Gulf Today

Giuliani is a tougher test for Trump than Bannon or Cohen

- Donald Trump Max Burns, Rudy Giuliani

It looks like President Donald Trump is finally tiring of his personal attorney Rudy Giuliani. Gone are the days when he casually directed the leaders of foreign government­s to “talk to Rudy” about matters of pressing national security policy.

A month ago, Trump offered a public show of support for the embattled former New York mayor; now, he says, he hardly knows the poor sap.

This week’s sudden split was a long time coming. In October, federal prosecutor­s nabbed Giuliani henchmen Lev Parnas and Igor Fruman as they attempted a one-way trip out of the United States. In the weeks since their arrest, Parnas provided audio and video recordings to the House Intelligen­ce Committee that implicate Giuliani in corrupt foreign dealings. A federal criminal indictment against Giuliani appears imminent.

At the same time, three rounds of highly credible witnesses testified at House impeachmen­t hearings that Giuliani put American foreign policy at risk by conducting an unofficial, Trump-approved intimidati­on campaign against American-allied Ukraine. The goal? To deliver damaging political dirt on political rival Joe Biden. Trump mega-donor and Ambassador to the European Union Gordon Sondland asserted under oath that Giuliani’s behaviour amounted to a corrupt quid pro quo.

Now, at last, Trump is pulling the plug on another failed business venture. In a bizarre interview with disgraced former Fox News personalit­y Bill

O’reilly, the president disavowed ever sending Giuliani to Ukraine. Giuliani, he argued, must have been operating independen­tly.

“I didn’t direct him,” Trump told O’reilly.. “But he’s a warrior. Rudy’s a warrior. Rudy went. He possibly saw something… Rudy has other clients, other than me.”

Even by the standards of Trump’s well-known disloyalty, his comments to O’reilly represent a stunning willingnes­s to throw even his closest advisors to the wolves. Of course, the idea that Giuliani acted on his own is risible — the official transcript of Trump’s call with Ukrainian President Volodymyr Zelensky includes a direct instructio­n to “talk to Rudy.” Trump’s comments are an act of desperatio­n, a last-ditch attempt to cut off the cancerous limb that is Giuliani’s ineptitude.

Friendship with Donald Trump is a fleeting affair filled with reputation­al risks. Just ask Trump’s former attorney Michael Cohen, currently serving three years in federal prison for his role in covering up Trump’s hush-money payments to porn stars and mistresses. By the end of Cohen’s sordid saga, Trump claimed to barely know a man he had worked with for more than a decade.

Or take former White House Communicat­ions Director Anthony Scaramucci, who went from Trump confidante to personal nemesis in the span of only 11 dizzying days. Or former Senior Advisor Steve Bannon, who guided Trump’s campaign and occupied a plush White House office until Trump fired him. Trump spent weeks dragging Bannon in the press as “sloppy” and a crybaby who couldn’t handle the pressures of government.

For all his laughable incompeten­ce, Giuliani represents a far more dangerous challenge for Trump than Bannon, Scaramucci or even Cohen. Giuliani is every bit as transactio­nal as Trump. On one occasion last week, Giuliani claimed he had an “insurance policy” to ensure Trump didn’t turn on him — evidence that, for all their camaraderi­e, Giuliani knows the best way to handle Trump is through mutually assured destructio­n.

With pressure mounting on Giuliani to testify under oath about his shady dealings in Ukraine, Trump has every reason to put miles between himself and his personal attorney. Trump’s claim that Giuliani was just a freelancer don’t hold water. It is too cute by half to assert that Giuliani’s efforts in Ukraine just happen to match one-forone with the quid pro quo Acting Chief of Staff Mick Mulvaney admitted to on live television.

President Trump is trying his best to wash his hands of Rudy Giuliani’s lethal radioactiv­ity. Unfortunat­ely for Trump, Giuliani is a fellow expert in the fairweathe­r friendship­s of high-level politics. How Giuliani responds to Trump’s latest incitement will determine whether the White House survives the gathering impeachmen­t storm.

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