By: Marjorie Kohen
Trump Finds Fellow Bully in Bolton
Nothing Donald Trump has done since his inauguration 14 months ago is more dangerous – to the United States, and indeed, to the world – than his selection of John Bolton for National Security Adviser. It is not surprising the president would feel most comfortable receiving advice from a fellow bully.
Trump bullies people on a nearly daily basis, directing his ire at
immigrants, Muslims, women, LBGTQ people, the poor and the environment. He
hurls Twitter attacks at those who disagree with him.
The president has encouraged police brutality, suggesting in a Long
Island speech that law enforcement officers bang suspects’ heads against police
car doors. “Please don’t be too nice” when arresting people, Trump advised.
“Like when you guys put somebody in the car, and you’re protecting their head,
you know, the way you put your hand over” their head, “I said, ‘You can take
the hand away, OK?’”
After being told someone might throw tomatoes at him at a campaign
rally, Trump urged his supporters to “knock the crap out of them … I promise
you, I will pay for the legal fees.” He stated on Fox News that a Black
Lives Matter activist who was attacked at a Trump rally “should have been
roughed up.”
Trump’s fellow bully Bolton also engages in abusive behavior.
Melody Townsel, working on a USAID project in Kyrgyzstan, became the object of
Bolton’s wrath in 1994. Townsel had complained about incompetence, poor
contract performance and inadequate funding of the project by a contractor
Bolton represented. In a letter to the Senate Foreign Relations Committee,
Townsel wrote that Bolton “proceeded to chase me through the halls of a Russian
hotel throwing things at me, shoving threatening letters under my door, and
generally behaving like a madman.” Townsel claimed Bolton threatened employees
and contractors who refused to cooperate with him. She maintained Bolton’s
behavior “wasn’t just unforgivable, it was pathological.”
Carl W. Ford, former Assistant Secretary for Intelligence and
Research, and a conservative Republican, called Bolton a “kiss-up, kick-down
sort of guy” who “abuses his authority with little people,” characterizing him
as a “serial abuser.” Bolton chairs the Gatestone Institute, which publishes
hateful, racist anti-Muslim rhetoric, calling refugees rapists and hosts of
infectious diseases.
Bolton was such a lightning rod that in 2005, even the
GOP-controlled Senate refused to confirm him as US
ambassador to the United Nations. To avoid the need for Senate confirmation,
George W. Bush named Bolton to the post in a recess appointment.
But Bolton doesn’t just bully individuals. He pushed for the 2003
invasion of Iraq, advocates military attacks on North Korea and Iran, favors
Israel’s annexation of the Palestinian West Bank, and falsely claimed that Cuba
had biological weapons.
As undersecretary of state for Arms Control and International
Security in the Bush administration, Bolton was instrumental in withdrawing the
United States from the 1972 Anti-Ballistic Missile Treaty, which heightened the risk of nuclear war with Russia.
Anthony J. Blinken, deputy secretary of state in the Obama
administration, wrote in The New York Times, “Mr. Bolton had a habit of
twisting intelligence to back his bellicosity and sought to remove anyone who
objected.”
Colin Kahl and Jon Wolf, writing in Foreign Policy, described
Bolton’s “pattern of warping and misusing intelligence to build the case for
war with rogue states; a disdain for allies and multilateral institutions; a
blind faith in US military power and the benefits of regime change; and a
tendency to see the ends as justifying the means, however horrific.”
When he left his position at USAID in the late 1980s, Bolton’s
colleagues presented him with a bronzed hand grenade.
Bolton Eschews
Diplomacy and Slams the UN
Bolton sees every international situation as an opportunity to make
war, notwithstanding the United Nations Charter that mandates the peaceful
resolution of disputes and forbids military force except in self-defense.
After two world wars claimed millions of lives, countries around
the globe – including the United States – came together and established the
United Nations system, “to save succeeding generations from the scourge of
war.”
Yet in 1994, Bolton famously claimed, “there is no such thing as
the United Nations.” He stated caustically, “If the UN Secretariat building in
New York lost 10 stories, it wouldn’t make a bit of difference.”
When Bolton officially withdrew the US signature from the
International Criminal Court treaty, he declared it “the happiest moment of my
government service.”
Bolton Led the
Charge to Invade Iraq
Bolton led the charge to invade Iraq and
forcibly change its regime in 2003, falsely claiming that President Saddam
Hussein had weapons of mass destruction (WMD). In 2002, former UN weapons
inspector Scott Ritter affirmed that Hussein had destroyed 90-95% of its WMD;
the remaining 5%, Ritter said, “doesn’t even constitute a weapons program . . .
just because we can’t account for it doesn’t mean Iraq retains it. There’s no
evidence Iraq retains this material.”
To bolster the case for war, Bolton pushed Bush to include in his
State of the Union address the false statement that Iraq was seeking uranium
from Niger, over the objection of the State Department.
Before the US invaded Iraq, Mohamed ElBaradei, director of the
International Atomic Energy Agency, said there was no evidence Hussein had any
viable nuclear program. Hans Blix, chief inspector of the UN Monitoring,
Verification and Inspection Commission, verified that weapons inspectors had
found no evidence of WMD.
In 2002, Bolton orchestrated the ouster of Jose Bustani, head of
the Organization for the Prohibition of Chemical Weapons, to prevent him from
inspecting and revealing that Hussein had no chemical weapons. When Bustani
argued he should stay in the post, Bolton threatened, “You have to be ready to
face the consequences, because we know where your kids live.”
No WMD were found after the US invasion of Iraq. Nearly one million
Iraqis were killed and the US-led regime change led to a vacuum of leadership
that was filled by ISIS.
A 2006 report prepared under the direction of former Rep. John
Conyers (D-Michigan) concluded that “members of the Bush Administration
misstated, overstated, and manipulated intelligence with regards to linkages
between Iraq and Al Qaeda; the acquisition of nuclear weapons by Iraq; the
acquisition of aluminum tubes to be used as uranium centrifuges; and the
acquisition of uranium from Niger.” Those “misstatements were in contradiction
of known countervailing intelligence information, and were the result of
political pressure and manipulation.” A key source of that pressure and
manipulation was Bolton.
In spite of the horror the US military unleashed on Iraq 15 years
ago, Bolton wrote in 2016 that the removal of Hussein was “a military success
of stunning scope and effectiveness, achieved in just three weeks.”
After the disastrous US invasion of Iraq, Bolton tried to get the
Iran file removed from ElBaradei in order to lay the groundwork for an
unjustified attack on Iran.
Bolton Wants to Rip
Up the Iran Nuclear Agreement
Bolton favors bombing Iran and changing its regime and
he opposes the Iran Nuclear Agreement. He has
advocated an Israeli strike on Iran’s nuclear facilities and encouraged the
United States to support it.
In the 2015 Joint Comprehensive Plan of Action (JCPOA), Iran
agreed to cut back its nuclear program and in return, received billions of
dollars of relief from punishing sanctions. Iran has complied with its obligations
under the deal, says a bipartisan group of over 100 national security veterans
called the National Coalition to Prevent Nuclear Weapons.
Under the US Iran Nuclear Agreement Review Act, the president
must decide every 90 days whether Iran remains in compliance with the JCPOA and
whether the agreement continues to serve US interests. Trump reluctantly
certified Iran’s compliance in April and July 2017. But in October, to the
consternation of his secretary of state, secretary of defense, and the chairman
of the Joint Chiefs of Staff, Trump refused to certify Iran’s compliance with
the agreement. He did not, however, pull out of the deal at that time.
On May 12, Trump will decide whether or not to end US participation
in the agreement. Bolton and CIA director Mike Pompeo, Trump’s nominee for
Secretary of State, both favor renouncing the deal. If the US breaches the
agreement, Iran may well resume the unlimited production of nuclear fuel.
“Bolton is an unhinged advocate for waging World War III,”
according to Trita Parsi, president of the National Iranian American Council.
“Bolton now represents the greatest threat to the United States,” he added,
stating, “Trump may have just effectively declared war on Iran.”
Bolton Wants to
Attack North Korea
In February, contrary to the overwhelming weight of legal
authority, Bolton argued in a Wall Street Journal op-ed that mounting a first
strike on North Korea would comply with international law.
Bolton stated on Fox News, “I think the only diplomatic option left
is to end the regime in North Korea by effectively having the South take it
over.” During another Fox appearance, Bolton declared, “the way you eliminate
the North Korean nuclear program is to eliminate North Korea.” He maintained
that North Korea having nuclear weapons was worse than the “millions” of North
and South Koreans who would be killed if the US attacked North Korea.
If Trump destroys the Iran deal, that will send a dangerous message
to Pyongyang that his word cannot be trusted. North and South Korea are slated
to meet in April and Trump has indicated he will meet with North Korean
President Kim Jong-Un. Diplomacy at this moment is critical.
Bolton has provocatively suggested a linkage between Iran and North
Korea on nuclear weapons. In January, he wrote in the Wall Street Journal,
“Little is known, at least publicly, about longstanding Iranian-North Korean
cooperation on nuclear and ballistic-missile technology. It is foolish to play
down Tehran’s threat because of Pyongyang’s provocations. They are two sides of
the same coin.”
The dangers inherent in following Bolton’s favored
policies in Iran and North Korea cannot be overestimated.
Bolton Falsely
Claimed Cuba Had Biological Weapons
Bolton argued unsuccessfully for the inclusion of Cuba in Bush’s
“axis of evil” (which consisted of Iraq, Iran and North Korea). Bolton
advocated a military attack on Cuba one year before Bush invaded Iraq. After
Bolton falsely claimed Cuba was developing a bio-warfare capacity, a
congressional investigation found no evidence to support such an allegation.
As Nicole Deller and John Burroughs from the Lawyers’ Committee on
Nuclear Policy have documented, Bolton is widely credited with the defeat of
the Protocol to the Biological Weapons Convention, which would have created an
inspection system to protect us against those deadly weapons.
Bolton Wants to Give
“Pieces” of Palestine to Jordan and Egypt
Bolton’s solution to the Israeli-Palestinian conflict is to give
“pieces” of Gaza to Egypt and “pieces” of the West Bank to Jordan since, he
thinks, Palestine is composed of “bits and pieces” of the former Ottoman
Empire.
In January, Bolton wrote in The Hill, “Once it becomes clear the
two-state solution is finally dead, Jordan should again be asked to
exercise control over suitably delineated portions of the West Bank and
have the monarchy’s religious role for holy sites like the Temple Mount
reaffirmed. Accepting Jordan’s sovereignty would actually benefit
Palestinians, as would Egyptian sovereignty over Gaza, by tying these
areas into viable, functioning states, not to the illusion of “Palestine.”
Neither Jordan nor Egypt supports this proposal, and Palestinians
are vehemently opposed to it. Jewish Voice for Peace stated, “The appointment
of Bolton is a complete disaster for the Middle East, the US, and the entire
world.”
Bolton’s Appointment
Is “a Disaster for Our Country”
The National Security Adviser’s job is to inform the president of
the different options that affect national security, briefing him on the
National Security Council’s findings. Bolton is such an ideologue, he will
invariably slant his advice toward waging war. Bolton is so extreme, he
reportedly promised Trump he “wouldn’t start any wars” if appointed, according
to CNN. In light of Trump’s aversion to reading daily intelligence reports,
Bolton will play an even greater role in the formulation of policy.
Unfortunately, National Security Adviser is not a cabinet position,
so Bolton doesn’t need Senate confirmation.
Former President Jimmy Carter said in an interview with USA Today
that Bolton’s appointment is “a disaster for our country,” adding it may be
“one of the worst mistakes” of the Trump presidency.
But as Stormy Daniels and Robert Mueller close in on Trump, the
president will seek to create a major distraction. With bully Bolton egging him
on, that may well be a military attack on North Korea or Iran. The consequences
would prove disastrous.
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