Ex-Trump adviser says former president ‘hasn’t
got the brains’ for dictatorship
Despite disparagement from John Bolton, critics
maintain Trump is clear threat to democracy, given admiration for dictators
Edward
Helmore
Sat 30 Mar
2024 17.42 EDT
https://www.theguardian.com/us-news/2024/mar/30/john-bolton-donald-trump-dictatorship
A former
national security adviser in the Donald Trump White House has said that the
ex-president “hasn’t got the brains” to helm a dictatorship, despite his
admiration for such rulers.
In an
interview with the conservative French outlet Le Figaro, John Bolton, 75, was
asked whether Trump had tendencies that mirror dictators like the ones he has
previously praised. Bolton not only disparaged Trump’s intellectual capacity,
he also disparaged the former president’s professional background, exclaiming:
“He’s a property developer, for God’s sake!”
Now a vocal
critic of Trump, Bolton served as the former president’s national security
adviser from April 2018 to September 2019. Bolton had previously served as US
ambassador to the UN during George W Bush’s presidency, developing a reputation
as a foreign policy hawk.
Bolton’s
remarks to Le Figaro suggesting Trump is not smart enough to be a dictator will
almost certainly do little to allay fears on the political left at home or
abroad about a second Trump presidency.
After all,
Trump has suggested he plans to be a dictator, if only for the first day of his
presidency if he were re-elected.
Meanwhile,
as seeks a second term in the White House, the incumbent Joe Biden has warned
that Trump – the lone remaining contender for the Republican nomination – and
his allies are “determined to destroy American democracy”. Trump recently
provided fuel for that argument by hosting Hungary’s autocratic prime minister
Viktor Orbán at his Mar-a-Lago estate in Florida.
Trump,
furthermore, is known to have lavished praise on leaders considered opposed to
US democratic ideals and foreign policy interests, including North Korea’s Kim
Jong-un and China’s Xi Jinping.
Bolton
nonetheless claimed Trump – who is grappling with more than 80 pending criminal
charges as well as multimillion-dollar civil penalties – lacks the kind of
coherent political philosophy effective dictators require. He also said Trump
does not like to “get involved in policy analysis or decision-making in the way
we normally use those terms”.
For Trump,
Bolton added: “Everything is episodic, anecdotal, transactional. And everything
is contingent on the question of how this will benefit Donald Trump.”
Such
disparagements from Bolton – who advocated for the Trump White House to
withdraw from a deal with Iran aimed at dissuading it from developing nuclear
weapons – are not new. In a new foreword to his account of his work for Trump’s
presidency, The Room Where It Happened, Bolton warns that Trump was limited to
worrying about punishing his personal enemies and appeasing US adversaries
Russia and China.
“Trump is
unfit to be president,” Bolton writes. And though he may not think Trump can
foster a dictatorship, Bolton has warned: “If his first four years were bad, a
second four will be worse.”
Trump has
seemingly leaned into such predictions. He stoked alarm at a campaign rally
earlier in March when – while musing about how foreign car production affects
the US auto industry – he said: “If I don’t get elected, it’s going to be a
bloodbath for the whole – that’s going to be the least of it. It’s going to be
a bloodbath for the country.”
His use of
the word “bloodbath” recalled provocative language Trump has used previously,
including describing immigrants as “poisoning the blood of our country”.
He told a
rally in New Hampshire last year that he wanted to “root out the communists,
Marxists, fascists and the radical left thugs that live like vermin within the
confines of our country that lie and steal and cheat on elections”.
After that
remark, Biden attacked Trump for his use of the world “vermin”, saying Trump’s
language “echoes language you heard in Nazi Germany” as Adolf Hitler rose to
power and orchestrated the murders of 6 million Jews during the Holocaust.
In his
interview with Le Figaro, Bolton said it was “very likely” that Trump would act
on his threat to pull the US out of the Nato military alliance if he were
re-elected. In recent months, Trump has repeated his threat not to protect
countries whom he believes do not pay enough to maintain the security alliance,
and he claimed that European members of the alliance “laugh at the stupidity”
of the US.
“Trump,
when he has an idea, comes back to it again and again, then gets distracted,
forgets, but eventually comes back to it and acts on it,” Bolton warned.
“That’s why leaving Nato is a real possibility. A lot of people think it’s just
a negotiating tool, but I don’t think so.”
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