Trump administra­tion.

“Under Boris Johnson you have a different dynamic – it is all about the personal relationsh­ip,” he concluded. “But if he loses that, we could be back in the soup we were in before.”

‘I want to put this in front of people so they can read for themselves what was really going on. This is a history on how not to be president’

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 ??  ?? John Bolton served as Donald Trump’s national security adviser but has now written a book that is highly critical of the president
John Bolton served as Donald Trump’s national security adviser but has now written a book that is highly critical of the president
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