Enough with the John Bolton smears — he’ll be the best national security adviser in a generation

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President Trump’s announcement that John Bolton would become his national security adviser in April sent cable news networks and the Twittersphere into a tizzy with characterizations of Bolton as intemperate, undiplomatic, and generally the wrong man for the job.

Most of the complaints about Bolton rest not on fact but partisan calumny. As for his effectiveness, the record speaks for itself.



Let’s debunk some myths:

  1. Bolton is a loose cannon. This is nonsense. Bolton is a cannon, but there’s nothing loose about him. When people argue that Bolton wasn’t a team player at the State Department during the George W. Bush-era, they ignore the fact that Bolton never said or did anything without authorization. Most of the anecdotes about knock-down, drawn-out policy fights were about Bolton seeking clearance within the process. He believes in process rather than leaks or faits accompli and, in that context, he was an exception to the prevailing State Department culture.
  2. Bolton is undiplomatic. No, Bolton is a straight-shooter. Talk to any diplomat who served at the United Nations during Bolton’s tenure and they would agree. They may not have liked his policies, but they grew to respect the man who always treated them with respect. Contrast that with reports of Susan Rice’s behavior, and the contrast couldn’t have been greater.
  3. Bolton was ineffective. Part and parcel of the ‘undiplomatic’ calumny is that Bolton couldn’t get the job done. Back in 2015, Sohrab Ahmari noted that by then-U.N. Ambassador Samantha Power’s definition, Bolton was a far more effective U.N. ambassador than she. Then there’s the fact that Bolton scored multiple unanimous or near-unanimous U.N. Security Council resolutions against Iran’s nuclear program, somehow getting the Chinese and Russians on board without giving up the farm — such as what occurred against the backdrop of Obama-era negotiations leading to the Iran nuclear deal. Or, consider Bolton’s tenure as undersecretary of state for arms control. In that position, he always saw the forest through the trees and never was willing to dilute the substance of U.S. national security in order to personally shine. Compare that to Ellen Tauscher, who held that position under Hillary Clinton: During her tenure, she hired and traveled with her own press flak, and the State Department buried reports of Russian cheating on past agreements in order to get the New START treaty with Russia passed.
  4. Bolton’s exaggerates. Many critics took Bolton to task for suggesting Iran had a nuclear weapons program. But the 2007 National Intelligence Estimate confirmed just that. Simply put, Bolton got it right while his opponents were wrong.
  5. Bolton abused his power. Again, nonsense. The press went into a frenzy when they learned that, as undersecretary of State, Bolton sought to unmask the identity of Americans negotiating with Libyan dictator Moammar Gadhafi about his weaponry. That made perfect sense given his role. Compare that with the press silence about literally dozens if not hundreds of requests by Power to unmask the names of Americans caught in intelligence intercepts, information which she had no real need to know given her role. It was not Bolton who abused his power. It was Power.

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The left gauges their evaluation of personnel picks by how willing they are to violate laws and the Constitution to pursue the liberal agenda, not by effective pursuit of US national interests.

It will take a little time to sort Bolton out, Reince Priebus didnt steer Trump correctly we still have a mole in the WhiteHouse leak leak leak.