BREAKING:
Donald Trump’s press conference (analysis)
Alexander
Mercouris
President
Trump confirms during marathon press conference that his priority
before negotiating with the Russians is to shore up his position at
home. He has taken a first step towards rooting out his opponents in
the intelligence community by asking the Justice Department to
instruct the FBI to undertake a criminal investigation of the leaks
which brought down General Flynn.
President
Trump’s gigantic
sprawling 77 minute press conference was
– as is always the case with him – a bravura performance that
left the media reeling. Amid all the fire and thunder – which
included denunciations of the media and warm and supportive words for
General Flynn – it did however reveal some important things.
Firstly,
Trump confirmed that the decision has been made to
roll out a new ‘travel ban’ Executive Order next
week.
This
is a sensible step, clearly made following legal advice from the
Justice Department, and follows logically from the Judgment of the
appeal court of the ninth circuit which
I have analysed previously.
The
two most important things to come out of the press conference are
however (1) that President Trump still wants a detente with Russia,
and is aware that the plotting against his administration is intended
to make that more difficult; and (2) that – as
I predicted –
he has asked the Justice Department to instruct the FBI to carry out
a criminal investigation of the leaks which led to General Flynn’s
downfall.
President
Trump’s comments about Russia were in some ways the most remarkable
amongst those he made during his whole press conference, with the
President directly accusing his opponents of weakening his position
in negotiations with the Russians by giving the Russians grounds to
doubt that he is in a strong enough position to make a deal with them
If
we could get along with Russia, that’s a positive thing. We have a
very talented man, Rex Tillerson, who’s going to be meeting with
them shortly and I told him. I said “I know politically it’s
probably not good for me.” The greatest thing I could do is shoot
that ship that’s 30 miles off shore right out of the water.
Everyone
in this country’s going to say “oh, it’s so great.” That’s
not great. That’s not great. I would love to be able to get along
with Russia. Now, you’ve had a lot of presidents that haven’t
taken that tack. Look where we are now. Look where we are now. So, if
I can – now, I love to negotiate things, I do it really well, and
all that stuff. But – but it’s possible I won’t be able to get
along with Putin.
Maybe
it is. But I want to just tell you, the false reporting by the media,
by you people, the false, horrible, fake
reporting makes it much harder to make a deal with Russia. And
probably Putin said “you know.” He’s sitting behind his desk
and he’s saying “you know, I see what’s going on in the United
States, I follow it closely. It’s going to be impossible for
President Trump to ever get along with Russia because of all the
pressure he’s got with this fake story.”
OK?
And
that’s a shame because if we could get along with Russia – and by
the way, China and Japan and everyone. If we could get along, it
would be a positive thing, not a negative thing……
All
of those things that you mentioned are very recent, because
probably Putin assumes that he’s not going to be able to make a
deal with me because it’s politically not popular for me to make a
deal. So
Hillary Clinton tries a re-set. It failed. They all tried. But I’m
different than those people.
(bold
italics dded)
Trump’s
belief that the Russians doubt that because of the domestic
opposition he faces he is capable of delivering on a deal he agrees
with them is undoubtedly right. It is interesting that Trump
himself realises it.
It
shows that Trump’s priority at the moment is to shore up his
position at home before he negotiates with the Russians. As an
experienced deal-maker he clearly does not want to be put in a
position where the Russians doubt that he is able to deliver on what
he promises, and this explains why
negotiations with the Russians have been put back.
This
in part also explains the criminal investigation into the leaks he
has asked the Justice Department to tell the FBI to undertake.
Clearly he understands that until he has mastered his
bureaucracy and proved to the Russians that he is the master of his
own house there is no sense in his negotiating with them. That
he has done what he
previously hinted at,
and has asked the Justice Department to instruct the FBI to
investigate the leaks, he has now confirmed
Yes, we’re looking at them very — very, very serious. I’ve gone to all of the folks in charge of the various agencies and we’re — I’ve actually called the Justice Department to look into the leaks. Those are criminal leaks. They’re put out by people either in agencies — I think you’ll see it stopping because now we have our people in. You know, again, we don’t have our people in because we can’t get them approved by the Senate.
(bold
italics dded)
Note
that the highlighted words all but confirm a point I have repeatedly
made: that the reason Trump has been unable to act against the
leakers before is because the Department of Justice under Sally Yates
has been working against him.
To
be clear this is going to be a very different investigation from the
various FBI investigations into the nebulous claims of contacts
between President Trump’s campaign team and the Russians details of
which have been appearing all over the media. As Trump himself
all but says – and as the FBI investigators undertaking them surely
know – those investigations are a complete waste of time, and will
lead nowhere, because no-one has identified a crime for anyone to
investigate.
By
contrast in the case of the leaks that brought about the downfall of
General Flynn, not only is there no
doubt a crime was committed,
but The New York Times and CNN know the identity of the perpetrators,
and probably enough is already known about them anyway to make it
possible to identify them without too much difficulty.
Unlike
the investigations into the allegations that are being made against
Donald Trump’s campaign team, this investigation therefore stands a
very strong chance of success, resulting in arrests, charges and
legal action.
I
would guess that already by now as I am writing this various people
in The New York Times, CNN, the US intelligence community, and former
officials of the Obama administration, are busy phoning their lawyers
This is how CNN covers it:
Washington
(CNN)President Donald Trump gave lengthy news conference Thursday, a
last-minute addition to the schedule, where he announced his new
selection to lead the Labor Department, Alexander Acosta. His
back-and-forth with reporters touched on everything from his critique
of the media, his Electoral College margin of victory, the workings
of his administration, former national security adviser Michael
Flynn's resignation and more.
Here
are the most memorable lines:
On
how things are going
"This
administration is running like a fine-tuned machine."
On
leaks, news
"The
leaks are real, the news is fake."
On
picking his next question
"I
want to find a friendly reporter."
On
false claims about his Electoral College win's spot in history
"I
was given that information, I don't know."
On
his own speech
"I'm
not ranting and raving, I'm just telling you you're dishonest
people."
On
Obamacare
"Obamacare,
they fill up our alleys with people you wonder how they got there."
On
reports about Russia contacts
"You
can talk all you want about Russia -- which was all a fabricated fake
news ... It is all fake news. It is all fake news."
On
Flynn
"I
don't think he did anything wrong. If anything, he did something
right."
On
why Flynn was fired
"The
thing is he didn't tell our Vice President properly and then he said
he didn't remember... that just wasn't acceptable to me."
On
an alternative career
"I'd
be a pretty good reporter."
On
dealing with Russia
"The
greatest thing I could do is shoot that ship that's 30 miles offshore
right out of the water. Everyone will say, "Oh, it's so great,
it's so great. That's not great."
On
nuclear holocaust and Russia
"Nuclear
holocaust would be like no other. They are a very powerful nuclear
country and so are we. But if we have a good relationship with
Russia, believe me, that is as good thing, not a bad thing."
On
the travel ban
"We
had a very smooth rollout of the travel ban, we had a bad court."
On
violence in Chicago
"There
are two Chicagos, as you know. One Chicago that is incredible,
luxurious and safe. There is another Chicago that is worse than
almost any of the places in the Middle East that we talk about and
that you talk about on the news."
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