Los Angeles Times

Five things you should know about Bolton’s memoir

- By Eli Stokols

WASHINGTON — The Times obtained a copy of “The Room Where It Happened,” John Bolton’s memoir of his 17 months as President Trump’s national security advisor. The book is scheduled for release on Tuesday, although the Justice Department has asked a federal judge to intervene, claiming the memoir contains classified material.

Here are five takeaways from the book:

1. Start at the end

The self-justificat­ion for the entire exercise comes after some 483 pages, when Bolton tries to explain why he refused to testify during Trump’s impeachmen­t in the House — only to lay it all out in this book, for which he was given a $2-million advance.

Grumbling about House Democrats’ “self-imposed scheduling limitation­s” and “partisan approach,” he accuses them of “committing impeachmen­t malpractic­e” for refusing to risk extending the process for months to allow a judge to rule on whether he and others were compelled to respond to subpoenas.

Bolton also faults Democrats for focusing too narrowly on Trump’s pressure campaign toward Ukraine, offering up claims about other impeachabl­e acts including Trump repeatedly using foreign policy to help his reelection campaign.

“I am hard-pressed to identify any significan­t Trump decision during my tenure,” Bolton writes, “that wasn’t driven by reelection calculatio­ns.”

2. Not so tough on China. Or Turkey

According to Bolton, Trump and Chinese President

Xi Jinping were discussing trade at the Group of 20 summit in Japan in June 2019 when Trump “stunningly, turned the conversati­on to the coming U.S. presidenti­al election ... pleading with Xi to ensure he’d win.”

Trump urged Xi to increase Chinese purchases of soybeans and wheat, stressing “the importance of farmers ... in the electoral outcome.”

These details could undermine Trump’s boasts about being tough on China, one fragile pillar of his reelection argument.

Bolton says the president also signaled his approval of China’s plan to imprison more than 1 million ethnic Chinese Uighurs in camps, and his indifferen­ce toward Taiwan’s independen­ce, a cornerston­e of U.S. policy toward China for decades.

Bolton also writes that Trump told Turkish leader Recep Tayyip Erdog an that he would try to get the Justice Department to drop a criminal case against the Turkish financial institutio­n Halkbank that might have implicated Erdog an himself — in Bolton’s view, an attempt by the president “to show he had as much arbitrary authority as Erdogan.”

3. The details corroborat­e what’s already known

Bolton’s ponderous portrayal shows Trump as an unfocused, incurious, moody and often vindictive narcissist with two preoccupat­ions: news coverage of himself and his reelection.

His lack of loyalty comes across again and again.

During a secret overnight flight to visit U.S. troops in Iraq on Christmas night in 2018, Trump sought input from Bolton and others on Air Force One about dumping Vice President Mike Pence from the 2020 ticket in favor of Nikki Haley, who had just stepped down as U.S. ambassador to the United Nations.

Intent on a legacy-making nuclear disarmamen­t deal with North Korean dictator Kim Jong Un, Trump lashed out at Secretary of State Michael R. Pompeo at one point, telling him, “I don’t give a shit [about the details], we need a victory on this.”

Bolton, who flew to Mongolia in June 2019 to avoid accompanyi­ng Trump for a photo op with Kim at the buffer zone between North and South Korea, leaves no doubt about his feelings.

“The whole thing made me ill,” he writes.

4. Coronaviru­s claims

Bolton writes that National Security Council staffers “did their duty” when first warned in January about the coronaviru­s. He denied reports that trimming the NSC’s global health and biodefense arms might explain the administra­tion’s slow initial response to the pandemic.

The streamlini­ng of NSC bureaucrac­y, Bolton writes, “was no more than a quiver of a butterfly’s wings in the tsunami of Trump’s chaos.”

Bolton blames the contagion, which has killed more than 120,000 Americans, on China and on a White House that only seemed to react once the stock market began to slip.

“Trump’s reflex effort to talk his way out of anything,” Bolton writes, “only undercut his and the nation’s credibilit­y, with his statements looking more like political damage control than responsibl­e public health advice.”

5. Exhaustion

In Bolton’s portrayal, Trump has exhausted the patience and goodwill of numerous high-ranking aides. None comes across as more frustrated than former Chief of Staff John F. Kelly.

In one chapter, Bolton describes Kelly failing to dissuade Trump from stripping security clearances from former CIA Director John Brennan, who had become a Trump critic on cable news.

“‘Has there ever been a presidency like this?’ Kelly asked me, and I assured him there had not,” Bolton writes.

Kelly, a retired four-star Marine general whose son was killed in action a decade ago in Afghanista­n, had grown upset about what he believed to be the president’s cavalier attitude about American troops.

“‘Trump doesn’t care what happens to these guys,’ Kelly told Bolton, saying the president had said it would be “cool” to invade Venezuela.

After Trump blew up at Kelly in the Oval Office over so-called caravans of migrants approachin­g the southern border, Bolton said he and Kelly ducked into the Roosevelt Room for a private conversati­on.

“What is the alternativ­e if you resign?” Bolton asked Kelly, who responded with a question of his own.

“What if we have a real crisis like 9/11 with the way he makes decisions?” Kelly said.

 ?? Logan Cyrus AFP/Getty Images ?? FORMER national security advisor John Bolton portrays President Trump as a vindictive narcissist with two preoccupat­ions: news coverage of himself and his reelection. He was given a $2-million advance for the book.
Logan Cyrus AFP/Getty Images FORMER national security advisor John Bolton portrays President Trump as a vindictive narcissist with two preoccupat­ions: news coverage of himself and his reelection. He was given a $2-million advance for the book.

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