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10/31/18 4:08 AM

#292637 RE: fuagf #291778

Why Is Donald Trump Still So Horribly Witless About the World?

"Is Iran really ‘the world’s leading state sponsor of terror’?"

By Robin Wright
August 4, 2017


“Lebanon is on the front lines in the fight against ISIS, Al Qaeda, and Hezbollah,”
President Trump pronounced, during an appearance with Lebanon’s Prime Minister,
Saad Hariri, in July.
Photograph by Carlos Barria / Reuters

Max Boot, a lifelong conservative who advised three Republican Presidential candidates on foreign policy, keeps a folder labelled “Trump Stupidity File” on his computer. It’s next to his “Trump Lies” file. “Not sure which is larger at this point,” he told me this week. “It’s neck-and-neck.”

Six months into the Trump era, foreign-policy officials from eight past Administrations told me they are aghast that the President is still so witless about the world. “He seems as clueless today as he was on January 20th,” Boot, who is now a senior fellow at the Council on Foreign Relations, said. Trump’s painful public gaffes, they warn, indicate that he’s not reading, retaining, or listening to his Presidential briefings. And the newbie excuse no longer flies.

“Trump has an appalling ignorance of the current world, of history, of previous American engagement, of what former Presidents thought and did,” Geoffrey Kemp, who worked at the Pentagon during the Ford Administration and at the National Security Council during the Reagan Administration, reflected. “He has an almost studious rejection of the type of in-depth knowledge that virtually all of his predecessors eventually gained or had views on.”

Criticism of Donald Trump among Democrats who served in senior national-security positions is predictable and rife. But Republicans—who are historically ambitious on foreign policy—are particularly pained by the President’s missteps and misstatements. So are former senior intelligence officials who have avoided publicly criticizing Presidents until now.

“The President has little understanding of the context”—of what’s happening in the world—“and even less interest in hearing the people who want to deliver it,” Michael Hayden, a retired four-star general and former director of both the C.I.A. and the National Security Agency, told me. “He’s impatient, decision-oriented, and prone to action. It’s all about the present tense. When he asks, ‘What the hell’s going on in Iraq?’ people around him have learned not to say, ‘Well, in 632 . . . ’ ” (That was the year when the Prophet Muhammad died, prompting the beginning of the Sunni-Shiite split.*)

“He just doesn’t have an interest in the world,” Hayden said.

I asked top Republican and intelligence officials from eight Administrations what they thought was the one thing the President needs to grasp to succeed on the world stage. Their various replies: embrace the fact that the Russians are not America’s friends. Don’t further alienate the Europeans, who are our friends. Encourage human rights—a founding principle of American identity—and don’t make priority visits to governments that curtail them, such as Poland and Saudi Arabia. Understand that North Korea’s nuclear program can’t be outsourced to China, which can’t or won’t singlehandedly fix the problem anyway, and realize that military options are limited. Pulling out of innovative trade deals, like the Trans-Pacific Partnership, will boost China’s economy and secure its global influence—to America’s disadvantage. Stop bullying his counterparts. And put the Russia case behind him by coöperating with the investigation rather than trying to discredit it.

Trump’s latest blunder was made during an appearance in the Rose Garden with Lebanon’s Prime Minister, Saad Hariri, on July 25th. “Lebanon is on the front lines in the fight against ISIS, Al Qaeda, and Hezbollah,” Trump pronounced. He got the basics really wrong .. https://www.whitehouse.gov/the-press-office/2017/07/25/remarks-president-trump-and-prime-minister-hariri-lebanon-joint-press . Hezbollah is actually part of the Lebanese government—and has been for a quarter century—with seats in parliament and Cabinet posts. Lebanon’s Christian President, Michel Aoun, has been allied .. http://www.jpost.com/Middle-East/Hezbollah-ally-Michel-Aoun-elected-President-of-Lebanon-471301 .. with Hezbollah for a decade. As Trump spoke, Hezbollah’s militia and the Lebanese Army were fighting ISIS and an Al Qaeda affiliate occupying a chunk of eastern Lebanon along its border with Syria. They won.

The list of other Trump blunders is long. In March, he charged .. https://www.washingtonpost.com/news/worldviews/wp/2017/03/18/no-germany-doesnt-owe-america-vast-sums-of-money-for-nato/ .. that Germany owed “vast sums” to the United States for NATO. It doesn’t .. http://www.politifact.com/truth-o-meter/statements/2017/mar/19/donald-trump/fact-check-donald-trump-says-germany-owes-vast-sum/ . No NATO member pays the United States—and never has—so none .. https://www.nytimes.com/2017/05/26/world/europe/nato-trump-spending.html .. is in arrears. In an interview .. https://blogs.wsj.com/washwire/2017/04/12/wsj-trump-interview-excerpts-china-north-korea-ex-im-bank-obamacare-bannon/ .. with the Wall Street Journal, in April, Trump claimed that Korea “actually used to be part of China.” Not true .. https://www.washingtonpost.com/news/fact-checker/wp/2017/04/19/trumps-claim-that-korea-actually-used-to-be-a-part-of-china/ . After he arrived in Israel from Saudi Arabia, in May, Trump said that he had just come from the Middle East. (Did he even look at a map?) During his trip to France, in July, the President confused Napoleon Bonaparte, the diminutive emperor who invaded Russia and Egypt, with Napoleon III, who was France’s first popularly elected President, oversaw the design of modern Paris, and is still the longest-serving head of state since the French Revolution (albeit partly as an emperor, too). And that’s before delving into his demeaning tweets about other world leaders and flashpoints.
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The sheer scale of his lack of knowledge is what has astounded me—and I had low expectations to begin with,” David Gordon, the director of the State Department’s policy-planning staff under Condoleezza Rice, during the Bush Administration, told me.

Trump’s White House has also flubbed basics. It misspelled the name of Britain’s Prime Minister three times in its official schedule of her January visit. After it dropped the “H” in Theresa May, several British papers noted that Teresa May is a soft-porn actress best known for her films “Leather Lust” and “Whitehouse: The Sex Video.” In a statement last month, the White House called .. https://www.washingtonpost.com/news/the-fix/wp/2017/07/08/white-house-press-office-misidentifies-japanese-prime-minister-abe-as-president/ .. Xi Jinping the President of the “Republic of China”—which is the island of Taiwan—rather than the leader of the People’s Republic, the Communist mainland. The two nations have been epic rivals in Asia for more than half a century. The White House also misidentified Shinzo Abe as the President of Japan—he’s the Prime Minister—and called the Prime Minister of Canada “Joe” instead of Justin Trudeau.

Trump’s policy mistakes, large and small, are taking a toll. “American leadership in the world—how do I phrase this, it’s so obvious, but apparently not to him—is critical to our success, and it depends eighty per cent on the credibility of the President’s word,” John McLaughlin, who worked at the C.I.A. under seven Presidents, from Richard Nixon to George W. Bush, and ended up as the intelligence agency’s acting director, told me. “Trump thinks having a piece of chocolate cake at Mar-a-Lago bought him a relationship with Xi Jinping. He came in as the least prepared President we’ve had on foreign policy," McLaughlin added. “Our leadership in the world is slipping away. It’s slipping through our hands.”

And a world in dramatic flux compounds the stakes. Hayden cited the meltdown in the world order that has prevailed since the Second World War; the changing nature of the state and its power; China’s growing military and economic power; and rogue nations seeking nuclear weapons, among others. “Yet the most disruptive force in the world today is the United States of America,” the former C.I.A. director said.

The closest similarity to the Trump era was the brief Warren G. Harding Administration, in the nineteen-twenties, Philip Zelikow, who worked for the Reagan and two Bush Administrations, and who was the executive director of the 9/11 Commission, told me. Harding, who died, of a heart attack, after twenty-eight months in office, was praised because he stood aside and let his Secretary of State, Charles Evans Hughes, lead the way. Hughes had already been governor of New York, a Supreme Court Justice, and the Republican Presidential nominee in 1916, losing narrowly to Woodrow Wilson, who preceded Harding.

Under Trump, the White House has seized control of key foreign-policy issues. The President’s son-in-law, Jared Kushner, a real-estate developer, has been charged with brokering Middle East peace, navigating U.S.-China relations, and the Mexico portfolio. In April, Kushner travelled to Iraq to help chart policy against ISIS. Washington scuttlebutt is consumed with tales of how Trump has stymied his own Secretary of State, Rex Tillerson, the former C.E.O. of ExxonMobil.

“The national-security system of the United States has been tested over a period of seventy years,” John Negroponte, the first director of National Intelligence and a former U.N. Ambassador, told me. “President Trump disregards the system at his peril.”

Trump’s contempt for the U.S. intelligence community has also sparked alarm. “I wish the President would rely more on, and trust more, the intelligence agencies and the work that is produced, sometimes at great risk to individuals around the world, to inform the Commander-in-Chief,” Mitchell Reiss, who was the chief of the State Department’s policy-planning team under Secretary of State Colin Powell, told me.

Republican critics are divided on whether Trump can grow into the job. “Trump is completely irredeemable,” Eliot A. Cohen, who was a counsellor to Condoleezza Rice at the State Department, told me. “He has a feral instinct for self-survival, but he’s unteachable. The ban on Muslims coming into the country and building a wall, and having the Mexicans pay for it, that was all you needed to know about this guy on foreign affairs. This is a man who is idiotic and bigoted and ignorant of the law.” Cohen was a ringleader of an open letter warning, during the campaign, that Trump’s foreign policy was “wildly inconsistent and unmoored.”

But other Republicans from earlier Administrations still hold out hope. “Whenever Trump begins to learn about an issue—the Middle East conflict or North Korea—he expresses such surprise that it could be so complicated, after saying it wasn’t that difficult,” Gordon, from the Bush Administration, said. “The good news, when he says that, is it means he has a little bit of knowledge.” So far, however, the learning curve has been pitifully—and dangerously—slow.

* This post has been updated to clarify the contextual significance of the year 632.

Robin Wright has been a contributing writer to The New Yorker since 1988. She is the author of “Rock the Casbah: Rage and Rebellion Across the Islamic World .. https://goo.gl/sVh73C .” Read more » .. https://www.newyorker.com/contributors/robin-wright


https://www.newyorker.com/news/news-desk/why-is-donald-trump-still-so-horribly-witless-about-the-world

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fuagf

06/02/19 12:02 AM

#313439 RE: fuagf #291778

Iran rejects Saudi Arabia's 'baseless' allegations at Arab summit

"Is Iran really ‘the world’s leading state sponsor of terror’?"

Iran's foreign ministry spokesperson denounces Saudi King Salman's accusations of Tehran meddling in the region.

31 May 2019

VIDEO

more on Saudi Arabia

Mecca summit supports Palestinians, backs Saudis in Iran standoff
https://www.aljazeera.com/news/2019/06/mecca-summit-supports-palestinians-backs-saudis-iran-standoff-190601063421981.html

Hezbollah chief warns war against Iran would 'engulf region'
https://www.aljazeera.com/news/2019/05/hezbollah-chief-warns-war-iran-engulf-region-190531205107426.html

Does Saudi Arabia have support to face Iran?
https://www.aljazeera.com/programmes/insidestory/2019/05/saudi-arabia-support-face-iran-190531180420233.html

Saudi FM: Gulf solution possible if Qatar returns to 'right path'
https://www.aljazeera.com/news/2019/05/saudi-fm-gulf-solution-qatar-returns-path-190531080845299.html

Iran .. https://www.aljazeera.com/topics/country/iran.html .. has rejected what it calls "baseless" accusations made at an Arab summit, saying Saudi Arabia .. https://www.aljazeera.com/topics/country/saudi-arabia.html .. had joined the United States .. https://www.aljazeera.com/topics/country/united-states.html .. and Israel in a "hopeless" effort to mobilise regional opinion against Tehran, state media reported.

Saudi Arabia's king told an emergency Arab summit on Thursday that decisive action was needed to stop Iranian "escalations" in the region following attacks on oil assets .. https://www.aljazeera.com/news/2019/05/sabotage-attacks-gulf-oil-vessels-190514184006381.html .. in the Gulf, as American officials said a US military deployment had deterred Tehran.

"Foreign Ministry spokesman Abbas Mousavi ... rejected the baseless accusations by the heads of certain Arab countries ... and said: 'We see the Saudi effort to mobilise [regional] opinion as part of the hopeless process followed by America and the Zionist regime against Iran'," state news agency IRNA reported on Friday.

OPINION
US 'maximum pressure' on Iran is empowering Russia in Syria
by Ali Bakeer
https://www.aljazeera.com/indepth/opinion/maximum-pressure-iran-empowering-russia-syria-190530125912225.html

The comments by King Salman Abdul Aziz came as Saudi Arabia hosted in Mecca emergency meetings of the Gulf Cooperation Council (GCC), the Organisation of the Islamic Conference (OIC .. https://www.aljazeera.com/topics/organisations/gcc.html ) and the Arab League to counter what it said was Iran's growing influence.

A Gulf-Arab statement and a separate communique issued after the wider summit both supported the right of Saudi Arabia and the United Arab Emirates (UAE .. https://www.aljazeera.com/topics/country/united-arab-emirates.html ) to defend their interests after the attacks on oil pumping stations in the kingdom and tankers off the UAE coast.

But in a sign of regional tensions, Iraq, which has good ties with neighbouring Iran and the US, said it objected to the Arab communique, which stated that any cooperation with Tehran should be based on "non-interference in other countries".

Reporting from Tehran, Al Jazeera's Zein Basravi said Iran knows that the final communique at the meeting is "not necessarily the real opinion of all the members of the GCC".

"He [Mousavi] also rejected and condemned allegations against Iran for interfering in the affairs of neighbouring countries, as the Saudis said in the meeting," he said.

Basravi said the Iranian leader also said "Saudi Arabia was misusing its role as host for the OIC meeting to spread ... divisive policies among Muslim leaders".

'Naked aggression'

Addressing Arab and Muslim leaders earlier, King Salman pressed the international community to "use all means to stop Iran from interfering in other countries' affairs".

VIDEO - Saudi summit held to try to resolve US-Iran tensions (2:58)

He said Tehran's actions threatened international maritime trade and global oil supplies in a "glaring violation of UN treaties".

"This is naked aggression against our stability and international security," the Saudi ruler told the gathered officials.

Iran's "recent criminal acts ... require that all of us work seriously to preserve the security... of GCC countries," the king added.

In his opening remarks, Saudi Foreign Minister Ibrahim al-Assaf said the alleged sabotage of oil tankers off the coast of the United Arab Emirates and drone attacks on a Saudi oil pipeline by Yemen's Houthi rebels .. https://www.aljazeera.com/topics/subjects/houthis.html .. in recent weeks threaten the global economy and endanger regional and international security.

"We should confront it with all means of force and firmness," he said.

An Iranian official was at the meeting where Assaf spoke. Tehran has denied any involvement in the attacks.

US NSA John Bolton claimed on Wednesday Iranian mines were "almost certainly .. https://www.aljazeera.com/news/2019/05/bolton-iranian-mines-uae-oil-tanker-attacks-190529062914984.html " used in the tanker operation. He provided no proof, however.

An Iranian official dismissed Bolton's remarks as "a ludicrous claim".

Animosity has risen between the US and Iran after Washington pulled out of a multinational nuclear deal over Tehran's alleged contravention of its terms. The US then reimposed sanctions and boosted its military presence in the Gulf.

On Friday, the UN atomic watchdog said Iran has continued to stay within the limitations set by the 2015 nuclear deal, but reported its stockpiles of low-enriched uranium and heavy water are growing and raised questions fro the first time about Iran's adherence to a key provision intended to limit the country's use of advanced centrifuges.

Qatar blockade

READ MORE
Qatari PM to attend Gulf summit in Saudi Arabia amid blockade
https://www.aljazeera.com/news/2019/05/qatari-pm-attend-gulf-summit-saudi-arabia-blockade-190529150709621.html

King Salman invited Qatar's Emir Sheikh Tamim bin Hamad Al Thani .. https://www.aljazeera.com/topics/people/tamim-bin-hamad-al-thani.html , whose country is home to the largest US military base in the region, to the Mecca summit.

Qatar's Prime Minister Sheikh Abdullah bin Nasser Al Thani attended the meeting instead, the highest Qatari official to visit the kingdom since Saudi Arabia, UAE, Bahrain and Egypt imposed a land, sea, and air blockade on the gas-rich nation in June 2017.

Video images of Thursday's gathering showed Sheikh Abdullah shaking King Salman's hand.

Thomas Pickering [https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Thomas_R._Pickering#Early_career], a former US ambassador to the United Nations, told Al Jazeera the Qatari prime minister's presence at the summit was an important step.

"The invitation has opened the door more than just a little bit. His [Sheikh Abdullah's] presence there and the handshake is a sign that Saudi Arabia wants unity in the Gulf Cooperation Council and that unity is spreading," said Pickering.

Analysts said the emergency summit will be watched closely for whether the Saudis will endorse Qatar .. https://www.aljazeera.com/topics/country/qatar.html .. as a mediator in the dispute with Iran the same way the US has.

Earlier this month, Al Jazeera reported that Qatar's foreign minister had held talks .. https://www.aljazeera.com/news/2019/05/iran-halts-commitments-2015-nuclear-deal-190515060220386.html .. with his Iranian counterpart in Tehran, aiming to defuse the escalating tensions in the Gulf.

"Washington seems to have bet on Doha to de-escalate by opening back channels with Tehran. The question is whether Saudi and especially UAE can agree on Doha as a mediator," Andreas Krieg from King's College London told Al Jazeera.

"The fact that the Saudis contacted the emir of Qatar directly suggests that the tension with Iran is taken very seriously in Riyadh. So, the kingdom is ready to build a broader-than-usual consensus on how to deal with Iran," Krieg said.

Gulf states have a joint defence force under the GCC, but the 39-year-old alliance has been fractured by the Qatar blockade.
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VIDEO - Is the US media beating the drums of war on Iran?

SOURCE: Al Jazeera and news agencies

https://www.aljazeera.com/news/2019/05/iran-rejects-saudi-arabia-baseless-allegations-arab-summit-190531060914467.html

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.. one of three replies ..
Why Mattis Had to Go
[...]
It wasn’t, apparently, Trump’s deployment of U.S. troops to the Mexican border in a transparent effort to swing the November midterms that did it; Mattis went along with that. It wasn’t the president’s repeated snipes at NATO, the trans-Atlantic alliance that has underpinned American national security for seven decades; nor was it his assiduous adoption of Kremlin talking points or his periodic eruptions at U.S. allies—it was basically all of that, Mattis made clear in his extraordinary resignation letter, which contains not a scintilla of praise for his boss and outlines several major points of disagreement.
P - “Because you have the right to have a Secretary of Defense whose views are better aligned with yours,” Mattis wrote, “I believe it is right for me to step down from my position.”
P - Obviously, Mattis couldn’t abide Trump’s sudden and apparently unilateral decision to pull U.S. troops out of Syria, where they were supporting predominantly Kurdish forces in fighting against ISIS and keeping an eye on an encroaching Iran. Word soon leaked out, too, that Trump plans to yank a big chunk of U.S. forces from Afghanistan, a flailing war effort the president has long questioned as pointless.
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