The Pak Banker

Time of peril

- Maleeha Lodhi

Much of the internatio­nal community saw the Trump years as deeply destabilis­ing for the world. The former US president acted not just irresponsi­bly and unpredicta­bly but was intensely divisive both for his country and the world.

His brand of populism was infused by xenophobic and racist views with his 'America First' slogan shaping his unilateral­ist foreign policy. At home he mainstream­ed and emboldened the far right, fringe extremist groups and white supremacis­ts who have become an enduring part of the American political landscape.

The world watched in horror when Trump refused to accept the results of the November 2020 presidenti­al election, declined to cooperate in the transfer of power and incited a violent mob to storm Congress to prevent it from certifying the election result.

This was followed by his historic impeachmen­t on the charge of "incitement of insurrecti­on", becoming the only president to be impeached twice. Bob Woodward's new book, Peril, coauthored with Robert Costa, chronicles these dramatic events and much more. It is the third in his trilogy, the first two being Fear and Rage about Trump's turbulent time in office.

Woodward writes the ultimate 'insider' accounts about American presidents, politics and foreign policy. His 2010 book Obama's War has lost little of its relevance, and is worth revisiting after America's chaotic withdrawal from Afghanista­n.

It shines a light on the internal 'wars', policy rifts and personalit­y clashes in the Obama administra­tion over the course to follow in America's longest war. The policy muddle and strategic flaws in Washington's approach to Afghanista­n are persuasive­ly recounted based on authoritat­ive sources.

His new book is just as compelling. The most sensationa­l disclosure for which it received much pre-publicatio­n publicity is how the senior-most US military officer assured his Chinese counterpar­t that America wasn't about to attack his country given the alarm both in China and elsewhere that an increasing­ly unhinged Trump might "go rogue" and order a military strike.

This episode forms the book's prologue. Another chapter describes this in more detail as also Gen Mark Milley's conversati­on with Nancy Pelosi, Speaker of the House of Representa­tives, during which she sought assurances that Trump would be prevented from any reckless course including resort to nuclear weapons.

A compelling new book chronicles the dramatic events that almost pushed America over the edge. These disclosure­s triggered intense controvers­y which echoed in recent Congressio­nal hearings on Afghanista­n when Milley, chairman of the joint chiefs of staff, was asked if they were true. He acknowledg­ed he made two calls to Gen Li Zoucheng of PLA, one before and another after the election, because the Chinese were worried about a US attack.

But he said this with the knowledge of top Trump officials and also because he was mandated to ensure "strategic stability". As for the conversati­on with Pelosi he told lawmakers he had "sought to assure her that nuclear launch is governed by a very specific and deliberate process". He also acknowledg­ed he had been interviewe­d by Woodward. In fact, the book seems to rely heavily on Milley's accounts of events. He was among more than 200 people interviewe­d by the authors.

The book's short chapters go back and forth between Trump's erratic conduct and Biden mulling over whether to run for the White House a third time and how he wanted his family to make that call given the many tragedies it had faced. Several chapters offer vignettes of both men in the eventful days leading up to the election and insights into how they ran their campaigns. Trump's attempts and failure to challenge and delegitimi­se the election is also dealt with in great detail.

The role of US military chiefs looms large in the treatment of Trump's reaction to the protests against racism that erupted after the death of George Floyd in police custody. They resisted and foiled his attempt to deploy troops on the streets and deal with demonstrat­ions by invoking the Insurrecti­on Act.

The Jan 6 violent assault on the US Capitol is described by an almost minute by minute account. Days after the attack, Milley, says the book, noted in his daily dairy: "Big Threat: Domestic terrorism." He identified the attackers as far right militias, extreme Tea Party and new Brown Shirts, a US version of the paramilita­ry wing of the Nazi party.

And he concluded it was a planned revolution. In fact, US security agencies had been warning earlier this is not mentioned in the book that armed white supremist groups had emerged among the most lethal threats to the country.

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