Monday, 21 Oct 2024

Bob Woodward’s new book War is a sober but alarming must-read

Bob Woodward’s new book War is a sober but alarming must-read


Bob Woodward’s new book War is a sober but alarming must-read

The Middle East and Ukraine are ablaze, the US mired in turmoil. An octogenarian president recedes from view. The threat of a second Trump term hangs like the sword of Damocles. Fifty years ago, with Carl Bernstein, Bob Woodward captured Watergate and the downfall of Richard Nixon. Now, the US sits at an inflection point once again. Woodward's fourth book at least in part about Donald Trump is a sober but alarming must-read.

War depicts an administration under Joe Biden that is often behind the curve, at times captive to its own wishful thinking. The withdrawal from Afghanistan haunts. Trump mesmerizes. Yet as Woodward tells it, Biden and his team did clearly see the menace Russia posed. Unlike George W Bush, Biden did not need to gaze into Vladimir Putin's blighted soul. Unlike Trump, he did not feel compelled to fluff his ego like a besotted fanboy.

True to form, Woodward gets his sources to talk. "All interviews were conducted under the journalist ground rule of 'deep background'," he notes. Unless the source agreed to be named. "It's still a mystery to me how he deals with Putin and what he says to Putin," Dan Coats, director of national intelligence under Trump, says of his former boss. "Is it blackmail?" There's something there, Coats is sure.

In the fall of 2021, the Biden administration concluded that Russia would soon invade Ukraine. They had the intelligence to prove it. They mounted a full-court press. On the front pages of the Washington Post, they laid out what was coming. They warned and later armed the Ukrainian president, Volodymyr Zelenskyy, despite his initial skepticism, and they rallied the west.

"You have no reason to invade Ukraine," Boris Johnson, then British prime minister, told Putin in October 2021, according to Woodward. Woodward also says Johnson called Putin a "small, puckish lowlife", for whatever that is worth. The Biden administration looked further afield. "We are highly confident Russia is going to do this," Kamala Harris told Emmanuel Macron, in November 2021. "France is prepared to impose costs," the French president answered. "I'm on board for that." As war broke out, Germany announced that the Nord Stream 2 gas pipeline project with Russia would not proceed.

Predictably, Trump and his minions hold a different view of Putin. "This is genius," the once and possibly future president said, after Putin declared regions of Ukraine independent, on top of invading them. "Here's a guy who's very savvy," Trump said. "I know him very well. Very, very well."

Woodward also reminds readers that after Hamas attacked Israel on 7 October, Trump heaped praise on another terror group, calling Hezbollah "very smart" and Yoav Gallant, Israel's defense minister, a "jerk". At a recent speech in Detroit, Trump delivered a shout-out to Massad Boulos, father-in-law of Tiffany Trump, the former president's daughter from his second marriage. Boulos, a Lebanese Christian, is reportedly aligned with Hezbollah. Having run unsuccessfully for a seat in Lebanon's parliament, he plays a role in Trump's Arab-American outreach.

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