Analysis Bolton departure says much about Trump

over 4 years in Roll Call

President Donald Trump’s announced firing of National Security Adviser John Bolton says more about Trump than about Bolton.
Tuesday’s move — Trump said on Twitter he had fired Bolton, but Bolton said he resigned — casts in bold relief several attributes of the president’s foreign policy and the president himself.
Trump is more than willing to talk to U.S. adversaries and less than willing to use America’s military. Trump is also his own man on policy matters, for better or worse. And he changes with head-spinning rapidity the people he turns to for advice — or more accurately, does not turn to.
On Capitol Hill on Tuesday, Republicans said the president has a right to pick his team, though some expressed dismay that the hawkish and bellicose Bolton was gone.
“The fact that he was a contrarian from time to time is an asset, not a liability,” said Sen. Mitt Romney of Utah, a member of the Foreign Relations Committee. “I’m very, very unhappy to hear that he’s leaving.”
Democrats had essentially the opposite take. They were happy to see Bolton gone but concerned about the turnover at the top echelons of the administration.
“I’m shaken by the instability of American foreign policy today,” said Sen. Christopher S. Murphy of Connecticut, also a member of Foreign Relations.


Trump’s tweeted announcement of Bolton’s dismissal was almost churlish. Trump said Bolton’s services “were no longer needed,” and that he “disagreed strongly with many of” Bolton’s suggestions.
The two men reportedly had personality clashes and they also differed on the best ways to address several foreign fronts.
On Afghanistan, Trump has been pushing a peace deal with the Taliban that would lead to phased U.S. troop withdrawals. Trump had wanted to bring Taliban leaders to Camp David on Sunday before he called it off the day before. Bolton did not like the emerging deal, or talking with the Taliban, and reportedly was excluded from meetings on the subject.
On North Korea, Bolton was more concerned about that country’s spate of recent missile tests than the president was, and Bolton was more skeptical about negotiating with North Korean ruler Kim Jong Un than Trump was.
On Iran, Bolton was said to be unhappy in June when the president called off at the last minute a military strike on that country after its forces had attacked several commercial tankers in the Persian Gulf. Bolton must have bristled when Trump said Monday he was open to talking with Iranian President Hassan Rouhani.
“If it was up to John, we’d be in four wars now,” Trump reportedly once said about Bolton, according to the New York Times.

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