Bannon's Out. But Did H.R. McMaster Win?
Bannons Out. But Did H.R. McMaster Win?
President Trump and Lt. Gen. H.R. McMaster in February at the Mar-a-Lago resort in Florida. Credit Al Drago/The New York Times
The Trump administrations decision to remove its chief strategist, Stephen Bannon, from the National Security Councils principals committee, along with the deputy national security adviser K.T. McFarlands likely exile to Singapore, as the United States ambassador, seems to indicate that Lt. Gen. H.R. McMaster, the national security adviser, is finally getting a little hard-earned bureaucratic traction. Not so fast: Other signals suggest that President Trumps national security team remains as weak and dysfunctional as ever. And while some people are crediting General McMaster with a big win, the reality is much different.
Reportedly from the moment he hired General McMaster, President Trump gave him broad staffing freedom. Yet Ms. McFarland, whom General McMaster wanted out, remained in place for well over a month. More egregiously, in mid-March, General McMaster tried to fire Ezra Cohen-Watnick, the senior director for intelligence programs at the National Security Council. Mr. Cohen-Watnick, a holdover from Michael Flynns aborted stint as national security adviser, complained to Mr. Bannon and Jared Kushner, who prevailed on Mr. Trump to have him reinstated.The idea that the 30-year-old Mr. Cohen-Watnick should be senior director for intelligence programs a position held by senior career C.I.A. officers in the Obama administration and others is dubious. Furthermore, General McMasters decision to get rid of Mr. Cohen-Watnick was well within his pay grade. And Mr. Trumps countermanding an understandable and routine staffing decision not only reneged on his deal with General McMaster, it also segued to an episode of clear White House obstructionism.
A few days after his reinstatement, Mr. Cohen-Watnick was one of three White House staffers who facilitated a briefing to House Intelligence Committee Chairman Devin Nunes on the incidental surveillance of Trump campaign staff members, which Mr. Nunes used to distract news media and public attention from the committees investigation of possible collusion between the Trump campaign and the Russian government to influence the outcome of the presidential election. A little unpacking revealed how artlessly pretextual this distraction was: Mr. Nunes professed the need to learn new information about surveillance to warn the president, yet that very information was in the possession of the White House and accessible to Mr. Trump without Mr. Nuness intervention.
Thus, Mr. Cohen-Watnick helped run interference for the administration against Congress in the Russia investigation. In a properly running National Security Council, this wouldnt have happened. One defensible inference is that Mr. Trump wanted to keep a pliable ally as the White Houses principal liaison with the intelligence community. To arrange Mr. Trumps reversal of General McMasters dismissal of Mr. Cohen-Watnick, Mr. Bannon required no formal position on the National Security Council. Indeed, Mr. Cohen-Watnicks other inside patron Mr. Kushner had no such position. Even with Mr. Bannon off the principals committee, he will be able to manipulate the National Security Council through Mr. Trump, who seems to regard it as a closely held corporation for channeling executive action originating with his inner circle. At this point, that circle does not appear to include General McMaster.
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https://www.nytimes.com/2017/04/05/opinion/did-hr-mcmaster-win.html
rgbecker
(4,834 posts)Have you ever seen a grip like that in your life? He just about has McMaster raised out of his seat. Trump's knuckles are white from all the squeezing.
niyad
(113,527 posts)always to his. . . . . tiny thing.