Baltimore Sun

Trump makes Captain Queeg look like Captain Kirk

- By Leonard Pitts Jr. Leonard Pitts Jr.

Only the ball bearings were missing. The reference, for those who don’t know, is to Humphrey Bogart’s performanc­e as the emotionall­y unstable Captain Queeg in the 1954 film “The Caine Mutiny.” In a pivotal scene, Bogart vividly etches the captain’s mental disintegra­tion, rambling on the witness stand about strawberri­es and tow lines and the supposed lies of his subordinat­es. All the while he toys, ceaselessl­y, unconsciou­sly obsessivel­y, with a handful of ball bearings.

The scene is called to mind by Donald Trump’s Wednesday news conference at the United Nations. It was supposed to be a summation of his trip to the world body, but the encounter was dominated by the scandal that has subsumed his presidency and reignited impeachmen­t talk in Congress.

Mr. Trump denied having done what he is accused of, i.e., pressuring Ukrainian President Volodymyr Zelensky in a July telephone call to launch an unfounded investigat­ion into a political rival, Democratic presidenti­al candidate Joe Biden and Mr. Biden’s son Hunter. Notes from the conversati­on, released Wednesday, make clear how much credence should be afforded Mr. Trump’s protestati­ons of innocence. Which is to say, none.

Even worse were Thursday’s charges that White House officials, at the direction of White House lawyers, attempted to bury the incriminat­ing notes in a computer system meant for the preservati­on of top-secret material, rather than placing them in the system where such documents ordinarily are stored. The word for that is “cover-up” and it indicates, by definition, an awareness of guilt.

Perhaps it was that awareness — or, more likely, just the fear that he was finally caught — that accounted for Mr. Trump’s Wednesday performanc­e. Whatever it was, he made Captain Queeg look like Captain Kirk, rambling on with no energy and less conviction about his innocence, his mistreatme­nt by the media, his unapprecia­ted greatness.

There were the usual insults, the usual complaints, the usual grandiose claims, resentment­s, non sequiturs, deflection­s and wild accusation­s. But his demeanor was that of an oldies band stumbling through its greatest hits. It was painful to watch, palpably pathetic. You wanted to turn away, and could not.

One had a sense that maybe the cat had run out of lives, that a man who has, in a political sense, escaped more death traps than Indiana Jones, had finally pushed his luck too far. It called to mind a Motown refrain. “Nowhere to run to, baby. Nowhere to hide.”

Indeed. The rat stood cornered. The wizard stood revealed. The emperor stood naked.

And you could only think to yourself: For this? Really?

For this, 63 million American voters deluded themselves?

For this, right-wing pundits prostitute­d their credibilit­y?

For this, Republican­s debased their honor?

For this, public officials broke public trust?

For this?

Sadly, yes. As a result, wecontend with an unbridled corruption — not just in the sense of illegal behavior, but also in the sense of decay and decomposit­ion. We are a nation rotting from within. And finally, finally, maybe, we’ve had enough. Finally, finally, maybe this attempt to induce a foreign power to meddle in an American election is the bridge too far, the Rubicon crossed, the straw that broke the donkey’s back. Maybe — dare we hope? — the elephant’s, too.

“Impeachmen­t for that?” scoffed Mr. Trump on Wednesday. And no, one would not have been surprised to see him pull out the ball bearings.

It’s not just the country that’s rotting from within.

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