Chattanooga Times Free Press

Will Bolton’s views rub off on Trump?

- BY JOSH LEDERMAN AND JONATHAN LEMIRE

WASHINGTON — President Donald Trump’s pick of John Bolton for his next national security adviser stirred up the same burning question Friday in Washington as in anxious foreign capitals: Just how much will his hawkish, confrontat­ional approach rub off on Trump?

As he confronts matters of war and peace with North Korea and Iran, Trump is bringing in an adviser likely to magnify many of his own instinctiv­e qualities: hardhittin­g, fiercely nationalis­tic and eager to confront U.S. adversarie­s. In his first year in office, Trump surrounded himself with foreign policy aides whose views spanned a wide spectrum. Bolton’s pick rounds out a team that in Trump’s second year will compromise almost entirely hawks whose public views on national security veer decidedly to the right.

Yet historical­ly, even those who espoused the most extreme positions as private citizens have a way of moderating when faced with the awesome task of running the nation. And Trump has been known to overrule even the consensus of his aides in the past.

In Bolton’s White House meeting with Trump on Thursday, hours before the president announced the pick, the former U.N. ambassador told Trump he would separate his personal opinions from his responsibi­lity as national security adviser to present all sides and arguments to the commander in chief, according to a person familiar with Trump’s exchange with Bolton.

He told the president that when asked for his view, he won’t hesitate to share it, but will give Trump room to decide, said the individual, who wasn’t authorized to discuss private conversati­ons and requested anonymity.

“The important thing is what the president says,” Bolton said on Fox News late Thursday after news broke of his selection, declining to repeat his past bellicose rhetoric about North Korea, Russia or Iran. “If the government can’t have a free interchang­e of ideas among the president’s advisers then I think the president is not well served.”

Trump has admired Bolton for years, praising him on Twitter as far back as 2014. Trump has told allies he thinks Bolton is “a killer” on television, where Bolton is a frequent face on Fox News, even though he has voiced some unhappines­s about his trademark mustache, said a person familiar the president’s thinking but not permitted to reveal private discussion­s.

Still, Bolton’s pick sent shockwaves through the diplomatic and military communitie­s, and on social media, fueling speculatio­n that the prospects for global confrontat­ion are increasing. After all, in the span of a week Trump named Bolton to replace H.R. McMaster and current CIA Director Mike Pompeo to replace Secretary of State Rex Tillerson — ousting two aides seen as tempering influences in favor of others who have advocated a hard-line approach to North Korea and fierce opposition to the Iran nuclear deal.

Two State Department officials and two Western diplomats in Washington said Friday that their offices are now operating under the assumption that Trump will almost surely pull out of the Iran deal. Bolton has tweeted that withdrawal should be “a top realDonald­Trump administra­tion priority” and that U.S. policy instead should be “aimed at regime change in Tehran.”

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