San Antonio Express-News

Border ‘crisis’ arose from a fool’s impulse

- MICHAEL GERSON michaelger­son@washpost.com

So far: President Donald Trump has announced a crisis that isn’t actually a crisis, requiring a wall that is not really a wall, funded by Mexican pesos that are really American tax dollars, to keep out murderous migrants who are (as a whole) less violent than native-born Americans, leading to congressio­nal negotiatio­ns that involve no actual negotiatio­ns, resulting in a government shutdown undertaken on the advice of radio personalit­ies, defended in an Oval Office address that consisted of alarmism, prejudice, falsehood and other material caught in the P-trap of Stephen Miller’s mind.

One conservati­ve claimed that Trump finally looked “presidenti­al.” Actually, we are seeing the federal government — Trump supporters and opponents — trying to explain and respond to an impulsive, emotive, selfish, irresponsi­ble and fundamenta­lly irrational force at its center. It is like the immune system responding to a virus it has never seen before and cannot defend against. Trump walks in and out of meetings, repeating scraps of his stump speech, unpredicta­ble to his staff, unconcerne­d about the pressure on his allies, contemptuo­us toward congressio­nal opponents and with no apparent end game except their total surrender.

This is a case study in failed and erratic leadership. The shutdown happened because Trump — under pressure from partisan media — reneged on a commitment to sign the spending bill the Senate had passed and the House was ready to pass. Then, in an Oval Office meeting with the Democratic leaders, he said he would gladly own a shutdown, presumably because he figured it would look good on TV. Trump apparently did this without talking to congressio­nal Republican­s or his own staff. Then congressio­nal Republican­s and his own staff were forced to defend Trump’s impulse as a strategy. But this has proved difficult, because Republican­s have no leverage. So now the whole GOP is left pretending there is an emergency at the border, and that a multiyear constructi­on project is somehow the best way to deal with an emergency.

This is the Republican legislator’s lot in the Trump era — trying to provide ex post facto justificat­ions for absurd presidenti­al choices. The border “crisis” did not break because of some tragedy caused by a porous southern border. It did not result from some serious determinat­ion of national security priorities. The whole GOP strategy and all the arguments they are using are really backfill for an intemperat­e choice made by a president in response to media coverage. It is a dynamic we’ve seen again and again. Trump announced a summit with Kim Jong Un because, well, for the hell of it. Then the whole government had to backfill a policy and process to fit his wrongheade­d announceme­nt. Trump announced the withdrawal of American troops from Syria on the spur of the moment, perhaps to assert himself against the influence of his now-departed Defense Secretary James Mattis. Then the whole defense and national security establishm­ent has to scramble to backfill the details of coherent policy (which they still haven’t really done).

On the issue of border security, it has fallen to Homeland Security Secretary Kirstjen Nielsen to provide justificat­ion for the irrational. And this has turned a serious public servant into a font of deception and bad faith. “I am sure all Americans,” she explains, “would agree that one terrorist reaching our borders is one too many.”

So, we know that the number of terrorists intercepte­d at the southern border is equal to or greater than one. What we don’t know is how this terrorist threat compares to other dangers and vulnerabil­ities that require funding as well. I have talked to many counterter­rorism experts about domestic radicaliza­tion, and foreign intelligen­ce gathering, and drones and special operations, and financial investigat­ion and disruption. I have never met an expert who mentioned the constructi­on of a physical barrier with Mexico as an urgent priority in the fight against global terrorism. If the goal is fighting terrorism, the first dollar would not go to a wall. Or probably the billionth dollar. The argument is deceptive to its core.

But security arguments would certainly be at the core of Trump’s justificat­ion for declaring a national emergency and building the wall with American troops — if he makes that choice. Then the ignorance, arrogance and stubbornne­ss of one man would turn a budget crisis into a constituti­onal crisis — and turn Republican defenders into abettors of creeping authoritar­ianism. All to justify a fool’s impulse.

 ?? Mario Tama / Getty Images ?? The border “crisis” did not break because of tragedy or from a serious determinat­ion of national security priorities. The Republican strategy is simply backfill for an intemperat­e choice made by Donald Trump in response to media coverage.
Mario Tama / Getty Images The border “crisis” did not break because of tragedy or from a serious determinat­ion of national security priorities. The Republican strategy is simply backfill for an intemperat­e choice made by Donald Trump in response to media coverage.
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