The Jerusalem Post

Trump offers strategist Bannon permanent seat on National Security Council

- • By MICHAEL WILNER Jerusalem Post correspond­ent

WASHINGTON – US President Donald Trump on Saturday reshuffled his National Security Council, removing permanent seats on his most important Situation Room meetings previously reserved for his military and intelligen­ce chiefs and offering one instead to his chief strategist.

That strategist is Steve Bannon, who before joining Trump’s presidenti­al campaign last year ran Breitbart, a website he characteri­zed as “the platform for the alt-right” movement.

Historical­ly, the chairman of the Joint Chiefs of Staff has served as the primary military adviser on the NSC principals committee – the president’s core national security team. Going forward, that adviser, currently Gen. Joseph F. Dunford, will only attend meetings on a discretion­ary basis. The same goes for the director of national intelligen­ce, who is tasked with coordinati­ng all streams of intelligen­ce collected by the government’s 17 intelligen­ce agencies.

Trump has had a fractured relationsh­ip with the intelligen­ce community ever since its leadership found that the Russian Federation actively campaigned to help elect him president.

Last year, at a forum on presidenti­al transition­s hosted by the Moody Series on Bipartisan Leadership, a top aide to former president George W. Bush explained the longstandi­ng decision not to include political figures in national security meetings.

“The signal he wanted to send to the rest of his administra­tion, the signal he wanted to send to the public, and the signal he especially wanted to send to the military is that the decisions I’m making that involve life and death for the people in uniform will not be tainted by any political decisions,” Josh Bolten, Bush’s former chief of staff, said.

Explaining Bannon’s appointmen­t to the council, White House Press Secretary Sean Spicer said his qualificat­ion is that “he’s a former naval officer.”

Bannon is credited for shaping Trump’s populist, anti-immigrant and ethno-nationalis­t image that helped fuel his unlikely political rise to the White House. Bannon helped draft Trump’s inaugurati­on speech, as well as his recent executive order on refugees.

In an interview last summer, Bannon called himself “a Leninist” who wants to “destroy the state.”

“I want to bring everything crashing down, and destroy all of today’s establishm­ent,” he said.

In an interview after the election with The Hollywood Reporter, Bannon further explained his vision as avowedly populist and nationalis­t.

“Darkness is good,” he said. “Dick Cheney. Darth Vader. Satan. That’s power. It only helps us when they get it wrong. When they’re blind to who we are and what we’re doing.”

Speaking on Sunday, Sen. John McCain said he was “worried” about the move to add Bannon.

This is “a radical departure from any national security council in history,” said McCain, who serves as chairman of the Senate Armed Services Committee, on CBS’s Face the Nation.

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