The Atlanta Journal-Constitution

50 GOP security officials call Trump ‘reckless’

Candidate has vowed to shake up foreign policy.

- ELECTION 2016 David E. Sanger

Fifty of the nation’s most senior Republican national security officials, many of them former top aides or Cabinet members for President George W. Bush, have signed a letter declaring that Donald Trump “lacks the character, values and experience” to be president and “would put at risk our country’s national security and well-being.”

Trump, the officials warn, “would be the most reckless president in American history.”

The letter says Trump would weaken the United States’ moral authority and questions his

knowledge of and belief in the Constituti­on. It says he has “demonstrat­ed repeatedly that he has little understand­ing” of the nation’s “vital national interests, its complex diplomatic challenges, its indispensa­ble alliances and the democratic values” on which U.S. policy should be based. And it laments that “Mr. Trump has shown no interest in educating himself.”

“None of us will vote for Donald Trump,” the letter states, though it notes later that many Americans “have doubts about Hillary Clinton, as do many of us.”

The Clinton campaign appeared to be aware that the letter was circulatin­g and encouraged it, but played no role in drafting it, several signatorie­s said.

A spokeswoma­n for Trump did not immediatel­y respond to a request for comment.

Among the most prominent signatorie­s are Michael Hayden, a former director of both the CIA and the National Security Agency; John Negroponte, who served as the first director of national intelligen­ce and then deputy secretary of state; and Robert B. Zoellick, another former deputy secretary of state, U.S. trade representa­tive and, until 2012, president of the World Bank. Two former secretarie­s of homeland security, Tom Ridge and Michael Chertoff, also signed, as did Eric S. Edelman, who served as Vice President Dick Cheney’s national security adviser and as a top aide to Robert Gates when he was secretary of defense.

The letter underscore­s the continuing rupture in the Republican Party, but particular­ly within its national security establishm­ent. Many of those signing it had declined to add their names to a similar open letter released in March. But a number said in recent interviews that they changed their minds once they heard Trump invite Russia to hack into Clinton’s email server — a sarcastic remark, he said later — and say that he would check to see how much NATO members contribute­d to the alliance before sending forces to help stave off a Russian attack.

Yet the signatorie­s are unlikely to impress Trump or the largely lesser-known foreign policy team he has assembled around him: He has said throughout his campaign that he intends to upend Republican foreign policy orthodoxy on everything from trade to Russia. And many of the aides who signed the letter were active in developing the plan to invade Iraq or managing its aftermath, which Trump has described as a “disaster.”

Missing from the signatorie­s are any of the living Republican former secretarie­s of state: Henry Kissinger, George P. Shultz, James A. Baker III, Colin L. Powell and Condoleezz­a Rice.

Trump met with Kissinger and Baker several months ago, and “I came away with a lot of knowledge,” he told The New York Times in a July 20 interview. But neither of the two — who represent different foreign policy approaches within the party — has said if he will endorse Trump.

It is unclear whether the former secretarie­s plan to stay silent or will issue their own statements. But particular­ly striking is how many of Rice’s closest aides at the White House and the State Department, including Philip Zelikow, Eliot A. Cohen, Meghan O’Sullivan, Kori Schake and Michael Green, are all signatorie­s.

“We agreed to focus on Trump’s fitness to be president, not his substantiv­e positions,” said John B. Bellinger III, who served as Rice’s legal adviser at the National Security Council and the State Department, and who drafted the letter.

Bellinger said that among the signatorie­s, “some will vote for” Clinton, “and some will not vote, but all agree Trump is not qualified and would be dangerous.”

Yet perhaps most striking about the letter is the degree to which it echoes Clinton’s main argument about her rival: that his temperamen­t makes him unsuitable for the job, and that he should not be entrusted with the control of nuclear weapons.

“He is unable or unwilling to separate truth from falsehood,” the letter says. “He does not encourage conflictin­g views. He lacks self-control and acts impetuousl­y. He cannot tolerate personal criticism. He has alarmed our closest allies with his erratic behavior. All of these are dangerous qualities in an individual who aspires to be president and commander in chief, with command of the U.S. nuclear arsenal.”

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