Bolton says Trump 'unfit' to be President in new memoir intro
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[January 31, 2024]
By Arshad Mohammed and Steve Holland
WASHINGTON (Reuters) -Former U.S. National Security Adviser John Bolton
excoriated former President Donald Trump as an utterly self-interested
man who would punish personal enemies and appease adversaries Russia and
China in a new edition of his memoir released on Tuesday.
Bolton, who served in Trump's White House in 2018 and 2019, accused the
Republican presidential frontrunner of having no political philosophy or
coherent policy outlook. If re-elected, Trump could leave the NATO
security alliance, curb support to Ukraine despite Russia's 2022
invasion, embolden China to blockade Taiwan and generally pursue
isolationism, Bolton warned.
"Trump is unfit to be president," Bolton wrote in the new foreword to
"The Room Where it Happened," his account of the 17 months he spent as
Trump's national security adviser. "If his first four years were bad, a
second four will be worse."
While Trump casts himself as the underdog's champion, once saying "for
those who have been wronged and betrayed, I am your retribution," Bolton
argues he is fundamentally self-regarding.
"Trump really cares only about retribution for himself, and it will
consume much of a second term," he wrote in the forward to the paperback
edition of his memoir, which painted a bleak picture of America during a
second Trump term.
Trump senior advisor Jason Miller said: “For someone who professes to
have such great disdain for President Trump, ‘Book Deal Bolton’ sure has
found a way to grift off the relationship".
Bolton said before serving Trump he mistakenly believed the burdens of
office would discipline the president. In the event, he found the former
president consumed by self-interest.
"He cares almost exclusively about his own interests," Bolton writes,
suggesting Trump would want to be surrounded by "a White House of serfs"
to execute his orders unquestioningly.
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John Bolton, a former White House national security adviser, speaks
to journalists at a forum in Taipei, Taiwan April 29, 2023.
REUTERS/Ben Blanchard/File Photo
He also makes a case that Trump, revered by the right for appointing
Supreme Court justices who overturned the 1973 Roe v. Wade ruling
that recognized women's constitutional right to abortion, may not
pursue conservative policies if re-elected.
Bolton said Trump's inability to run for a third term under the U.S.
Constitution means "the political constraints around him are much
looser, and the real 'guardrail' of voter opinion will be
minimized."
Bolton saves some of his harshest words for foreign policy, writing
Trump sent an "isolationist virus" coursing through the Republican
party and that "in no arena ... has the Trump aberration been more
destructive than in national security."
He also argued Trump could withdraw from the North Atlantic Treaty
Organization (NATO), a prospect likely to please Russian President
Vladimir Putin, adding that "it is almost inevitable that a
second-term Trump policy on Ukraine will favor Moscow."
Taiwan and others along China's periphery "face real peril in a
second Trump term," Bolton adds, suggesting that the risks of China
under President Xi Jinping manufacturing a crisis over Taiwan -
perhaps by blockading the island - would rise.
"It is a close contest between Putin and Xi Jinping who would be
happiest to see Trump back in office," he writes.
(Reporting By Steve Holland in Washington and by by Arshad Mohammed
in Saint Paul, Minn.; Writing by Arshad Mohammed; Editing by Michael
Perry)
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