Bolton’s book reminds us of the biggest problem with Trump By Fareed Zakaria

President Trump speaks during an event at the White House on Wednesday. (Tom Brenner/Reuters)

Trump has for the most part settled into conventional Republican policies. He has cut taxes for the rich, rolled back regulations, appointed conservative judges and lavished money on the Defense Department. He departs from the Reagan formula in two major areas — immigration and trade — and on these issues, he has changed much of the party, which is now comfortable with tariffs, subsidies and mercantilism as well as severe restrictions on immigration.

I don’t agree with many of these policies. But what has always worried me more is Trump’s character. He is a man for whom his own personal and political interests are paramount and override any other concerns — of decency, morality, even law. Bolton is not the first top aide to dissent — Rex Tillerson, Jim Mattis and John Kelly have all made clear their low opinion of Trump — but he is the first to provide details. And the details are damning.

(One note: Trump says Bolton is breaking the law by revealing classified information and that “every conversation with me as president [is] highly classified.” So Trump’s defense would seem to confirm that Bolton’s account is true.)

The book says Trump promised to remove federal prosecutors who were going after a Turkish bank because President Recep Tayyip Erdogan asked him to intervene. Trump insisted that the Ukrainian government hand over incriminating information about Hillary Clinton and Joe Biden before he would release congressionally approved aid to that country. Bolton notes that he and the secretaries of state and defense tried up to 10 times to press Trump to release those funds and that Trump refused.

Ukraine might be the most “impeachable” offense, but Trump’s dealings with China are the most troubling. U.S. policy toward China is the most important business any president will conduct. It will set the stage for peace or war, the preservation of U.S. interests, and the security of the United States and its allies for decades to come. And Trump has treated this relationship almost entirely as one to be used, manipulated and altered to serve his personal interests (specifically, to boost his reelection prospects).

Bolton describes Trump’s willingness to reverse prosecution and even criminal penalties against Chinese firms as personal favors to President Xi Jinping. He casually offered to reduce tariffs on Chinese goods in return for a deal that would make him look good in November, pressing Xi to have China buy agricultural products so that Trump would poll well in Midwestern states. He praised Xi for building concentration camps in Xinjiang. (We saw Trump do something similar on covid-19, praising Xi to the skies, probably hoping to preserve their trade deal.) Bolton describes Trump as “pleading with Xi to ensure he’d win [reelection].” Most strikingly, the Chinese understood with whom they were dealing and openly played to Trump’s personal political interests. Xi said he would like Trump to remain in office for the next six years. Trump responded that “people were saying” — his favorite way of expressing his own views — that the two-term limit on U.S. presidents should be waived for him.

Bolton’s conclusion regarding the deal with China — and Trump’s foreign policy more generally — is breathtaking. “Trump commingled the personal and the national not just on trade questions but across the whole field of national security. I am hard-pressed to identify any significant Trump decision during my White House tenure that wasn’t driven by re-election calculations,” he writes.

For those who have been willing to support Trump because of particular policies they have always wanted — Supreme Court judges or tax cuts — Bolton’s book makes clear the cost is high. Trump will pay any price, make any deal, bend any law to assure his own survival and success.

Advertisement

Leave a Reply

Fill in your details below or click an icon to log in:

WordPress.com Logo

You are commenting using your WordPress.com account. Log Out /  Change )

Facebook photo

You are commenting using your Facebook account. Log Out /  Change )

Connecting to %s

This site uses Akismet to reduce spam. Learn how your comment data is processed.

%d bloggers like this: