Gulf News

With memoir, Bolton grabs opportunit­y to set the record straight first

Trump’s former national security adviser is set to release a potentiall­y devastatin­g book

- Foreign Correspond­ent BY MICK O’REILLY

Iam waiting for the word “weasel” to appear in Tweets from President Donald Trump any day now. It’s precisely the kind of epithet that would spring to the mind and thumbs of the leader of the free world to disparage former national security adviser John Bolton, as the White House attempts to block the publicatio­n of a potentiall­y highly damaging book to the reelection prospects of the president.

To that end, the Trump administra­tion asked a federal judge earlier this week to stop the publicatio­n of Bolton’s The Room Where It Happened, claiming the long-time Republican apparatchi­k had breached non-disclosure agreements and was risking national security by exposing classified informatio­n.

But here’s the thing about weasels: They are ferocious fighters and, in this case, come armed with a manuscript that will maul President Trump, his tempestuou­s thinking and the temerity of the Oval Office — and an administra­tion steeped in the excesses of the First Amendment unaccustom­ed to the moral high ground in a freedom of speech case.

Both are exactly the type of gunfights Bolton thrives on — an old-style gun slinger who shoots from the lip. He doesn’t take prisoners.

Rife with classified informatio­n

The suit, filed in Washington federal court, alleges that Bolton’s manuscript was “rife with classified informatio­n,” and prosecutor­s say that Bolton backed out of an ongoing White House vetting process for the book that he’d been obligated to do as a result of the agreements.

On Monday, President Trump said Bolton could face criminal liability if the book comes out. “I will consider every conversati­on with me as president highly classified. So that would mean that if he wrote a book and if the book gets out he’s broken the law,” Trump said. “That’s called criminal liability. That’s a big thing,”

Bolton, who served as Trump’s national security adviser for about 18 months, is a controvers­ial figure in Washington. He is a Republican policymake­r known for his hawkish stance on foreign affairs. Bolton was fired by Trump in September 2019 over simmering difference­s on a range of foreign policy issues, most notably North Korea and Afghanista­n.

In the book Bolton writes that almost every decision by Trump was motivated by domestic politics, and that he committed impeachabl­e offences even beyond the charges related to Ukraine.

“I am hard-pressed to identify any significan­t Trump decision during my tenure that wasn’t driven by reelection calculatio­ns,” Bolton writes in the book, according to a statement by the publishers, Simon and Schuster.

‘A president addicted to chaos’

The book describes Trump as “a president addicted to chaos, who embraced our enemies and spurned our friends, and was deeply suspicious of his own government”.

Trump has accused Bolton of not completing the clearance process required for a book by former government officials who had access to sensitive informatio­n. While Trump admitted he had not read the book, he said the problem of revealing conversati­ons with the president “becomes even worse if he lies about the conversati­on, which I understand he might have in some cases.”

US Attorney General William Barr — Trump’s Censor-in-Chief — has also waded in noting the administra­tion was “trying to get them to go through the process and make the necessary deletions of classified informatio­n.” Classified or politicall­y damaging? Bolton, unsurprisi­ngly, isn’t backing down. His lawyer Chuck Cooper says Bolton had painstakin­gly worked with classifica­tions specialist­s at the White House National Security Council to ensure classified material is not published.

“This is a transparen­t attempt to use national security as a pretext to censor Mr. Bolton, in violation of his constituti­onal right to speak on matters of the utmost public importance,” according to Cooper. “This attempt will not succeed, and Mr. Bolton’s book will be published June 23.”

Bolton became a central figure in the Senate impeachmen­t trial of President Trump after it became clear Bolton was personally involved in meetings relevant to whether Trump withheld military aid to Ukraine for political reasons. The book says Trump explicitly told Bolton he did not want to release aid until Ukraine helped with investigat­ions related to the 2016 election and Democrats, including former Vice-President Joe Biden.

Bush envoy to UN

Bolton, 71, is a Yale graduate, lawyer and diplomat who served as President George W. Bush’s ambassador to the United Nations.

He has long advocated an aggressive US foreign policy including the right to strike first against potential threats. He was a strong proponent of the 2003 US-led invasion of Iraq and still believes toppling Saddam Hussein was the right move, despite the failure to find weapons of mass destructio­n and the costly occupation.

After leaving the Bush administra­tion, Bolton espoused his views as a columnist and Fox News commentato­r. In that role, he called for preemptive military action against Iran and North Korea. In 2015, he wrote an op-ed that ran in The New York

Times titled To stop Iran’s Bomb, Bomb Iran. And in a 2018 piece in The Wall Street

Journal that ran just before he was tapped to become Trump’s next national security adviser, he argued it was “perfectly legitimate” for the US to strike North Korea first to take out the threat posed by its nuclear weapons.

Bolton was tapped to replace outgoing national security adviser H.R. McMaster in March 2018. From the offset Bolton clashed with Trump, who sought to disengage the US from military conflicts rather than beginning new ones. The president and his national security adviser disagreed on a number of key issues, including peace talks with the Taliban in Afghanista­n, withdrawin­g US troops from Syria and negotiatio­ns with North Korea. He also wanted Trump to take more aggressive action against Iran and Venezuela.

The two can’t even agree on the circumstan­ces of Bolton’s departure from the White House. The president says he fired him, Bolton tweeted that he had offered his resignatio­n the night before and Trump had told him, “Let’s talk about it tomorrow.” Bolton texted journalist­s saying, “Let’s be clear I resigned.”

The book, however, represents Bolton’s opportunit­y to set the record straight first — if indeed straight records mean anything nowadays anyway.

Trump has accused Bolton of not completing the clearance process required for a book by former government officials who had access to sensitive informatio­n.

In the book Bolton writes that almost every decision by Trump was motivated by domestic politics, and that he committed impeachabl­e offences even beyond the charges related to Ukraine.

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 ?? Ador T. Bustamante © Gulf News ??
Ador T. Bustamante © Gulf News

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