USA TODAY US Edition

HORRIFYING BLUNDER ON RUSSIA

Boastful ignorance and Russophili­a have put security and lives at risk

- Max Boot Max Boot, a member of USA TODAY’s Board of Contributo­rs, is a senior fellow at the Council on Foreign Relations.

On Monday night, the question of the hour was did he do it? Did President Trump reveal codeword secrets (some of the most sensitive informatio­n that the U.S. government possesses) to the Russian foreign minister and ambassador?

There was never much doubt that The Washington Post éxposé was accurate, given its depth of detail. If The Post got it wrong, why would security officials ask reporters to withhold details about the intelligen­ce in question? But the White House felt compelled to send out national security adviser H.R. McMaster and his deputy, Dina Powell, to label the story false while disputing only assertions that The Post didn’t make — such as insisting that Trump hadn’t blown any ongoing military operations. Intelligen­ce operations, well that’s different.

Then on Tuesday, having put his aides out on a limb, Trump sawed it off. In a series of tweets, he admitted that, yes, he had shared the informatio­n with the Russians but claimed it was proper to do so.

PRESIDENT’S LEGAL RIGHTS In a legal sense he’s right: The president can declassify anything he wants. But in a larger moral and strategic sense, Trump committed a horrifying blunder that puts at risk at least one vital U.S. intelligen­ce-sharing relationsh­ip, threatens the life of a human asset, and ultimately endangers U.S. security by potentiall­y cutting off valuable streams of intelligen­ce about terrorist planning by the Islamic State of Iraq and Syria terrorist group.

Why did he do it? I think there are three answers: Trump is boastful, ignorant, and inclined to see the Russians as friends rather than enemies. Let’s unpack those.

If The Post account is accurate, Trump’s disclosure to the Russians came in the context of a boast about how great his intelligen­ce is. This is of course a pattern with Trump, a man-child who is in desperate, endless need of approbatio­n. He turned this neediness into a successful business strategy because his brand of braggadoci­o served him well in real estate and reality TV. It is, however, anathema for his current job, in which he must deal with the nation’s most sensitive secrets and measure his words carefully so as not to create diplomatic incidents or even a war by accident. His over-the-top talk has already ramped up tensions, not only with adversarie­s such as North Korea but also with allies such as Mexico, Australia, Canada and the United Kingdom.

This bring us to the second reason for Trump’s blunder: He has no idea how government works. He is the first president never to have worked in the civilian or military branches of the government. Amazingly, he made no attempt to learn about policy before he ran. Now he needs to educate himself about the most powerful job in the world.

CODEWORD SECRETS For a start he needs to learn the very stringent rules for the handling of codeword secrets, which are so sensitive that they may be known to only a dozen people in the entire government. But he has a short attention span and an inability to read long documents, combined with a boundless faith in his own ability to improvise and come up with the right answer on the spur of the moment. Hence his latest blunder — and many others.

The final explanatio­n lies in Trump’s benign view of Russia as a potential partner rather than a dangerous adversary. He is willing to share more intelligen­ce with the Kremlin than we share with South Korea, France or Germany. But then, he has been more critical of those countries than he has ever been about Russia. Indeed, he consistent­ly praises Russian President Vladimir Putin as a strong leader and even defends him from well-founded charges that he murders critics.

What accounts for Trump’s Russophili­a? That is, to paraphrase Winston Churchill, a riddle, wrapped in a mystery, inside an enigma. Could it be that Trump simply likes strongmen such as Putin? Is he financiall­y dependent on Russian oligarchs? Does Putin have compromisi­ng informatio­n that can be used to blackmail him? Is he grateful that Russia helped to elect him?

Those are the questions the FBI is probing, and Trump fired FBI Director James Comey to, by his own admission, try to bring that investigat­ion to a close.

Perhaps Trump’s relationsh­ip with Russia is entirely innocent, but he is certainly acting like he’s guilty. However, for purposes of explaining the disclosure, we don’t have to posit that Trump is a Russian agent. More likely, if hardly reassuring, is that he is simply an ignorant braggart who is unprepared for the presidency.

 ?? RUSSIAN FOREIGN MINISTRY VIA AP ?? President Trump, Russian Foreign Minister Sergey Lavrov, left, and Russian Ambassador Sergey Kislyak last week.
RUSSIAN FOREIGN MINISTRY VIA AP President Trump, Russian Foreign Minister Sergey Lavrov, left, and Russian Ambassador Sergey Kislyak last week.

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