Miami Herald

Trump grew weary of Bolton’s push for military force against Venezuela

- BY MICHAEL WILNER mwilner@mcclatchyd­c.com Michael Wilner: 2023836083, @mawilner

President Donald Trump ousted John Bolton in part due to frustratio­n with his third national-security adviser’s guidance to pair military power with economic pressure against Venezuela, according to current and former administra­tion officials.

One senior administra­tion official said that Trump had grown weary of repeated vows from Bolton that Venezuelan President Nicolás Maduro would be out of office in short order. A second official said that they had clashed over Bolton’s efforts to advance planning for a military interventi­on.

That official pointed to the administra­tion’s national-security strategy, which calls for “strong diplomatic engagement” to isoin late rogue nations in the Western Hemisphere. “That has been and remains the policy,” the official told McClatchy, although officials across the administra­tion insist that all options are on the table.

Bolton left the White House on Tuesday over several bitter disputes with the president and Cabinet members.

“I disagreed with John Bolton on his attitudes on Venezuela — I thought he was way out of line,” Trump told reporters in the Oval Office.

Bolton raised the potential of military force on several occasions, including in January by walking into the White House press briefing room sporting a pad with a note reading, “5,000 troops to Colombia,” revealing private deliberati­ons.

Before Bolton joined the administra­tion, Trump had received guidance that portrayed military interventi­on Venezuela as a massive undertakin­g. Hundreds of thousands of troops would be required for an invasion – more than were sent into Iraq in 2003 – and more modest military options, such as a blockade, would still amount to a sizeable war effort.

Trump eventually drew a line that Bolton would not readily accept.

“Every time [Bolton] brought up the potential of invasion, and potential use of the military, the president got frustrated and apparently grew tired of it,” one former Trump administra­tion official said.

Secretary of State Mike Pompeo, who remains in the president’s good graces, has also advocated a tough line on Venezuela and is pioneering a strategy endorsed by Trump to negotiate Maduro’s exit with top Venezuelan government aides.

Bolton’s departure comes amid U.S. concerns that the embattled Venezuelan leader might be preparing to use force against Colombia.

Maduro called the neighborin­g country a “warmongeri­ng threat” in a televised statement this week, huddled with defense officials, and reportedly directed a military buildup at the border.

In a statement on Wednesday, Pompeo said the United States was invoking a decades-old treaty of reciprocal assistance with 10 other countries in the Western Hemisphere . The pact states that an attack on one is an attack on all. He called Maduro’s reign “increasing­ly destabiliz­ing” to the region.

 ?? ANDREW HARNIK AP file, 2019 ?? ‘Every time he brought up the potential of invasion, and potential use of the military, the president got frustrated and apparently grew tired of it,’ one former Trump administra­tion official said of former National Security Adviser John Bolton, above.
ANDREW HARNIK AP file, 2019 ‘Every time he brought up the potential of invasion, and potential use of the military, the president got frustrated and apparently grew tired of it,’ one former Trump administra­tion official said of former National Security Adviser John Bolton, above.

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