The Saratogian (Saratoga, NY)

Tell-all book by Watergate reporter roils White House

Former Washington Post reporter Bob Woodward speaks during a 2012 event to mark the 40th anniversar­y of Watergate in Washington.

- By Zeke Miller

WASHINGTON » An incendiary tell-all book by a reporter who helped bring down President Richard Nixon is roiling the White House as current and former aides of President Donald Trump are quoted as calling him an “idiot” and admitting they snatched sensitive documents off his desk to keep him from taking rash actions.

The book by Washington Post journalist Bob Woodward is the latest to throw the Trump administra­tion into damage-control mode with explosive anecdotes and concerns about the commander in chief. The Post on Tuesday published details from “Fear: Trump in the White House,” the Watergate reporter’s forthcomin­g examinatio­n of Trump’s first 18 months in office.

The publicatio­n of Woodward’s book has been anticipate­d for weeks, and current and former White House officials estimate that nearly all their colleagues cooperated with the famed Watergate journalist. The White House, in a statement from press secretary Sarah Huckabee Sanders, on Tuesday dismissed the book as “nothing more than fabricated stories, many by former disgruntle­d employees, told to make the President look bad.”

The book quotes chief of staff John Kelly as having doubts about Trump’s mental faculties, declaring during one meeting, “We’re in Crazytown.” It also says he called Trump an “idiot,” an account that Kelly denied.

“The idea I ever called the President an idiot is not true,” Kelly said in a statement Tuesday.

The book says that Trump’s former lawyer in the Russia probe, John

Dowd, doubted the president’s ability to avoid perjuring himself should he be interviewe­d in special counsel Robert Mueller’s investigat­ion into Russian election interferen­ce and potential coordinati­on with Trump’s campaign. Dowd stepped down in January.

“Don’t testify. It’s either that or an orange jumpsuit,” Dowd is quoted telling the president.

Dowd, in a statement Tuesday, said “no so-called ‘practice session’ or ‘re-enactment” took place and denied saying that Trump was likely to end up in an orange jumpsuit.

Secretary of Defense Jim Mattis is quoted explaining to Trump why the U.S. maintains troops on Korean Peninsula to monitor North Korea’s missile activities. “We’re doing this in order to prevent World War III,” Mattis said, according to the book.

The book recounts that Mattis told “close associates that the president acted like — and had the understand­ing of — ‘a fifth- or sixthgrade­r.’”

Woodward reported that after Syria’s Bashar Assad launched a chemical weapons attack on civilians in April 2017, Trump called Mattis and said he wanted the Syrian leader taken out, saying, “kill him! Let’s go in.” Mattis assured Trump he would get right on it but then told a senior aide they’d do nothing of the kind, Woodward wrote. National security advisers instead developed options for the airstrike that Trump ordered.

Woodward also claims that Gary Cohn, the former director of the National Economic Council, boasted of removing papers from the president’s desk to prevent Trump from signing them into law, including efforts to withdraw from the North American Free Trade Agreement.

The book also quotes Trump as mocking his attorney general, Jeff Sessions, who has been a target of the president’s wrath since recusing himself from the Russia investigat­ion.

“This guy is mentally retarded,” Trump said of Sessions, according to the book. “He couldn’t even be a oneperson country lawyer down in Alabama.”

Trump did not speak to Woodward until after the book’s manuscript was completed. The Post released audio of Trump expressing surprise about the book in an August conversati­on with Woodward. Woodward tells Trump he had contacted multiple officials to attempt to interview Trump and was rebuffed.

The book follows the January release of author Michael Wolff’s “Fire and Fury,” which led to a rift between Trump and Steve Bannon, his former chief strategist, who spoke with Wolff in terms that were highly critical of the president and his family. Wolff’s book attracted attention with its vivid anecdotes but suffered from numerous factual inaccuraci­es.

Woodward’s work also comes weeks after former White House aide and “Apprentice” contestant Omarosa Manigault Newman published an expose on her time in the West Wing, including audio recordings of her firing by Kelly and a follow-up conversati­on with the president in which he claimed to have been unaware of Kelly’s decision.

While White House aides have become increasing­ly numb to fresh scandals, the book still increased tensions in the West Wing, especially given the intimate details shared and the number of people Woodward appeared to have interviewe­d. Some White House officials expressed surprise at the number of erstwhile Trump loyalists willing to offer embarrassi­ng stories of the president and his inner circle.

No clear response strategy emerged immediatel­y after the Post report, but insiders speculated the fallout could be worse than from “Fire and Fury,” given Woodward’s storied reputation.

Scheduled for a Sept. 11 release, “Fear” was ranked the top-selling book on Amazon on Tuesday.

Trump has been increasing­ly critical of anonymous sources used by reporters covering his administra­tion. Woodward’s account relies on deep background conversati­ons with sources, meaning their identities are not disclosed.

Former George W. Bush press secretary Ari Fleischer defended Woodward’s methodolog­y. “I’ve been on the receiving end of a Bob Woodward book,” he tweeted Tuesday. “There were quotes in it I didn’t like. But never once — never — did I think Woodward made it up.”

 ?? ALEX BRANDON — THE ASSOCIATED PRESS FILE ??
ALEX BRANDON — THE ASSOCIATED PRESS FILE

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