The Citizen (Gauteng)

Sessions must fix ‘treason’

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Washington – US President Donald Trump yesterday urged his attorney-general to investigat­e the anonymous author of a damning op-ed, escalating his long-running battles with both the media and leaks from the White House.

Trump also took aim at a book by investigat­ive journalist Bob Woodward which, like the incendiary unsigned piece in The New

York Times, offered a damning portrayal of the inner workings of his administra­tion, sparking yet another White House crisis and putting the president on the defensive.

“I would say Jeff (Sessions) should be investigat­ing who the author of that piece was because I really believe it’s national security,” Trump told reporters traveling with him in North Dakota.

“The Times should never have done that, because really what they’ve done is virtually, you know, it’s treason,” the president said in an interview with Fox News broadcast earlier yesterday.

A “whodunnit?” style guessing game has raged in the corridors of power and on social media over the identity of the author, prompting nearly every Cabinet-ranked member of the government to deny involvemen­t.

“We have thousands of people that, in theory, could qualify,” Trump told Fox, describing the author’s anonymity as “very unfair,” since it prevented them from being openly scrutinise­d.

The article, which was published on Wednesday, said “unsung heroes” were quietly working within the administra­tion to frustrate the president’s “worst inclinatio­ns.”

That account was also supported by Woodward’s book, which Trump dismissed on Twitter as a “scam.”

“I don’t talk the way I am quoted. If I did I would not have been elected president. These quotes were made up. The author uses every trick in the book to demean and belittle,” Trump tweeted.

“I wish the people could see the real facts - and our country is doing great!”

Woodward’s Fear: Trump in the White House, a 448-page account of an out-of-control administra­tion set to hit bookshelve­s next week, draws on hundreds of hours of insider interviews.

The respected White House chronicler describes a coalition of like-minded aides plotting to prevent the president from destroying the world trade system, underminin­g national security and sparking wars.

Woodward’s is not the first unflatteri­ng investigat­ion into Trump’s White House, but it has been particular­ly resonant coming from the man who together with Carl Bernstein authored the Watergate expose that brought down Richard Nixon.

He is one of the most respected living US journalist­s, and has written extensivel­y on modern American presidents, earning praise from Trump himself in 2013 for his work on former president Barack Obama. –

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