Khaleej Times

Resignatio­n marks end of ‘contain and control’ phase of trump admin

- Julie Pace and Zeke Miller

Last year, during one particular­ly frenetic stretch in Donald Trump’s presidency, a top Republican senator said there were three men guarding the country from chaos: Defence Secretary Jim Mattis, White House chief of staff John Kelly and then-Secretary of State Rex Tillerson.

Within weeks, not one will be left in the administra­tion.

Mattis will be the last to go, and his abrupt resignatio­n on Thursday marks the end of the ‘contain and control’ phase of Trump’s administra­tion — one where generals, business leaders and establishm­ent Republican­s struggled to guide the president and curb his most disruptive impulses. They were branded in Washington as the “troika of sanity,” the “axis of adults” and the “committee to save America.”

But as Trump careens toward his third year in office, their efforts are in tatters and most are out of a job.

The early consequenc­es of the new era were already apparent at year’s end, with Trump on the verge of a government shutdown over the advice of GOP leaders and ordering the withdrawal of US troops from Syria over Mattis’ objections. A similar pullback in Afghanista­n appeared to be in the works. The financial markets, spooked by uncertaint­y from a nearly yearlong trade war, tanked.

“We are headed toward a series of grave policy errors which will endanger our nation, damage our alliances & empower our adversarie­s,” Sen. Marco Rubio, R-Florida tweeted after Mattis’ resignatio­n.

The shrinking circle around Trump is now increasing­ly dominated by a small cadre of longtime Trump loyalists and family members, ex-Fox News talent, and former GOP lawmakers who were backbenche­rs on Capitol Hill before being elevated by the president. Attracting top flight talent will only get more difficult as more investigat­ions envelope the White House once Democrats take over the House in January.

To some of Trump’s most ardent supporters, the exodus leaves the president with a team that is more in line with his hardline campaign promises. They viewed some of his early advisers as obstacles to enacting the unabashed nationalis­t agenda they believe Trump had been elected to implement.

Mattis wrote in his resignatio­n letter that Trump deserved a Pentagon chief “whose views are better aligned with yours.” It was not readily apparent whom that might be, as Trump’s decision in Syria drew widespread bipartisan condemnati­on this week. Soon after Trump entered the White House, aides seeking to restrain the brash and inexperien­ced president’s foreign policy decisions recognized that those best adept at advising him were or had recently been in uniform. Trump, who never served himself but attended a military academy as a youth, granted them outsised respect.

Mattis was one of three generals who filled the top ranks of Trump’s staff, along with Kelly and H.R. McMaster, who spent a year as national security adviser. Mattis’ appointmen­t required a congressio­nal waiver to laws meant to preserve the civilian nature of the Department of Defense.

Mattis and outgoing Chairman of the Joint Chiefs Joseph Dunford became almost weekly dinner guests of the president early in his administra­tion, particular­ly before First Lady Melania Trump moved to Washington late last spring. The seemingly informal briefings for the president were in fact carefully orchestrat­ed persuasion sessions designed to ease the president into abandoning some of his disruptive campaign rhetoric and accepting the advice of his senior national security advisers.

But Mattis’ departure highlights how those early efforts delayed Trump’s disruption, rather than averting it. His decision to depart follows a clash with the president over withdrawin­g troops from Syria, where a small military force has been fighting Daesh militants. The president is also said to be seeking to draw down American forces in Afghanista­n, another move the Pentagon disagrees with.

Trump’s split with Mattis followed a pattern of public breakdowns with advisers who served as guardrails in the administra­tion.

Kelly suffered a similar fate. Hired to bring order to the Oval Office, the retired Marine ultimately found he, too, could not control Trump, who subjected Kelly to a series of public humiliatio­ns. Kelly is slated to leave in two weeks.

It was Mattis who made clear in his letter that he was leaving over a dispute with the president. Still, he said he would remain on through February to allow Trump time to nominate and confirm a successor, expressing concern about high-level turnover at the Pentagon at a critical juncture.

Because you have the right to have a secretary of defence whose views are better aligned with yours. I believe it is right for me to step down from my position.”

Jim Mattis

I am particular­ly distressed that he is resigning due to sharp difference­s with the president on ... key aspects of America’s global leadership.”

Mitch McConnell, Senate Majority Leader

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