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FOCUS: Richard Nixon, Donald Trump and the 'Breach of Faith' Print
Written by <a href="index.php?option=com_comprofiler&task=userProfile&user=45295"><span class="small">Bob Bauer, Lawfare</span></a>   
Saturday, 18 August 2018 10:40

Bauer writes: "By now, almost two years into his administration, it is clear that this is who he is."

Former president Richard Nixon. (photo: AP)
Former president Richard Nixon. (photo: AP)


Richard Nixon, Donald Trump and the 'Breach of Faith'

By Bob Bauer, Lawfare

18 August 18

 

ournalist and presidential historian Theodore H. White thought of Richard Nixon’s downfall as the consequence of a “breach of faith.” Perhaps it was a “myth,” White wrote, but it was important nonetheless that Americans believe that this office, conferring extraordinary power, would “burn the dross from [the president’s] character; his duties would, by their very weight, make him a superior man, fit to sustain the burden of the law, wise and enduring enough to resist the clash of all selfish interests.”

A president who frustrates this expectation, failing to exhibit the transformative effects of oath and office, will have broken faith with the American public. And yet, White believed that Nixon’s presidency had been an aberration. “[M]any stupid, hypocritical and limited men had reached that office,” he wrote. “But all, when publicly summoned to give witness, chose to honor the legends” of what the office required of a president’s behavior in office.

White’s understanding of what constitutes a “breach of faith” is well worth recalling in considering the presidency of Donald Trump. As White understood it, the term encompassed more than illegal conduct or participation in its cover-up. It was a quality of leadership—or more to the point, the absence of critical qualities—that defined a president’s “betrayal” of his office. What elevated Nixon’s misdeeds to a fatal constitutional flaw, forcing him to surrender his presidency, was the breaking of faith with the American people. Nixon brushed the legal and ethical limits on pursuing his own political and personal welfare. He held grudges and was vindictive; he looked to destroy his enemies rather than simply prevailing over them in hard, clean fights. He lied repeatedly to spare himself the costs of truth-telling.

All of this may be said of Donald Trump, but for a key difference: Nixon was anxious to conceal much of this behavior from public view.

Much has been said and written about Trump’s leadership style: the chronic resort to false claims; the incessant tweeting of taunts and personal attacks on his adversaries; the open undermining of members of his own administration; the abandonment of norms; the refusal to credit, respect or support the impartial administration of justice where his personal or political interests are stake; and the use of office to promote his personal business enterprises. By now, almost two years into his administration, it is clear that this is who he is.

Like Nixon, Trump seems to believe that his behavior is justified by the extraordinary and ruthless opposition of an “establishment”—comprised mainly of the media, the opposition party, and intellectuals—to his election and his politics. The similarity in these two presidents’ outlooks is striking. In the tape of an Oval Office conversation of March 13, 1973, as the Watergate scandal escalated, Nixon’s legal adviser, John Dean, suggested that the president should tell all. Dean argued that without a full account, the “press, the Democrats, the intellectuals” would never believe Nixon’s side of the story. In reply, the president snapped:

They got the hell kicked out of them in the election … Basically, it’s the media, uh, I mean it’s the Establishment. The Establishment is dying, and so they’ve got to show that … ‘well it just is wrong [the election] because … of this [Watergate].’ … They are trying to use this to smear the whole thing.

This is how Nixon saw things in comments he never expected would see the light of day. White argues that the exposure of Nixon’s thinking was a critically significant consequence of the release of the Watergate tapes: They were important not only as the “smoking gun” evidence that sealed Nixon’s fate, but because they captured the president in the raw, as he spoke and deliberated. They revealed “a vulgarity of language, an indecision of tone and a profanity of such commonness as to make the imaginative level of Lyndon Johnson’s obscenities seem artful by comparison.” Nixon was not leading, he was conspiring; and the coarse language he used seemed to fit well with the underhanded strategies he was devising to save himself.

So Nixon’s breach of faith consisted, at least in part, of how he led, not just of what he did. The office failed to “burn the dross from his character.” He was shown to be unfit. Republican leaders in Congress who read the tape transcripts began to turn decisively away from him. His public support withered. It matters, of course, that in what they deemed the president’s interest, his aides had planned and committed clearly illegal activities. As importantly, at critical moments when Nixon could have chosen differently, the president lied about what he knew and when, while actively plotting to obstruct justice. But in White’s account, the decisive breach of faith lay in how this had come to this pass: the sort of leader Nixon was. On this question, and not only as evidence of illegal conduct, the tapes were devastating.

Trump shows himself all the time to be what Nixon sought to conceal. Trump repeats his version of Nixon’s counter-“establishment” narrative, publicly insisting that it explains why he must reject the legitimacy of the inquiry into what may prove to be his Watergate—Russian electoral interference and possible collusion by his campaign. As Trump sees the world, those who would question his campaign’s political involvement with Russia are liars, engaged in a cynical “witch hunt” in order to taint his election and bring him down.

But unlike Nixon, Trump does not feel that his office compels him to honor—even to pay lip service—to the legal process. He has never suggested, as did Nixon when speaking to the country in April 1974, that his “first and obvious” responsibility is “to find out just exactly what had happened and who was involved … [to see] that justice was done, fairly and according to the law.” As became clear from the irrefutable evidence of the tapes, Nixon didn’t mean it. But he understood that a president would have to appear to keep the faith. Trump does not bother with any such pretense.

Trump has gone even further, moving systematically to discredit the system of justice and firing in some cases, vilifying in others, those who have stood behind the need for an independent investigation in the Russia matter. He is now experimenting with new tools of retribution, as in revoking former CIA director John Brennan’s security clearance as express punishment for his role in the early phases of the Russia investigation.

Trump is going where Nixon would not go, openly flaunting his breach of faith. Ret. Adm. William McRaven has now powerfully made this case in an Aug. 16 letter to the president, in which McRaven asked that his own security clearance be withdrawn so that he could stand with Brennan. Trump, McRaven wrote, is a bad leader who has abysmally failed to “rise to the occasion” upon election to the presidency. “Through your actions, you have embarrassed us in the eyes of our children, humiliated us on the world stage and, worst of all, divided us as a nation.” McRaven omits any claims or concerns about “collusion.” He is speaking only to the leadership qualities missing in Donald Trump, such as “putt[ing] the welfare of others before himself or herself.”

Trump does not appreciate that when the purely legal accounting of his actions arrives, its significance will be subject to judgment in the light of these profound leadership issues at the heart White’s notion of “breach of faith.” He might try to pass off the responsibility for any direct or indirect Russian contacts to his son, Roger Stone, and others, and he might dismiss as harmless his own public call for Russian assistance in locating missing Clinton emails. He will strive to minimize active misrepresentations to the public, accomplished, for example, through the wholly misleading and incomplete account of the Russian meeting with the campaign in Trump Tower in the summer of 2016 that, he dictated to his eldest son. He will claim that presidents can obstruct justice if so inclined, because it is their constitutional right to do so.

Thinking about his defense in these terms, Trump will have missed, maybe fatally, the key point: The charge that a president has broken faith with the American people is more than a legal charge and cannot be disposed of with a legal defense.

What is in question, rather than only a determination of legal responsibility, is Trump’s fitness to hold office. As the president looks to undermine the ongoing special counsel investigation by bullying and punishing his critics, he is providing the most damaging evidence yet in a future case for impeachment.


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Cheers to Whoever Just Saved Us $92 Million on Trump's Farce of a Parade Print
Written by <a href="index.php?option=com_comprofiler&task=userProfile&user=11104"><span class="small">Charles Pierce, Esquire</span></a>   
Saturday, 18 August 2018 08:40

Pierce writes: "Somewhere in that five-sided mystery cabinet along the Potomac is a genuine American hero."

Military marching band. (photo: Getty)
Military marching band. (photo: Getty)


Cheers to Whoever Just Saved Us $92 Million on Trump's Farce of a Parade

By Charles Pierce, Esquire

18 August 18


Helping to shut down the president*'s ode to himself is truly a patriotic endeavor.

omewhere in that five-sided mystery cabinet along the Potomac is a genuine American hero. We may never know this person's name, but this person did the country a great service, in addition to making El Caudillo Del Mar-A-Lago an occasion for further mockery, which is always a worthwhile patriotic endeavor. Sometime on Wednesday night, this person—or persons—got in touch with Amanda Macias of CNBC, and this is what Macias was told.

The Department of Defense and its interagency partners have updated their prospective cost estimates for the parade, according to a U.S. defense official with firsthand knowledge of the assessment. The official spoke on the condition of anonymity. The parade, originally slated for Nov. 10 but now potentially set for 2019, is estimated to cost $92 million, the official said. The figure consists of $50 million from the Pentagon and $42 million from interagency partners such as the Department of Homeland Security. An initial estimate last month pegged the prospective cost for the parade at $12 million.

The whole idea of this parade was a farce from the start, but it was a farce to which much of official Washington seemed resigned to suffer; a costly two-hour demonstration of armed presidential* onanism is no way to spend an holiday afternoon, but it looked like it was going to happen anyway. Then the real price of the impending wank-a-thon was leaked and, within an hour, the White House had yet another PR catastrophe on its hands. What happened next was inevitable. From Reuters:

“We originally targeted November 10, 2018 for this event but have now agreed to explore opportunities in 2019,” Defense Department Spokesman Colonel Rob Manning said in a statement. A U.S. official, speaking on condition of anonymity, said it was unclear exactly what caused the postponement but the increased cost of the event had caused concern and could be one reason. The parade to honor U.S. military veterans and commemorate the 100th anniversary of the end of World War One could cost more than $90 million, the U.S. official said, citing provisional planning figures that were nearly three times an earlier White House estimate.

Reaction from the president* was not long in coming, and it was every bit as petty, incoherent, and untruthful as you can expect from someone who doesn't know anything about anything and who lies about it anyway.

Zoom!

While D.C. Mayor Muriel Bowser had been pushing back against this grandiose monstrosity almost from the moment it was proposed, it was that anonymous Pentagon spokesperson who blew the whistle the loudest. A grateful nation sends its thanks.


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FOCUS: Donald Trump Is a Dangerous Demagogue. It's Time for a Crusading Press to Fight Back. Print
Written by <a href="index.php?option=com_comprofiler&task=userProfile&user=47190"><span class="small">James Risen, The Intercept</span></a>   
Friday, 17 August 2018 11:50

Risen writes: "When Adolf Hitler came to power, after the Nazis had shut down all of Germany's independent newspapers and magazines and ended press freedom in the country, Hermann Ullstein, a member of a highly regarded German publishing family, fled to New York and wrote a penetrating memoir of the rise and fall of his family's media empire."

Former New York Times journalist James Risen. (photo: Virginia Lozano/The Intercept)
Former New York Times journalist James Risen. (photo: Virginia Lozano/The Intercept)


Donald Trump Is a Dangerous Demagogue. It's Time for a Crusading Press to Fight Back.

By James Risen, The Intercept

17 August 2018

 

hen Adolf Hitler came to power, after the Nazis had shut down all of Germany’s independent newspapers and magazines and ended press freedom in the country, Hermann Ullstein, a member of a highly regarded German publishing family, fled to New York and wrote a penetrating memoir of the rise and fall of his family’s media empire.

His father, Leopold Ullstein, a Jewish newspaper dealer, had founded Ullstein Verlag, the family publishing house, which at its pre-Nazi peak owned some of Germany’s most important publications, including the Vossische Zeitung newspaper. But when Hitler stole their press holdings, Hermann Ullstein and other family members fled, and by World War II, the Ullstein presses were being used to print Das Reich, a newspaper created by Nazi propaganda minister Joseph Goebbels.

From his refuge in New York, Hermann Ullstein wrote critically of the failure of the German press to confront Hitler more aggressively when it still had a chance — before he came to power. In his 1943 book, Ullstein chastised the mainstream press in Germany for being too cautious in the pre-Nazi years, especially in comparison to the aggressive right-wing media that was rising during the late 1920s and boosting Hitler’s political fortunes. He lamented the weak response of  “the loyal press,” his phrase for the pre-Nazi mainstream press “whose efforts were devoted to democracy, and whose failure was to a large extent due to mildness of language, to the tired and cautious spirit in which they fought.”

Hermann Ullstein’s criticism of the mainstream press of the pre-Nazi era would sound eerily familiar to anyone following the American media today as it tries to confront Donald Trump. Trump has repeatedly castigated the American press as “the enemy of the people” and has brought his political supporters to such a crazed pitch that many of them now consider journalists to be traitors.  Some of Trump’s backers even seem to think that physical attacks on reporters are acceptable.

Trump uses his Twitter account to maliciously attack individual reporters, and journalists covering Trump’s dark and fevered rallies are now being forced to hire security personnel to protect themselves from the crowds. Trump seeks to discredit the mainstream press at every turn, while granting preferential access to news organizations that traffic in right-wing propaganda and conspiracy theories.

He has pressured the Justice Department to launch a wide range of leak investigations of the press, and has politicized that process to such an extent that at least two of the first leak cases to be prosecuted by his administration have involved stories related to whether Russia has meddled in the American electoral system and whether the Trump campaign colluded with the Russians to help Trump win the 2016 election.

Many in the American press today blanche at any comparisons between Trump and Hitler or other autocrats, and warn against overreacting to Trump. They also recoil at the notion that the press should go on a war-footing against Trump and eschew old-style journalistic crusades. They fear that such a confrontational approach will harm their credibility. Martin Baron, executive editor of the Washington Post, coined a phrase that succinctly captured this professional ethic — “We’re not at war, we’re at work.”

To be sure, plenty of reporters are doing great work under enormous pressure. Many news organizations continue to engage in aggressive investigative reporting about Trump, and much of what we now know about Trump’s corruption and possible collusion with Moscow has come from the press. But while that investigative digging is underway, Trump’s daily efforts to denigrate and discredit the press continue unabated, and his subversive efforts to undermine the media have had an impact. A recent poll showed that nearly nine out of 10 Republicans disapprove of the way the media has covered Trump.

The press often seems uncertain on how to respond. The White House press corps in particular seems determined to try to cover Trump as it has previous presidents, employing the same American journalistic standards and practices used in the past. Some press critics now believe that approach is too passive in the face of Trump’s malevolent approach.

“When the most powerful person in the world declares war on journalism, you can respond in one of two ways,” writes Dan Gillmor, co-founder of News Co/Lab and professor of practice at Arizona State University’s Walter Cronkite School of Journalism and Mass Communication. “The first adds up to surrender. I’m sorry to say that some of you appear to have done so, by normalizing what is grossly abnormal and letting your enemies take advantage of the craft of journalism’s inherent weaknesses.”

It’s time to break with those civil traditions, other critics have added. “Journalists charged with covering him should suspend normal relations with the presidency of Donald Trump, which is the most significant threat to an informed public in the United States today,” argues Jay Rosen, a journalism professor at New York University.

Some counter that Trump is only following in the press-bashing pattern set by Presidents George W. Bush and Barack Obama, who both also used leak investigations to target reporters. (Believe me, I know about that. Both Bush and Obama came after me in a leak investigation that lasted seven years.)

But it is a mistake to see Trump as just another White House occupant following in a long tradition of presidential press-bashing. While the present-day U.S. is not Weimar Germany, Trump is not Hitler, and his incompetent administration has not come close to consolidating power in the way the Nazis did, Trump is nonetheless a dangerous demagogue who deploys some of the same tactics that Hitler did, and he has already gone further to attack the democratic institution of a free press than his predecessors did. He is seeking nothing less than the destruction of the legitimacy of the American press.

As Hermann Ullstein warned, such dangerous threats to press freedom are sometimes only taken seriously in hindsight. In 1964, the New York Times echoed Ullstein, writing that his family had made one critical mistake. “That was to believe that Adolf Hitler’s early statements of anti-Semitism were merely campaign oratory. They failed to turn the power of their papers and magazines against the rising Hitler until it was too late.”

Many in the American media believe that they are fighting back aggressively already. And indeed, in response to Trump’s attacks, hundreds of news organizations are publishing editorials about press freedom today. But that’s not enough. The response to Trump by the American press is still too tepid. Most American editors and reporters today disavow old-fashioned, crusading journalism, in which a news organization or even a group of news outlets throw all of their energy into an all-out assault on one story. They fear that crusades look partisan.

But crusading journalism is what is needed now. And there is a model to follow from recent American history. In 1976, Don Bolles, an investigative reporter with the Arizona Republic newspaper in Phoenix who had become well-known for his coverage of the Mafia, was killed when his car blew up. In response, investigative reporters from all over America poured into Arizona to continue Bolles’s reporting. In 1977, those reporters, working through what became known in journalism as the Arizona Project, produced a 23-part series on corruption in Arizona.

Today, more than 40 years later, American journalists should come together for a Trump Project.


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FOCUS: Revoke My Security Clearance, Too, Mr. President Print
Friday, 17 August 2018 10:52

McRaven writes: "I would consider it an honor if you would revoke my security clearance as well, so I can add my name to the list of men and women who have spoken up against your presidency."

Navy Adm. William McRaven. (photo: Bill Clark/CQ Roll Call)
Navy Adm. William McRaven. (photo: Bill Clark/CQ Roll Call)


Revoke My Security Clearance, Too, Mr. President

By William H. McRaven, The Washington Post

17 August 2018

 

ear Mr. President:

Former CIA director John Brennan, whose security clearance you revoked on Wednesday, is one of the finest public servants I have ever known. Few Americans have done more to protect this country than John. He is a man of unparalleled integrity, whose honesty and character have never been in question, except by those who don’t know him.

Therefore, I would consider it an honor if you would revoke my security clearance as well, so I can add my name to the list of men and women who have spoken up against your presidency.

Like most Americans, I had hoped that when you became president, you would rise to the occasion and become the leader this great nation needs.

A good leader tries to embody the best qualities of his or her organization. A good leader sets the example for others to follow. A good leader always puts the welfare of others before himself or herself.

Your leadership, however, has shown little of these qualities. Through your actions, you have embarrassed us in the eyes of our children, humiliated us on the world stage and, worst of all, divided us as a nation.

If you think for a moment that your McCarthy-era tactics will suppress the voices of criticism, you are sadly mistaken. The criticism will continue until you become the leader we prayed you would be.


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President Trump's Claims of No Collusion Are Hogwash Print
Friday, 17 August 2018 08:22

Brennan writes: "When Alexander Bortnikov, the head of Russia's internal security service, told me during an early August 2016 phone call that Russia wasn't interfering in our presidential election, I knew he was lying."

Former CIA Director John Brennan. (photo: Al Drago/The New York Times)
Former CIA Director John Brennan. (photo: Al Drago/The New York Times)


President Trump's Claims of No Collusion Are Hogwash

By John Brennan, The New York Times

17 August 18


That’s why the president revoked my security clearance: to try to silence anyone who would dare challenge him.

hen Alexander Bortnikov, the head of Russia’s internal security service, told me during an early August 2016 phone call that Russia wasn’t interfering in our presidential election, I knew he was lying. Over the previous several years I had grown weary of Mr. Bortnikov’s denials of Russia’s perfidy — about its mistreatment of American diplomats and citizens in Moscow, its repeated failure to adhere to cease-fire agreements in Syria and its paramilitary intervention in eastern Ukraine, to name just a few issues.

When I warned Mr. Bortnikov that Russian interference in our election was intolerable and would roil United States-Russia relations for many years, he denied Russian involvement in any election, in America or elsewhere, with a feigned sincerity that I had heard many times before. President Vladimir Putin of Russia reiterated those denials numerous times over the past two years, often to Donald Trump’s seeming approval.

Russian denials are, in a word, hogwash.


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