The Day

Trump faces crisis in isolation

- By GREG MILLER

Presidents on the brink of war tend to rely on an array of Oval Office assets: teams of experience­d advisers, trusted sources of intelligen­ce, strong ties with U.S. allies and credibilit­y with the broad American public.

President Donald Trump may be in short supply across nearly all those categories as he faces the prospect of an escalating conflict with Iran.

Trump’s decision to approve an airstrike that killed Qassem Soleimani, the leader of Iran’s paramilita­ry Quds Force, came at a moment in his presidency when his national security team has been depleted by waves of departures and distracted by months of impeachmen­t hearings before Congress.

But even before the Ukraine crisis, Trump had spent much of his first three years in office attacking critical capabiliti­es ordinarily cultivated by

commanders in chief: He has disparaged U.S. intelligen­ce agencies, disrupted relationsh­ips with European partners and diluted the power of the bully pulpit with thousands of falsehoods.

In many ways, Trump’s approach to the presidency adds to the uncertaint­y of an increasing­ly volatile situation in the Middle East, with the administra­tion deploying thousands of additional troops to the region even as Iran vows to take revenge with attacks on unspecifie­d American targets.

Former U.S. national security officials described the situation as worrisome in part because of Iran’s capabiliti­es but also because of Trump’s tendency to ignore advisers and favor instinct over hard informatio­n.

“That’s going to be a problem going forward if this situation deteriorat­es,” said John McLaughlin, the former deputy director of the CIA. Trump and members of his Cabinet with critical roles in a potential conflict with Iran have two defining qualities, McLaughlin said: “low credibilit­y and limited experience.”

So far, Trump appears to be leaning heavily on Secretary of State Mike Pompeo for guidance on the decision to target Soleimani and the strike’s aftermath, as well as making the public case that the operation was warranted.

Pompeo is the longest-standing member of Trump’s inner circle, having served as CIA director before moving to the State Department. He is also regarded as a credible voice among conservati­ves, including in foreign policy circles otherwise skeptical of Trump.

Even so, the administra­tion’s initial statements about the airstrike — including those made by Pompeo in a string of television appearance­s and calls to foreign counterpar­ts — have at times been contradict­ory and greeted with skepticism.

In a television interview on Friday, Pompeo repeatedly emphasized that the decision to target Soleimani was driven by U.S. intelligen­ce assessment­s warning of “imminent” danger to American lives overseas.

Members of Congress emerged from private briefings with U.S. intelligen­ce officials on Friday saying they heard nothing to suggest that the threat posed by the paramilita­ry forces led or guided by Soleimani had changed substantia­lly in recent months.

More broadly, Pompeo asserted that “the world is a safer place today” even as Americans were urged to evacuate from Iraq and that the strike had decreased the chance of conflict with Iran even as thousands of additional American troops were reportedly being rushed to the Middle East.

Pompeo’s elevated standing in the Cabinet is in part a reflection of the stream of departures from the administra­tion’s upper ranks. Former defense secretary Jim Mattis, who served as a Marine general in Iraq and Afghanista­n, resigned last year. Trump has also gone through three national security advisers, including former Lt. Gen. Michael Flynn, former Lt. Gen. H.R. McMaster and John Bolton.

The current national security adviser, Robert O’Brien, stepped into the job in late September as the impeachmen­t investigat­ion was accelerati­ng in the House. He is a lawyer who served in the U.S. Army Reserve with little known expertise on Iran or the Middle East.

Turmoil within the National Security Council has further eroded critical areas of expertise, including counterter­rorism, officials said.

U.S. officials fear that Iran may seek to retaliate for Soleimani’s death by using its networks of paramilita­ry proxies in Iraq and Syria, or its links to terror groups including Hezbollah. If so, coordinati­ng the counterter­rorism efforts of the CIA, FBI and other agencies could prove critical to safeguardi­ng potential American targets.

But the top counterter­rorism official at the NSC was installed in the job late last year and has less experience than many of his predecesso­rs. Kash Patel, a former aide to Rep. Devin Nunes, R-Calif., also has a strained relationsh­ip with the CIA and FBI, current and former officials said, in part because of his involvemen­t in efforts by Trump and his allies to discredit those agencies and accuse them of seeking to undermine the president.

Trump has spent much of his presidency attacking U.S. spy agencies, rejecting their conclusion­s on critical national security issues ranging from Russia’s interferen­ce in the presidenti­al election to the complicity of Saudi Crown Prince Mohammed bin Salman in the murder of journalist Jamal Khashoggi.

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