Gulf News

How the tables turned on Bolton

In the end, pushing the national security adviser out of the door was something that brought all the other factions in Trump World together

-

In every United States administra­tion — but especially in the administra­tion of President Donald Trump — personalit­ies are policy and internal factions form assorted alliances to exert influence and maintain power. John Bolton’s long-anticipate­d departure from the job of national security adviser came when his faction lost all its allies. He was fighting too many battles on too many fronts.

Of course, Bolton’s principal problem was that he had lost the trust and confidence of his boss, Trump. But foreign policy difference­s were just one reason. It’s true Bolton opposed the president’s deal-making efforts on Afghanista­n, North Korea and Iran. But as several reports explain, Trump became convinced Bolton had moved from simply opposing his agenda to actively underminin­g it, primarily by leaking. Trump came to that belief with the determined help of many inside and outside the administra­tion waging a not-subtle campaign to sour the president on Bolton, primarily by leaking.

What’s remarkable is that so many factions went on the record to reveal their internal disputes. Bolton kicked that off by tweeting openly that he resigned of his own initiative, contradict­ing Trump’s tweet that Bolton was fired. White House press secretary Stephanie Grisham then went on the record, texting with reporters that Bolton was lying. Bolton then texted reporters that Grisham was lying.

Bolton’s long-simmering feud with Secretary of State Mike Pompeo and his team also spilled out into plain view when Pompeo confirmed that they disagreed on many issues, contradict­ing his previously routine claims that the administra­tion was unified. It’s true Bolton thought Pompeo’s North Korea diplomacy was counterpro­ductive, and he wanted to take an even harder line than the US State Department on Iran.

But on Tuesday, Pompeo seemed to reveal his own personal view that Bolton was working against Trump’s agenda. Trump “should have people that he trusts and values and whose efforts and judgements benefit him in delivering American foreign policy”, Pompeo said at a sanctions-related news conference Bolton had been scheduled to attend. “That’s what, as Cabinet members, [Treasury] Secretary [Steven] Mnuchin and I try to do each and every day.”

When the ouster came about

A year ago, Pompeo and Bolton, both conservati­ve hawks, were aligned, and Mnuchin was the outlier. Now, the tables have turned and Pompeo and Mnuchin jointly celebrated Bolton’s ouster.

“The president’s view of the Iraq War and Ambassador Bolton’s was very different. The president has made that very clear,” Mnuchin volunteere­d for no reason.

Another faction Bolton was battling was that of acting chief-of-staff Mick Mulvaney. Mulvaney’s deputy for national security, Rob Blair, and Bolton have been feuding. “Mulvaney and Bolton are barely on speaking terms, and Blair has regularly challenged Bolton’s subordinat­es,” There was a mix of policy and personalit­y disputes. Again, each side accused the other of leaking.

Final straw

Team Bolton lost an ally when acting defence secretary Patrick Shanahan resigned mid-confirmati­on process in June after details emerged about his family’s troubled history. Bolton had been a big Shanahan supporter.

The final straw might have come when Bolton’s last ally, Vice-President Mike Pence, got caught up in Bolton’s various internal beefs. Pence and Bolton have been quietly close, but Pence plays a much more cautious and discipline­d game. The New York Times reported Pence’s team was angry that Pence was named in news reports with Bolton as opposing Trump’s plan to invite Taliban leaders to Camp David.

Some wins, some losses

Bolton is not innocent: His team just got outgunned, outmanoeuv­red and out-leaked. It was inevitable. Anticipati­ng this outcome, Bolton had been telling people for months he intended to leave by the end of the year. The Afghanista­n Camp David mess seems to have sped that up. Bolton will leave with a record of some policy wins and some losses — from his perspectiv­e, more wins than if he hadn’t had the job at all.

In the end, pushing Bolton out of the door was something that brought all the other factions in Trump World together. But don’t expect that to last long. Trump said he will choose his new national security adviser next week. Let the new games begin. ■ Josh Rogin is a prominent American columnist, political analyst and foreign policy expert.

 ??  ??

Newspapers in English

Newspapers from United Arab Emirates