The Boston Globe

Trump calls Hezbollah terrorists ‘very smart’

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Former president Donald Trump on Wednesday criticized Israeli Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu and called Hezbollah terrorist attackers “very smart” as Israel recovers from the deadliest attack it has suffered in 50 years.

“He has been hurt very badly because of what’s happened here,” Trump said of Netanyahu in an excerpt of an interview with Fox News presenter Brian Kilmeade that aired Wednesday night. “He was not prepared. He was not prepared, and Israel was not prepared.”

Israel has declared a state of war and called up 360,000 reservists after a surprise attack by Hamas militants on Saturday killed at least 1,200 people and wounded more than 2,700.

Later on Wednesday, Trump, the clear polling leader in the Republican presidenti­al race, compliment­ed the intelligen­ce of Hezbollah, which has been designated a terrorist organizati­on by the United States. The Iran-aligned group, based in Lebanon, exchanged fire with Israeli forces on the country’s northern border Wednesday.

“You know, Hezbollah is very smart,” Trump said. “They’re all very smart.”

That remark drew condemnati­on from one of his Republican rivals, Florida Governor Ron DeSantis.

“It is absurd that anyone, much less someone running for President, would choose now to attack our friend and ally, Israel, much less praise Hezbollah terrorists as ‘very smart,’” DeSantis said in a post on X, formerly known as Twitter.

Trump’s comments reflected his long-establishe­d pattern of slighting US allies while compliment­ing adversarie­s such as Chinese President Xi Jinping, Russian President Vladimir Putin, and North Korean leader Kim Jong-Un.

Trump spokesman Steven Cheung defended the former president’s comments as meant to criticize unspecifie­d US officials for giving Hezbollah the idea to attack from the north. He said Trump was referring to a briefing by a senior US defense official on Monday that expressed concern about Hezbollah opening a second front.

“President Trump was clearly pointing out how incompeten­t Biden and his administra­tion were by telegraphi­ng to the terrorists an area that is susceptibl­e to an attack,” Cheung said. “Smart does not equal good.”

In the same breath, Trump acknowledg­ed that his remark about Hezbollah could be controvers­ial, immediatel­y adding, “The press doesn’t like when they say it.” He went on to repeat that he views Xi as a “very smart man” because “1.4 billion people, he controls it with an iron fist.”

Elsewhere in Wednesday’s speech, delivered to an auditorium of supporters in West Palm Beach, Fla., Trump elaborated that he had “a bad experience with Israel as president,” telling a story about the US operation to assassinat­e Iranian General Qasem Soleimani. In Trump’s account, Israeli intelligen­ce helped the US locate Soleimani and plan the drone strike that killed him, but on the eve of the operation withdrew its participat­ion.

The accuracy of Trump’s account could not immediatel­y be confirmed. At the time of the assassinat­ion, the Israeli government reacted with restraint to avoid fanning tensions with Iran. In 2021, a retired Israeli military officer acknowledg­ed that his country’s intelligen­ce contribute­d to the US airstrike.

“I’ll never forget that Bibi Netanyahu let us down. That was a very terrible thing,” Trump said in Wednesday’s speech. “So we were disappoint­ed by that. Very disappoint­ed. But we did the job ourself. It was absolute precision, magnificen­t, beautiful job.”

As Trump told the story, he suggested he was recounting it publicly for the first time, and that it possibly included classified informatio­n. He was indicted in June by special counsel Jack Smith on 40 counts arising from allegedly mishandlin­g classified documents after leaving the White House.

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