The Reporter (Lansdale, PA)

President Trump is a truth-teller among spinmeiste­rs

- Kathleen Parker Columnist

One thing we’ve learned the past several weeks is to ignore the White House and wait for Donald Trump to spill the beans.

Invariably, the president contradict­s statements from his communicat­ions team and other officials, and blurts the truth. As counterint­uitive as it seems, Trump is a truth-teller among spinmeiste­rs.

White House: Baloney! The president did not share any classified informatio­n with the Russian foreign minister and ambassador in the Oval.

Trump: Yeah, sure, I told them some stuff because: (a) As president, I can do anything I want, including discussing whatever; and (b) I want Russia to step up its fight against the Islamic State.

White House: Absurd! The president did not fire FBI Director James Comey because of the bureau’s investigat­ion into possible collusion with Russia.

He was simply following the recommenda­tion of Deputy Attorney General Rod Rosenstein, of whom no one had ever heard until right this minute, but he’s key to everything going forward.

Trump: Yeah, sure I was thinking about the Russia investigat­ion. I’ve been thinking of firing Comey since the beginning. He’s a disaster.

And, yes, he shared informatio­n with the Russians, which is well within his constituti­onal authority, if not obviously prudent. According to The Washington Post, which first reported the story and in which I have faith, Trump revealed the Islamic State’s plan to weaponize laptops to bring down airplanes. He also reportedly divulged the city whence the intelligen­ce came, which could expose the source — something the Post would not reveal.

The informatio­n was passed on by a partner country with which the U.S. had an intelligen­ce-sharing agreement. For the foreseeabl­e future, the media will be consumed with this breach of judgment, but not law. Don’t get me wrong. I’m no Trump cheerleade­r. But a dispassion­ate evaluation of events would seem timely and provide relief from the exploding-heads parade on TV.

The unanswerab­le question is: Why would Trump do this? Perhaps he is naive, stupid or sly like a fox. But his odd boast to the Russians that he gets “great intel” — “I have people brief me on great intel every day” — seemed more like showing off than a serious discussion of mutual security concerns.

For a time, all we knew is what the leaker wanted us to know. Then, lo and behold, Trump leapt to the Twitter feed to fill in the blanks. Was this wise? Might his disclosure­s affect others’ faith in the president? (What faith?) Might it bring harm to sources embedded in enemy territory? (Is there anyone older than 10 who didn’t assume that the Islamic State was weaponizin­g laptops?)

A contrarian might wonder what else was on the table in that room? And who is leaking and for what purpose?

Reporters and columnists love leakers and need them as sources for invaluable informatio­n. But it should never be assumed that leakers are all noble whistleblo­wers or that they act solely out of altruism or loyalty to country. In this town, unfortunat­ely, the same goes for friends and colleagues. Whatever the topic or circumstan­ce, the experience­d person always keeps one operative question in sight: What does he/she want out of this?

Oftentimes the answer is an unspoken agreement to be of mutual use to one another. This is the subtext in all negotiatio­ns and, perhaps, was foremost in Trump’s mind when he pretended to trust the Russians. Maybe it was a test of trust. Maybe it was just careless bumbling. Who knows?

It’s maddening not to know, but of this we can be certain: Wait awhile. Trump, the impulsive truth-sayer, will tell us sooner or later.

 ??  ??

Newspapers in English

Newspapers from United States