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Showing posts with label National Security Advisor. Show all posts
Showing posts with label National Security Advisor. Show all posts

Thursday, March 29, 2018

Trump's Appointment Of Bolton Sends A "We're Serious" Message To American's Enemies. No More Pussyfooting Around!

Bolton’s appointment — a brilliant “America first” move by President Donald Trump

www.israel-commentary.org
Redacted from an article originally published at Breitbart.com.
By Carolyn Glick
President Donald Trump’s decision to appoint former UN Ambassador John Bolton to serve as his National Security Advisor is arguably the most significant single step he has taken to date toward implementing his America First foreign policy.
The news hit America’s enemies and competitors — from Pyongyang to Teheran to Moscow to Beijing — like a wall of bricks Thursday night.
Early criticisms on the political right of Bolton’s appointment have centered on two points. First, it is argued that Bolton, who has been involved in U.S. foreign policymaking since the Reagan administration, is a creature of the Washington foreign policy swamp.
While it is true that Bolton is from Washington – or Baltimore, to be precise – and although it is true that he held senior foreign policy positions in both Bush administrations, he has always been a thorn in the side of the establishment rather than a member of that establishment.
For the better part of three decades, Bolton has bravely held positions that fly in the face of the establishment’s innate preference for appeasement. He was a vocal critic, for example, of then-President Bill Clinton’s disastrous nuclear diplomacy with North Korea.
The 1994 “Agreed Framework” that Clinton concluded with Pyongyang was touted as a peaceful resolution of the nuclear crisis with North Korea. In exchange for shuttering – but not destroying — its nuclear installations, North Korea received light water reactors from the U.S. and massive economic relief.
As Bolton warned it would, North Korea pocketed the concessions and gifts and continued to develop its nuclear weapons. In other words, far from preventing North Korea from developing nuclear weapons, the Agreed Framework preserved the North Korean nuclear program and enabled the regime to develop it effectively with U.S. assistance.
For his warnings, Bolton has been reviled as a “warmonger” and a “superhawk” by the foreign policy elite, which has gone out if its way to undercut him.
President George W. Bush appointed Bolton to serve as UN ambassador in 2005 in a recess appointment. Three moderate Republicans on the Senate Foreign Affairs Committee, Lincoln Chafee (RI), Chuck Hagel (ND), and George Voinovich (OH), signaled that they would oppose Bolton’s confirmation, blocking it.
At the time, rumors surfaced that then-Secretary of State Condoleezza Rice had quietly undercut Bolton’s confirmation in private conversations with senators. Those rumors were denied, and Rice publicly supported Bolton’s confirmation.
But in 2016, Rice, along with her mentor, former secretary of state James Baker, and her deputy and successor as National Security Advisor, Stephen Hadley, openly opposed President Trump’s intention to appoint Bolton Deputy Secretary of State. At the same time, all three lobbied Trump to appoint outgoing Secretary of State Rex Tillerson.
Bolton was a vocal opponent of Rice’s nuclear diplomacy with North Korea, undertaken after Pyongyang conducted its first nuclear test in 2006. He also opposed Rice’s pursuit of diplomatic ties with Iran through negotiations in Iraq. In both cases, as events showed, Bolton’s criticisms were all in place.
Rice’s nuclear diplomacy with North Korea emboldened the regime, and enabled its continued testing of nuclear weapons and development of ballistic missiles.
In Iran’s case, Rice’s negotiations with the Iranians in 2007 and 2008 set the stage for president Barack Obama’s nuclear talks with Tehran, which led to the 2015 nuclear deal. That deal, like the 1994 Agreed Framework with North Korea, preserves, rather than dismantles, Iran’s nuclear program while providing Iran with the financial means to expand its regional power through its terrorist proxies.
On the other hand, Bolton’s actions while in office brought extraordinary benefit to US national security. For instance, as Bush’s undersecretary of state for arms control and international security, in 2003 Bolton conceptualized and launched the Proliferation Security Initiative (PSI). The purpose of the PSI was to empower nations to interdict ships suspected of carrying weapons of mass destruction, delivery systems, and related materials from states and non-state actors of proliferation concern. Originally launched with 11 state members, today the PSI has 105 state members. Its members have interdicted multiple ships suspected of transferring illicit weapons systems to other states and to non-state actors.
Like Trump, Bolton is an opponent of international treaties that bind the U.S. in a manner that may be antithetical to its national interests, and prefers bilateral agreements that are tailor-made to defend America’s national interests. Bolton was a firm opponent of the Rome Treaty, which established the International Criminal Court. He worked avidly to vacate America’s signature from the treaty.
Due largely to his cogent opposition, the Bush administration decided not to submit the treaty to the Senate for ratification. Bolton concluded 100 bilateral treaties with nations committing them never to present complaints against U.S. military personnel before the tribunal.
Bolton’s nationalist convictions, and his refusal to join the foreign policy elite in its adoration of diplomacy, whatever the substance, over a firm, fact-based pursuit of America’s national interests lies at the heart of the foreign policy establishment’s opposition to him.
Indeed, the level of hostility the foreign policy establishment has directed towards Bolton over the years has been so ferocious, it is a testament to his diplomatic skills, and success, that he has managed to persevere in Washington, in and out of office for forty years.
As to the second charge by conservative critics, that Bolton is a neoconservative interventionist, the fact is that he is neither a neoconservative nor is he a knee jerk interventionist. Rather, Bolton supports the judicious use of American power in the world to advance U.S. national security and economic interests when the use of force is the best way to achieve those interests.
It is true that Bolton supported the U.S. invasion of Iraq in 2003. But it is also true that he opposed the nation-building strategy that stood at the root of America’s failure to achieve its aims there.
It is also true that like many of the neoconservatives, Bolton is a firm supporter of Israel. However, Bolton is actually far more supportive of Israel than the neoconservatives are. As a nationalist, he supports U.S. allies because he understands that the stronger America’s allies are, the better able they are to defend their interests. Since American allies – particularly Israel – share America’s interests, the more powerful they are, the more secure America’s interests are, and the less the U.S. needs to assert its power abroad.
Bolton supported — indeed, urged — Israel to destroy Iran’s nuclear installations during the Obama presidency. Rather than treating Israel as what Rice referred to patronizingly as America’s “special friend,” Bolton views Israel as America’s most powerful ally in the Middle East. He opposes Palestinian statehood and an Israeli withdrawal from the West Bank.

Bolton’s healthy skepticism for international agreementshis support for a foreign policy that prioritizes the advancement of American national interests over multilateral diplomacy; and his belief that Obama’s signature diplomatic achievement, the nuclear deal with Iran, is a disaster, all make him the senior diplomat most aligned with President Trump’s America First agenda in Washington.
The combination of Trump and Bolton no doubt puts fear in the hearts of America’s enemies, and heartens America’s allies. Given the hatred Bolton inspires in the Washington swamp, it took great courage for Trump to appoint him. America and its allies will be the primary beneficiaries of this bold move.

Thursday, March 22, 2018

Was H.R. Let Go Due To The Leaks?

Trump FIRES his national security advisor H.R. McMaster and brings in Bush's U.N. ambassador John Bolton in another White House shake-up

  • Trump's second national security advisor, three-star Army general H.R. McMaster is finally out after months of speculation
  • John Bolton, a hawkish conservative who was George W. Bush's ambassador to the United Nations will replace him April 9
  • Trump called McMaster, whom he has clashed with repeatedly 'a friend' and said: he as 'very thankful' for his service
  • Bolton is the son of a Baltimore firefighter who's known in Washington for his brush-like moustache and his curmudgeonly Fox News Channel appearances
  • He is a fierce opponent of the Obama-era Iran nuclear deal but a cheerleader for Bush's Iraq war – which Trump has called a waste of blood and treasure
  • Bolton's afternoon visit to the West Wing on Thursday was followed by a flurry of activity as press aides drafted statements and Trump was delayed a half-hour from a scheduled speech in the East Room
President Donald Trump will replace National Security Advisor H.R. McMaster with John Bolton on April 9, the White House announced late Thursday.
Bolton, a former U.S. Ambassador to the United Nations, is a hawkish conservative with a pugnacious streak – and a frequent guest on the Fox News Channel.
He is also a fierce opponent of the Obama-era Iran nuclear deal.
At one time a vacillating potential presidential candidate, the plainspoken yet curmudgeonly Bolton will become Trump's third chief national security aide in his 14-month presidency.
'I am pleased to announce that, effective 4/9/18, @AmbJohnBolton will be my new National Security Advisor,' the president tweeted.
Hiring and firing: John Bolton, the former ambassador the United Nations and a security hawk will come into the White House to replace General H.R. McMaster next month, ending months of speculation
Hiring and firing: John Bolton, the former ambassador the United Nations and a security hawk will come into the White House to replace General H.R. McMaster next month, ending months of speculation
Hiring and firing: John Bolton, the former ambassador the United Nations and a security hawk will come into the White House to replace General H.R. McMaster next month, ending months of speculation 
Unusual tribute: Trump, who was late to a Greek Independence Day Celebration reception in the East Room because of the shake-up, thanked McMaster for his service
Unusual tribute: Trump, who was late to a Greek Independence Day Celebration reception in the East Room because of the shake-up, thanked McMaster for his service

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'I am very thankful for the service of General H.R. McMaster who has done an outstanding job & will always remain my friend. There will be an official contact handover on 4/9.'
Bolton was on Fox News within an hour of Trump's tweet, saying 'I didn't really expect that announcement this afternoon.'
'But it's obviously a great honor, it's always an honor to serve our country.'
Trump had clashed with McMaster repeatedly in recent months, telling confidants that he considered the general a long-winded bore.
His departure comes barely a week after the president dramatically ousted former Secretary of State Rex Tillerson in a tweet.
Trump's national security staff appeared in disarray this week after he placed a congratulatory phone call to Russian President Vladimir Putin – who had won a fourth term in a lopsided election that critics called a corrupt 'sham.'
National security aides, it emerged in an embarrassing leak, had cautioned him in written briefing documents: "DO NOT CONGRATULATE" – in all capital letters – but he did it anyway, following the example of Barack Obama in 2012. 
'I was not involved in any way in the preparations for it,' Bolton said during his Fox interview, talking about the congratulations call.
'The election just took place. And I think it's a matter of courtesy more than anything else.'
Bolton appeared on the Fox News Channel within an hour of the White House announcing he'd been hired
Bolton appeared on the Fox News Channel within an hour of the White House announcing he'd been hired
But he was visibly upset that someone in Trump's inner circle would blab to the press that the president had ignored the advice of experts.
'When I read about the leak of the notes and the subject of the conversation, I was outraged by it,' he said. 'It recalled earlier in the administration when somebody was leaking transcripts of the president's conversations with foreign leaders. It's completely unacceptable.' 
'I think this is really a terrible reflection on the individual or individuals that did this,' he declared. 
Bolton was in the West Wing Thursday afternoon – along with his signature brush-like moustache – and met with Trump. 
By dinnertime the White House Press Office was a hive of activity, with Press Secretary Sarah Sanders, her deputy Raj Shah and outgoing communications director Hope Hicks huddling behind closed doors and taking brief interruptions only for trips down the hall to the Oval Office.
Because of the backstage frenzy, Trump was a half-hour late to a planned speech at an East Room event commemorating Greek Independence Day.
The president had told top aides that he wanted to put a new National Security Advisor in place before his planned meeting with North Korean despot Kim Jong-Un, a sit-down that is expected no sooner than late May. 
A White House official said Thursday that Trump and McMaster 'mutually agreed' that he would 'resign.'
'The two have been discussing this for some time,' the official added. 'The timeline was expedited as they both felt it was important to have the new team in place, instead of constant speculation.'
McMaster, a three-star Army general, said in a statement that he will retire from the armed forces over the summer, passing up what was thought to be a chance to land a command position with a fourth star.
'Throughout my career it has been my greatest privilege to serve alongside extraordinary servicemembers and dedicated civilians,' he said.
'I am thankful to President Donald J. Trump for the opportunity to serve him and our nation as national security advisor. I am grateful for the friendship and support of the members of the National Security Council who worked together to provide the President with the best options to protect and advance our national interests.'
Pack your bags: A White House official said Thursday that Trump and McMaster 'mutually agreed' that he would 'resign.' 'The two have been discussing this for some time,' the official added.
Pack your bags: A White House official said Thursday that Trump and McMaster 'mutually agreed' that he would 'resign.' 'The two have been discussing this for some time,' the official added.
The president said in his own statement that McMaster 'has served his country with distinction for more than 30 years. He has won many battles and his bravery and toughness are legendary.'
Trump credited McMaster with helping to revitalize U.S. relationships in the Middle East and bring North Korea's dictatorship to the brink of negotiations over its nuclear arsenal.
White House Chief of Staff John Kelly called him 'a true solider-scholar whose impact on the U.S. 'will be felt for years to come.'
Bolton's baptism into the Trump administration won't come without growing pains. He remains a firm believer in the wisdom of President George W. Bush's Iraq war, which Trump has routinely cast as a colossal mistake and a waste of money that could have been spent domestically. 
He has repeatedly drawn ire from libertarians like Kentucky Republican Sen. Rand Paul, who rhetorically body-slammed him in a 2016 op-ed when there was talk of Bolton becoming Trump's first secretary of state.
The son of a Baltimore firefighter, Paul wrote, was 'a longtime member of the failed Washington elite that Trump vowed to oppose, hell-bent on repeating virtually every foreign policy mistake the US has made in the last 15 years – particularly those Trump promised to avoid as president.'
'All nuance is lost on the man,' he continued. 'The fact that Russia has had a base in Syria for 50 years doesn't deter Bolton from calling for all out, no holds barred war in Syria. Bolton criticized the current administration for offering only a tepid war. For Bolton, only a hot-blooded war to create democracy across the globe is demanded.'
Asked about strident opposition from Paul and other lawmakers, a White House official responded Thursday: 'Why should we care?'
McMaster was originally hired as a quick-fix replacement for Gen. Michael Flynn, who was fired after mere weeks as National Security Advisor because he hid from Vice President Mike Pence and other officials the nature and extent of his contacts with Russia's U.S. ambassador.


Read more: http://www.dailymail.co.uk/news/article-5533961/Trump-FIRES-national-security-advisor-H-R-McMaster.html#ixzz5AX20mJbJ
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Friday, June 30, 2017

Will Obama Come Back From Indonesia? Will Rice's Testimony Cause Him To Seek Asylum? Can We Hope?


Obama Flown to Childhood Home of Indonesia as Susan Rice Agrees to Testify


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On Thursday night, former National Security Advisor Susan Rice announced that she will testify before the House Intelligence Committee in July as part of its investigation into the Trump/Russia 2016 election hacking investigation.
Her agreement to testify sent shockwaves throughout the political world. One person with close ties to Rice, however, seemed to ignore it altogether. Former President Barack Obama will continue to enjoy his (very lengthy) vacation, ABC News reported.
Obama is spending the next ten days in Indonesia, where he plans on visiting his childhood home of Jakarta. Obama lived in Jakarta from the age of 6 to 10.

It’s a little suspicious that Obama is jetting off right as his own adviser is testifying before an intelligence committee. The allegations that the Obama administration, including Rice, was behind the unmasking of individuals during the 2016 election is potentially one of the biggest scandals of Obama’s time in office.
CNN noted that Rice’s testimony will be behind closed doors, so we may never actually find out what she says to the committee, or more importantly, what she doesn’t say.
It is possible that Obama and Rice are in communication with each other while he is on vacation so that is how Obama is being kept up-to-date on these developments.
However, one would think it would hard to relax knowing that your national security advisor is going to be testifying about something that could permanently stain your presidency.
Fox News noted that the exact date of the testimony is not known yet. For her part, Rice has denied that she ever did anything wrong. She admitted that she requested the identity of individuals on occasion, but denied she ever leaked them to the press.
Whatever the case, hopefully this intelligence committee will be able to get to the bottom of the unmasking allegations and figure out exactly who was behind them.
President Donald Trump has suffered a lot in recent months from those who are determined to bring him down, no matter how many laws they break.

These people need to be held accountable to send a message to anyone considering illegally leaking information to the media.
Share this on Facebook and Twitter and let us know what you think Susan Rice’s testimony will reveal.
Why do you think of Obama jetting off to Indonesia?

Tuesday, April 4, 2017

Media Ignore, Downplay Susan Rice ‘Unmasking’ Revelations. Here Are 3 Major Reasons The Story Matters.

HOANG DINH NAM/AFP/Getty ImagesRice
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Despite bombshell reports yesterday claiming that Obama National Security 
Advisor Susan Rice “unmasked” members of the Trump campaign and Trump
 transition team while reviewing raw intelligence, that such unmasked
 information was widely distributed among top members of the Obama 
administration, and that Rice asked for continuous updates on communications
 between foreign targets and the Trump team after Trump won the Republican 
nomination, the media have decided that the story simply isn’t worth covering.
CNN’s Don Lemon stated that the media should not “aid and abet the
 people” creating a “diversion” over Susan Rice. As Newsbusters reports, CBS’
Margaret Brennan cited sources stating that Rice’s activity was perfectly normal
 and not improper. The New York Times echoed that claim. ABC News
and NBC News didn’t cover the story at all.
But the story is huge.
Here are three reasons why.
1. The Obama Administration Targeted The Trump Team. The story is huge
 because it’s just more evidence that the Obama administration used government
to target its political opposition. There’s no evidence Rice did anything illegal here.
 But it’s certainly an abuse of power to use the power of unmasking to keep tabs
 on your political opposition without any evidence of wrongdoing, as Rice
 reportedly did. If they’d found anything nefarious but non-criminal, what would
 they have done about it? Would that information have died a quiet death amidst
 the other intelligence reports spreading around the top levels of the Obama
 administration? Or would it have made its way to the press, as information
about Mike Flynn’s innocuous contacts with the Russian Ambassador did after
 the election? As The Wall Street Journal editorial board states, “Ms. Rice would
 have had no obvious need to unmask Trump campaign officials other than
political curiosity.”
2. Rice Lied. Last month, Rice told PBS Newshour that she knew “nothing”
about surveillance of the Trump team. But she knew that the Trump team was
 caught up in incidental surveillance, obviously. We know that Rice has a habit
of lying to protect her former boss, President Obama. Was this just another
 instance of such lying?
3. This Makes The Left’s Trump-Russia Theories More Strained. We’ve
been hearing for months that Team Trump had nefarious ties with the Russian
 government, that collusion took place between the Trump campaign and
Russian sources in order to coordinate the release of damaging information
 from the DNC hacks. But if Rice was monitoring all intelligence that came
 up regarding the Trump campaign, then where’s the evidence that any of
this supposedly nefarious activity was occurring?
The Rice story is a major story. It doesn’t mean that Americans don’t have a
right to be suspicious of supposed connections between Trump and Russia;
 it also doesn’t mean that Trump had his wires “tapped” or was the target of
“spying,” as Tucker Carlson put it last night on Fox News. But Trump and his
 team were a political target of the Obama administration, and they apparently
 did everything they could within the law, including abuse of power, to dig up
 information on the Republican running against their former Secretary of State.