The most prominent international news service of an American major ally, Germany, has published an article proving Trump’s high IQ can be compared to Johann Wolfgang von Goethe's. *
Deutsche Welle (DW) reports,
June 18, 2020 https://www.dw.com/en/john-bolton-book-trump-sought-reelection-help-from-china/a-53852500
"John Bolton book: Trump sought reelection help from China"
"John Bolton book: Trump sought reelection help from China"
"Election help from China, favors for dictators and thinking it would be "cool" to invade Venezuela: Former US national security adviser John Bolton has made explosive claims about his time working in the White House.
A new book by former US national security advisor John Bolton shows
US President Donald Trump to be "stunningly uninformed on how to run the
White House."
The New York Times, The Washington Post (WashPost) and The Wall Street Journal (WSJ) published excerpts from The Room Where It Happened: A White House Memoir on Wednesday.
The New York Times, The Washington Post (WashPost) and The Wall Street Journal (WSJ) published excerpts from The Room Where It Happened: A White House Memoir on Wednesday.
Here's a look at
some of the major claims:
Election help from China
Election help from China
Trump's
decisions were guided by his drive to win reelection, asserts Bolton. This includes a
June 2019 conversation with Chinese President Xi Jinping at a G20 summit in Japan.
"With only
interpreters present," said Bolton, Trump switched subject, "pleading
with Xi to ensure he'd win" the next US presidential election scheduled
for November 3.
"He
stressed the importance of [US] farmers, and increased Chinese purchases of
soybeans and wheat in the electoral outcome," asserted Bolton.
Uighur
internment camps 'right thing to do'
"Xi
explained to Trump why he was basically building concentration camps in
Xinjiang," China's western predominantly Muslim Uighur province, said
Bolton in the excerpt cited by the WSJ.
"According
to our interpreter, Trump said that Xi should go ahead with building the camps,
which he thought was exactly the right thing to do," Bolton said, alluding
to global alarm over the internment of 1 million people despite
China's denials.
Trump himself signed US legislation Wednesday
calling for sanctions over the repression of China's Uighur
Muslims, just as Bolton's book excerpts emerged.
Intelligence briefings rare
Inside the White
House, said Bolton, Trump typically had only two intelligence briefings a week "and
in most of those, he spoke at greater length than the briefers, often on
matters completely unrelated to the subjects at hand."
Trump, poorly
served by staff (asserted Bolton) "saw conspiracies behind rocks, and
remained stunningly uninformed on how the White House functioned, let alone the
huge federal government."
Trump, according
to Bolton, had demonstrated "fundamentally unacceptable behavior that
eroded the very legitimacy of the presidency."
Error-prone
statements
Bolton reported
that Trump repeatedly confused the current and former presidents of Afghanistan
— despite 18 years of US military intervention.
Former White
House chief of staff John Kelly had been asked by Trump if Finland — an EU
member nation — was part of Russia.
According to WashPost, at a meeting with Britain's former Prime Minister Theresa May, Trump
even interjected to ask if "London was a nuclear power."
On Trump's past
overtures to reclusive North Korean leader Kim Jong Un, Bolton
claimed that the US president cared little about denuclearization and only saw
his summits with Kim as "an exercise in publicity."
Saudi defense to distract from Ivanka
A 2018 text by
Trump in defense of Saudi Crown Prince Mohammad bin Salman — amid outcry over
the killing of
journalist Jamal Khashoggi — was reportedly to distract media
focus from his daughter Ivanka Trump.
[Ivanka Trump] had used her
personal email for government business, WashPost quoted Bolton as saying,
although Trump had lambasted his Democratic opponent Hillary Clinton for doing
the same during the 2016 US presidential election.
How did
Trump react?
The Trump
administration is trying to block publication of the book, scheduled for
release by Simon & Schuster next Tuesday. The Department of Justice sought
an emergency injunction late Wednesday.
But the
publisher said the move was "a frivolous, politically motivated exercise
in futility."”
PETE COMMENT
* Unfavourably that is. Johann Wolfgang von Goethe, is considered to have been a genius with an
acute curiosity about the world - all things Americans' mischoice of President isn't.
acute curiosity about the world - all things Americans' mischoice of President isn't.
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