Book: Joint Chiefs general, fearing Trump might try to seize power, took measures to block a coup

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jserraglio
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Book: Joint Chiefs general, fearing Trump might try to seize power, took measures to block a coup

Post by jserraglio » Thu Jul 15, 2021 6:45 am

WAPO https://www.washingtonpost.com/politics ... story.html

Top General Feared Trump Would Attempt A Coup

In the waning weeks of Donald Trump’s term, the country’s top military leader repeatedly worried about what the president might do to maintain power after losing reelection, comparing his rhetoric to Adolf Hitler’s during the rise of Nazi Germany and asking confidants whether a coup was forthcoming, according to a new book by two Washington Post reporters.

As Trump ceaselessly pushed false claims about the 2020 presidential election, Gen. Mark A. Milley, chairman of the Joint Chiefs of Staff, grew more and more nervous, telling aides he feared that the president and his acolytes might attempt to use the military to stay in office, Carol Leonnig and Philip Rucker report in “I Alone Can Fix It: Donald J. Trump’s Catastrophic Final Year.”

Milley described “a stomach-churning” feeling as he listened to Trump’s untrue complaints of election fraud, drawing a comparison to the 1933 attack on Germany’s parliament building that Hitler used as a pretext to establish a Nazi dictatorship.
“This guy’s crazy,” Pelosi said of Trump in what the book reported was mostly a one-way phone call. “He’s dangerous. He’s a maniac.”
“This is a Reichstag moment,” Milley told aides, according to the book. “The gospel of the Führer.”

A spokesman for Milley declined to comment.

Portions of the book related to Milley — first reported Wednesday night by CNN ahead of the book’s July 20 release — offer a remarkable window into the thinking of America’s highest-ranking military officer, who saw himself as one of the last empowered defenders of democracy during some of the darkest days in the country’s recent history.

The episodes in the book are based on interviews with more than 140 people, including senior Trump administration officials, friends and advisers, Leonnig and Rucker write in an author’s note. Most agreed to speak candidly only on the condition of anonymity, and the scenes reported were reconstructed based on firsthand accounts and multiple other sources whenever possible.

Milley — who was widely criticized last year for appearing alongside Trump in Lafayette Square after protesters were forcibly cleared from the area — had pledged to use his office to ensure a free and fair election with no military involvement. But he became increasingly concerned in the days following the November contest, making multiple references to the onset of 20th-century fascism.

After attending a Nov. 10 security briefing about the “Million MAGA March,” a pro-Trump rally protesting the election, Milley said he feared an American equivalent of “brownshirts in the streets,” alluding to the paramilitary forces that protected Nazi rallies and enabled Hitler’s ascent.

Late that same evening, according to the book, an old friend called Milley to express concerns that those close to Trump were attempting to “overturn the government.”

“You are one of the few guys who are standing between us and some really bad stuff,” the friend told Milley, according to an account relayed to his aides. Milley was shaken, Leonnig and Rucker write, and he called former national security adviser H.R. McMaster to ask whether a coup was actually imminent.

“What the f--- am I dealing with?” Milley asked him.

The conversations put Milley on edge, and he began informally planning with other military leaders, strategizing how they would block Trump’s order to use the military in a way they deemed dangerous or illegal.

If someone wanted to seize control, Milley thought, they would need to gain sway over the FBI, the CIA and the Defense Department, where Trump had already installed staunch allies. “They may try, but they’re not going to f---ing succeed,” he told some of his closest deputies, the book says.

In the weeks that followed, Milley played reassuring soothsayer to a string of concerned members of Congress and administration officials who shared his worries about Trump attempting to use the military to stay in office.

“Everything’s going to be okay,” he told them, according to the book. “We’re going to have a peaceful transfer of power. We’re going to land this plane safely. This is America. It’s strong. The institutions are bending, but it won’t break.”

In December, with rumors circulating that the president was preparing to fire then-CIA Director Gina Haspel and replace her with Trump loyalist Kash Patel, Milley sought to intervene, the book says. He confronted White House Chief of Staff Mark Meadows at the annual Army-Navy football game, which Trump and other high-profile guests attended.

“What the hell is going on here?” Milley asked Meadows, according to the book’s account. “What are you guys doing?”

When Meadows responded, “Don’t worry about it,” Milley shot him a warning: “Just be careful.”

After the failed insurrection on Jan. 6, House Speaker Nancy Pelosi (D-Calif.) called Milley to ask for his guarantee that Trump would not be able to launch a nuclear strike and start a war.
“They may try, but they’re not going to f---ing succeed,” [Milley] told some of his closest deputies…“We’re going to put a ring of steel around this city and the Nazis aren’t getting in.”
“This guy’s crazy,” Pelosi said of Trump in what the book reported was mostly a one-way phone call. “He’s dangerous. He’s a maniac.”

Once again, Milley sought to reassure: “Ma’am, I guarantee you that we have checks and balances in the system,” he told Pelosi.

Less than a week later, as military and law enforcement leaders planned for President Biden’s inauguration, Milley said he was determined to avoid a repeat of the siege on the Capitol.

“Everyone in this room, whether you’re a cop, whether you’re a soldier, we’re going to stop these guys to make sure we have a peaceful transfer of power,” he told them. “We’re going to put a ring of steel around this city and the Nazis aren’t getting in.”

At Biden’s swearing-in on Jan. 20, Milley was seated behind former president Barack Obama and former first lady Michelle Obama, who asked the general how he was feeling.

“No one has a bigger smile today than I do,” Milley replied. “You can’t see it under my mask, but I do.”

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Re: Book: Joint Chiefs general, fearing Trump might try to seize power, took measures to block a coup

Post by Rach3 » Thu Jul 15, 2021 7:13 am

Glad to see I am not alone in comparing the Trumpists to Nazis or crazies.

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Re: Book: Joint Chiefs general, fearing Trump might try to seize power, took measures to block a coup

Post by lennygoran » Thu Jul 15, 2021 7:35 am

Rach3 wrote:
Thu Jul 15, 2021 7:13 am
Glad to see I am not alone in comparing the Trumpists to Nazis or crazies.
Steve count me in! Regards, Len

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Re: Book: Joint Chiefs general, fearing Trump might try to seize power, took measures to block a coup

Post by jserraglio » Thu Jul 15, 2021 7:44 am

The Right’s Pathway to Power

2021: Voter suppression laws enacted in dozens of GOP-run states; some are challenged in the courts by DOJ; redistricting completed, redrawn congressional districts mostly benefit the GOP.
2022: Nancy Pelosi retires as Speaker in January. In November midterm, GOP wins control of the House. Kevin McCarthy becomes Speaker.
2023: SCOTUS turns back DOJ challenge, upholds a state’s right to control its voting procedures. In response, Dems launch huge voter registration drive and voter turnout drive. Trump announces run for POTUS.
2024: Trump loses popular vote despite voter suppression. Trump also loses Electoral College, but election officials, newly appointed by governors and GOP-run legislatures, claim voter irregularities, overturn the results and install electors pledged to Trump.
January 6, 2025: House majority under Speaker McCarthy certifies Donald J. Trump as the next President of the United States.

ALL DONE FAIR AND SQUARE, ON THE UP AND UP, NO BLOOD SHED.
Last edited by jserraglio on Thu Jul 15, 2021 8:02 am, edited 1 time in total.

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Re: Book: Joint Chiefs general, fearing Trump might try to seize power, took measures to block a coup

Post by lennygoran » Thu Jul 15, 2021 8:01 am

jserraglio wrote:
Thu Jul 15, 2021 7:44 am
The Right’s Pathway to Power

Joseph, plenty scary.

Remember the old movie A Christmas Carol-Scrooge asks if these things are inevitable or could the future be changed? Regards, Len :(

"Scrooge runs away but encounters the Spirit of Christmas Yet to Come, who shows him the Cratchits mourning Tiny Tim's recent death. He then watches as three people, including his charwoman, sell off the possessions of a dead man. When shown his own grave, Scrooge weeps openly and begs the Spirit for mercy, pleading "I'm not the man I was." He awakens in his own bed to learn that it's Christmas Day and he still has an opportunity to do good. When his charwoman Mrs. Dilber is frightened by his transformation, Scrooge reassures her and promises to raise her salary. He purchases a turkey dinner for the Cratchits and delights Fred by attending his dinner party and dancing with the other guests. "

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Re: Book: Joint Chiefs general, fearing Trump might try to seize power, took measures to block a coup

Post by barney » Thu Jul 15, 2021 8:07 am

lennygoran wrote:
Thu Jul 15, 2021 7:35 am
Rach3 wrote:
Thu Jul 15, 2021 7:13 am
Glad to see I am not alone in comparing the Trumpists to Nazis or crazies.
Steve count me in! Regards, Len
Moi aussi.

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Re: Book: Joint Chiefs general, fearing Trump might try to seize power, took measures to block a coup

Post by barney » Thu Jul 15, 2021 8:09 am

jserraglio wrote:
Thu Jul 15, 2021 7:44 am
The Right’s Pathway to Power

2021: Voter suppression laws enacted in dozens of GOP-run states; some are challenged in the courts by DOJ; redistricting completed, redrawn congressional districts mostly benefit the GOP.
2022: Nancy Pelosi retires as Speaker in January. In November midterm, GOP wins control of the House. Kevin McCarthy becomes Speaker.
2023: SCOTUS turns back DOJ challenge, upholds a state’s right to control its voting procedures. In response, Dems launch huge voter registration drive and voter turnout drive. Trump announces run for POTUS.
2024: Trump loses popular vote despite voter suppression. Trump also loses Electoral College, but election officials, newly appointed by governors and GOP-run legislatures, claim voter irregularities, overturn the results and install electors pledged to Trump.
January 6, 2025: House majority under Speaker McCarthy certifies Donald J. Trump as the next President of the United States.

ALL DONE FAIR AND SQUARE, ON THE UP AND UP, NO BLOOD SHED.
Frighteningly plausible. And the slimeball lobotomy party would have utterly no qualms about stealing the election this way, as 149 slimeballs proved in January.

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Re: Book: Joint Chiefs general, fearing Trump might try to seize power, took measures to block a coup

Post by diegobueno » Thu Jul 15, 2021 9:02 am

jserraglio wrote:
Thu Jul 15, 2021 7:44 am
The Right’s Pathway to Power
This is exactly what the Republicans are counting on. They put these laws in place to accomplish precisely that. And unless the For the People Act is passed, this is what will in fact happen.
Black lives matter.

jserraglio
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Re: Book: Joint Chiefs general, fearing Trump might try to seize power, took measures to block a coup

Post by jserraglio » Thu Jul 15, 2021 9:41 am

diegobueno wrote:
Thu Jul 15, 2021 9:02 am
jserraglio wrote:
Thu Jul 15, 2021 7:44 am
The Right’s Pathway to Power
This is exactly what the Republicans are counting on. They put these laws in place to accomplish precisely that. And unless the For the People Act is passed, this is what will in fact happen.
You are right but I also think that it might eventually be struck down as unconstitutional by the SCOTUS.

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Re: Book: Joint Chiefs general, fearing Trump might try to seize power, took measures to block a coup

Post by jserraglio » Thu Jul 15, 2021 9:47 am

CNN More unsalubrious details from THE BOOK.

'They're not going to f\**king succeed': Top generals feared Trump would attempt a coup after election, according to new book

The top US military officer, Chairman of the Joint Chiefs Gen. Mark Milley, was so shaken that then-President Donald Trump and his allies might attempt a coup or take other dangerous or illegal measures after the November election that Milley and other top officials informally planned for different ways to stop Trump, according to excerpts of an upcoming book obtained by CNN.

The book, from Pulitzer Prize-winning Washington Post reporters Carol Leonnig and Philip Rucker, describes how Milley and the other Joint Chiefs discussed a plan to resign, one-by-one, rather than carry out orders from Trump that they considered to be illegal, dangerous or ill-advised.
"It was a kind of Saturday Night Massacre in reverse," Leonnig and Rucker write.
The book, "I Alone Can Fix It," scheduled to be released next Tuesday, chronicles Trump's final year as president, with a behind-the-scenes look at how senior administration officials and Trump's inner circle navigated his increasingly unhinged behavior after losing the 2020 election. The authors interviewed Trump for more than two hours.
The book recounts how for the first time in modern US history the nation's top military officer, whose role is to advise the president, was preparing for a showdown with the commander in chief because he feared a coup attempt after Trump lost the November election.
The authors explain Milley's growing concerns that personnel moves that put Trump acolytes in positions of power at the Pentagon after the November 2020 election, including the firing of Defense Secretary Mark Esper and the resignation of Attorney General William Barr, were the sign of something sinister to come.
The Donald wrote:That b*tch Merkel. I know the f**king krauts, I was raised by the biggest kraut of them all.
Milley spoke to friends, lawmakers and colleagues about the threat of a coup, and the Joint Chiefs chairman felt he had to be "on guard" for what might come.
"They may try, but they're not going to f**king succeed," Milley told his deputies, according to the authors. "You can't do this without the military. You can't do this without the CIA and the FBI. We're the guys with the guns."
In the days leading up to January 6, Leonnig and Rucker write, Milley was worried about Trump's call to action. "Milley told his staff that he believed Trump was stoking unrest, possibly in hopes of an excuse to invoke the Insurrection Act and call out the military."
Milley viewed Trump as "the classic authoritarian leader with nothing to lose," the authors write, and he saw parallels between Adolf Hitler's rhetoric as a victim and savior and Trump's false claims of election fraud.
"This is a Reichstag moment," Milley told aides, according to the book. "The gospel of the Führer."
Ahead of a November pro-Trump "Million MAGA March" to protest the election results, Milley told aides he feared it "could be the modern American equivalent of 'brownshirts in the streets,'" referring to the pro-Nazi militia that fueled Hitler's rise to power.
Milley will not publicly address the issues raised in the book, a defense official close to the general told CNN. The official did not dispute that Milley engaged in activities and communications that are not part of the traditional portfolio of a chairman in the final days of Trump's presidency.
"He's not going to sit in silence while people try to use the military against Americans," the official said. So while Milley "tried his hardest to actively stay out of politics," if the events that occurred brought him into that arena temporarily, "so be it," the official said.
The official added that the general was not calling Trump a Nazi but felt he had no choice but to respond given his concerns that the rhetoric used by the President and his supporters could lead to such an environment.

'This is all real, man'
Rucker and Leonnig interviewed more than 140 sources for the book, though most were given anonymity to speak candidly to reconstruct events and dialogue. Milley is quoted extensively and comes off in a positive light as someone who tried to keep democracy alive because he believed it was on the brink of collapse after receiving a warning one week after the election from an old friend.
"What they are trying to do here is overturn the government," said the friend, who is not named, according to the authors. "This is all real, man. You are one of the few guys who are standing between us and some really bad stuff."
"That f**king guy Jim Jordan. That son of a b*tch," [Liz] Cheney bluntly relayed to Milley what she experienced on the House floor on January 6 … including a run-in with Jordan … Cheney described to Milley her exchange with Jordan: "While these maniacs are going through the place, I'm standing in the aisle and he said, 'We need to get the ladies away from the aisle. Let me help you.' I smacked his hand away and told him, 'Get away from me. You f**king did this.'"
Milley's reputation took a major hit in June 2020, when he joined Trump during his controversial photo-op at St. John's Church, after federal forces violently dispersed a peaceful crowd of social justice protesters at Lafayette Square outside the White House. To make matters worse, Milley wore camouflage military fatigues throughout the incident. He later apologized, saying, "I should not have been there."
But behind the scenes, the book says Milley was on the frontlines of trying to protect the country, including an episode where he tried to stop Trump from firing FBI Director Chris Wray and CIA Director Gina Haspel.
Leonnig and Rucker recount a scene when Milley was with Trump and his top aides in a suite at the Army-Navy football game in December, and publicly confronted White House chief of staff Mark Meadows.
"What's going on? Are you guys getting rid of Wray or Gina?" Milley asked. "Come on chief. What the hell is going on here? What are you guys doing?"
"Don't worry about it," Meadows said. "Just some personnel moves."
"Just be careful," Milley responded, which Leonnig and Rucker write was said as a warning that he was watching.

'That doesn't make any sense'
The book also sheds new light on Trump's descent into a dark and isolated vacuum of conspiracy theories and self-serving delusions after he was declared the loser of the 2020 election.
After the January 6 insurrection, the book says Milley held a conference call each day with Meadows and then-Secretary of State Mike Pompeo. Leonnig and Rucker report the officials used the calls to compare notes and "collectively survey the horizon for trouble."
"The general theme of these calls was, come hell or high water, there will be a peaceful transfer of power on January twentieth," one senior official told the authors. "We've got an aircraft, our landing gear is stuck, we've got one engine, and we're out of fuel. We've got to land this bad boy."
Milley told aides he saw the calls as an opportunity to keep tabs on Trump, the authors write.
Leonnig and Rucker also recount a scene where Pompeo visited Milley at home in the weeks before the election, and the two had a heart-to-heart conversation sitting at the general's table. Pompeo is quoted as saying, "You know the crazies are taking over," according to people familiar with the conversation.
The authors write that Pompeo, through a person close to him, denied making the comments attributed to him and said they were not reflective of his views.
In recent weeks Trump has attacked Milley, who is still the Joint Chiefs chairman in the Biden administration, after he testified to Congress about January 6.

'You f**king did this'
The book also contains several striking anecdotes about prominent women during the Trump presidency, including GOP Rep. Liz Cheney, House Speaker Nancy Pelosi, German Chancellor Angela Merkel and former first lady Michelle Obama.
The book details a phone call the day after the January 6 insurrection between Milley and Cheney, the Wyoming Republican who has close military ties. Cheney voted to impeach Trump and has been an outspoken critic of his election lies, leading to her ouster from House GOP leadership.
Milley asked Cheney how she was doing.
"That f**king guy Jim Jordan. That son of a b*tch," Cheney said, according to the book.
Cheney bluntly relayed to Milley what she experienced on the House floor on January 6 while pro-Trump rioters overran police and breached the Capitol building, including a run-in with Jordan, a staunch Trump ally in the House who feverishly tried to overturn the election.
Cheney described to Milley her exchange with Jordan: "While these maniacs are going through the place, I'm standing in the aisle and he said, 'We need to get the ladies away from the aisle. Let me help you.' I smacked his hand away and told him, 'Get away from me. You f**king did this.'"

'Crazy,' 'dangerous,' 'maniac'
The book reveals Pelosi's private conversations with Milley during this tenuous period. When Trump fired Esper in November, Pelosi was one of several lawmakers who called Milley. "We are all trusting you," she said. "Remember your oath."
After the January 6 insurrection, Pelosi told the general she was deeply concerned that a "crazy," "dangerous" and "maniac" Trump might use nuclear weapons during his final days in office.
"Ma'am, I guarantee you these processes are very good," Milley reassured her. "There's not going to be an accidental firing of nuclear weapons."
"How can you guarantee me?" Pelosi asked.
"Ma'am, there's a process," he said. "We will only follow legal orders. We'll only do things that are legal, ethical, and moral."
A week after the insurrection, Pelosi led House Democrats' second impeachment of Trump for inciting the insurrection. In an interview with the authors, Pelosi said she fears another president could try to pick up where Trump left off.
"We might get somebody of his ilk who's sane, and that would really be dangerous, because it could be somebody who's smart, who's strategic, and the rest," Pelosi said. "This is a slob. He doesn't believe in science. He doesn't believe in governance. He's a snake-oil salesman. And he's shrewd. Give him credit for his shrewdness."

'That b*tch Merkel’
The book quotes Trump, who had a strained relationship with Merkel, as telling his advisers during an Oval Office meeting about NATO and the US relationship with Germany, "That b*tch Merkel."
"'I know the f**king krauts,' the president added, using a derogatory term for German soldiers from World War I and World War II," Leonnig and Rucker write. "Trump then pointed to a framed photograph of his father, Fred Trump, displayed on the table behind the Resolute Desk and said, 'I was raised by the biggest kraut of them all.'"
Trump, through a spokesman, denied to the authors making these comments.

'No one has a bigger smile'
After January 6, Milley participated in a drill with military and law enforcement leaders to prepare for the January 20 inauguration of President Joe Biden. Washington was on lockdown over fears that far-right groups like the Proud Boys might try to violently disrupt the transfer of power.
Milley told a group of senior leaders, "Here's the deal, guys: These guys are Nazis, they're boogaloo boys, they're Proud Boys. These are the same people we fought in World War II. We're going to put a ring of steel around this city and the Nazis aren't getting in."
Trump did not attend the inauguration, in a notable break with tradition, and the event went off without incident.
As the inauguration ceremony ended, Kamala Harris, who had just been sworn in as vice president, paused to thank Milley. "We all know what you and some others did," she said, according to the authors. "Thank you."
The book ends with Milley describing his relief that there had not been a coup, thinking to himself, "Thank God Almighty, we landed the ship safely."
Milley expressed his relief in the moments after Biden was sworn in, speaking to the Obamas sitting on the inauguration stage. Michelle Obama asked Milley how he was feeling.
"No one has a bigger smile today than I do," Milley said, according to Leonnig and Rucker. "You can't see it under my mask, but I do."
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Re: Book: Joint Chiefs general, fearing Trump might try to seize power, took measures to block a coup

Post by maestrob » Thu Jul 15, 2021 10:46 am

Yes.

I kind of thought it went like that. It's good to see my surmises validated in print.

It's not over 'till it's over, and it's certainly not over yet.

Never forget. :twisted:

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Re: Book: Joint Chiefs general, fearing Trump might try to seize power, took measures to block a coup

Post by maestrob » Thu Jul 15, 2021 2:27 pm

Two Accounts of Donald Trump’s Final Year in Office, One More Vivid and Apt Than the Other

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By Dwight Garner
July 15, 2021

Updated 1:45 p.m. ET

Two new books about the final year of Donald J. Trump’s presidency are entering the cultural bloodstream. The first, “Landslide,” by the gadfly journalist Michael Wolff, is the one to leap upon, even though the second, “I Alone Can Fix It,” from the Washington Post journalists Carol Leonnig and Philip Rucker, is vastly more earnest and diligent, to a fault.


This is Wolff’s third book about Trump in as many years. It’s Leonnig and Rucker’s second, after the excellent “A Very Stable Genius,” which appeared in early 2020. This one, alas, reads like 300 daily newspaper articles taped together so that they resemble an inky Kerouacian scroll. Each article longs to jump to Page A28 on a different scroll, in another room.

Perhaps it’s not the authors’ fault that “I Alone Can Fix It” is grueling. It may be that a reader, having survived Covid-19, “stop the steal” and the bear-spray wielders, and feeling a certain amount of relief — relief, John Lanchester has said, is the most powerful emotion — is uneager to rummage so soon through a dense, just-the-facts scrapbook of a dismal year.

A primary and not insignificant achievement in “I Alone Can Fix It,” however, is its bravura introduction of a new American hero, a man who has heretofore not received a great deal of attention: Gen. Mark A. Milley, the chairman of the Joint Chiefs of Staff. A better title for this book might have been “Mr. Milley Goes to Washington.”


There tend not to be a lot of people to root for in Trump books. Reading them is like watching WWE fights in which all the wrestlers are heels, smashing each other with folding chairs. Milley provides Leonnig and Rucker not just with an adult in the room, but a human being with a command of facts, a long view of history, a strong jaw and a moral center.

Milley explains the Constitution to Trump. He delivers cinematic, Eisenhower-worthy monologues, such as: “Everything’s going to be OK. We’re going to have a peaceful transfer of power. We’re going to land this plane safely. This is America.” In one meeting he tells the egregious Stephen Miller to “shut the [expletive] up.”

We were, Milley suggests, closer than we knew to the precipice. A crucial moment in this book details the final weeks of Trump’s presidency, when the stitching was really coming off the ball. Milley told aides he feared a coup, and, Leonnig and Rucker write, “saw parallels between Trump’s rhetoric of election fraud and Adolf Hitler’s insistence to his followers at the Nuremberg rallies that he was both a victim and their savior.” Milley told aides: “This is a Reichstag moment.”

About the Proud Boys and their ilk, he tells military and law enforcement leaders: “These are the same people we fought in World War II.”

There’s a vast amount more in “I Alone Can Fix It.” It’s an almost day-by-day accounting of Trump’s last year in office, from the fumbled Covid response to the second impeachment to Rudy Giuliani’s public self-immolations. There are apocalyptic scenes of Trump dressing down and humiliating those around him, including former Attorney General William P. Barr.

A final scene worth mentioning occurred during the siege on January 6. The congresswoman Liz Cheney called Milley the following day to check in. She described being with the Trump dead-ender Representative Jim Jordan during the attack on the Capitol, and how he said to her, “We need to get the ladies away from the aisle. Let me help you.” Cheney responded, the authors write, by slapping his hand away and telling him, “Get away from me. You [expletive] did this.”

Among the first intellectuals to take Trump seriously as a cultural and political force was Camille Paglia. Writing in Salon six months before the 2016 election, she presciently described him, in a photograph with a busty younger woman, as resembling “a triumphant dragon on the thrusting prow of a long boat.”

Paglia’s “dragon” comment came back to me while I was reading Wolff’s book, “Landslide.” Wolff, too, tells a broad, jumpy, event-laden story about Trump’s shambolic final year. But he’s particularly interested in Trump’s X-factor, his Luciferian pride, his engorged ego, his gargoyle chi — as well as his darkly telepathic relationship with his admirers and the sick realization that in his universe standard morality is waved aside as if by force majeure.

Wolff blames the “striving, orderly, result-oriented, liberal world and its media,” including this newspaper, for missing the point about Trump. Wolff suggests Trump dwells outside the knowable and the conventionally understood. He was never cynical and armed with a grand strategy. He had “completely departed reality.”

His aides stuck with him, in part, because they came to believe he had magical properties. He was unkillable. He was that dragon on a thrusting prow. “Why bet against him?” Wolff asks.

Wolff is a sometimes-mocked figure in the worlds of journalism and politics. He’s been accused of being less than diligent in his fact-checking. He’s been ticketed for careless writing violations. These complaints are valid, up to a point. But “Landslide” is a smart, vivid and intrepid book. He has great instincts. I read it in two or three sittings.

It’s the book that this era and this subject probably deserve. In that way it’s like “His Way,” Kitty Kelley’s brutal 1983 biography of Frank Sinatra or, more flattering to the author, Tina Brown’s sinuous and alert 2007 book about Princess Diana.

You never sense Wolff has the political world in his hands, the way Theodore H. White did in his “The Making of the President” books. He lacks the bristling erudition of a Garry Wills. “Landslide,” with its impudent and inquisitive qualities, put me in mind of Joe McGinniss’s “The Selling of the President 1968.” Like McGinniss, Wolff embeds himself like a tick, even while socially distancing.

Wolff doesn’t have Mark Milley. He’s not so interested in the Covid narrative. He zeros in on the chaos and the kakistocracy, on how nearly everyone with a sense of decency fled Trump in his final months, and how he was left with clapped-out charlatans like Sidney Powell and Giuliani. Giuliani’s flatulence is a running joke in this book, but the author doesn’t find him funny at all.

Wolff has scenes Leonnig and Rucker don’t. These include election night details, such as the freak-out in Trump world when Fox News called Arizona early for Biden. Wolff, who wrote a biography of Rupert Murdoch, describes the frantic phone calls that flew back and forth before the word came down from the old Dirty Digger himself: “[Expletive] him.”

In this accounting, Trump belittles his followers. “Trump often expressed puzzlement over who these people were,” Wolff writes, “their low-rent ‘trailer camp’ bearing and their ‘get-ups,’ once joking that he should have invested in a chain of tattoo parlors and shaking his head about ‘the great unwashed.’”

Wolff has an eye for status details. A typical comment: “Bedminster had hopeful airs of a British gentlemen’s club, but looked more like a steak restaurant.”

It was another Wolfe, Tom, who commented that “the dark night of fascism is always descending in the United States and yet lands only in Europe.” The authors of both these books conclude with fresh Trump interviews, seaside at Mar-a-Lago. None think the threat of that night will pass anytime soon.

I Alone Can Fix It
Donald J. Trump’s Catastrophic Final Year
By Carol Leonnig and Philip Rucker
578 pages. Penguin Press. $30.

Landslide
The Final Days of the Trump Presidency
By Michael Wolff
312 pages. Henry Holt and Company. $29.99.

https://www.nytimes.com/2021/07/15/book ... ime-weight

lennygoran
Posts: 19341
Joined: Tue Mar 27, 2007 9:28 pm
Location: new york city

Re: Book: Joint Chiefs general, fearing Trump might try to seize power, took measures to block a coup

Post by lennygoran » Fri Jul 16, 2021 7:35 am

Colbert on trump yesterday. Regards, Len

https://www.thedailybeast.com/stephen-c ... -coup-rant

maestrob
Posts: 18904
Joined: Tue Sep 16, 2008 11:30 am

Re: Book: Joint Chiefs general, fearing Trump might try to seize power, took measures to block a coup

Post by maestrob » Fri Jul 16, 2021 9:33 am

lennygoran wrote:
Fri Jul 16, 2021 7:35 am
Colbert on trump yesterday. Regards, Len

https://www.thedailybeast.com/stephen-c ... -coup-rant
Yes, indeed. We all knew this, and hopefully these books will provide enough attention in the media so that the reality of TFG's (the former guy's) evil character will finally break through to enough Maganderthals who are always crowing about FREEDOM!" and "LIBERTY!"

Freedom and liberty have zero to do with the phrase "I can have the right to have everybody be like me and get whatever I want out of life!" Our Constitution never said that, but that's what they believe.

Incidentally, did you scroll down on the same page you linked to? This eye-popping text leapt out at me:

"A witness in the New York investigation against the Trump Organization has told prosecutors that Donald Trump personally guaranteed he would cover school costs for the family members of two employees in lieu of a raise—directly implicating the former president in an ongoing criminal tax fraud case.

"The explosive claims come from Jennifer Weisselberg, the ex-wife of a longtime company employee, during a teleconference call with investigators on Friday, June 25, according to two sources who agreed to speak on the condition of anonymity.

"On that afternoon's Zoom call, those sources said, investigators with the Manhattan district attorney and New York state attorney general asked Jennifer Weisselberg whether Trump himself was involved in the company’s alleged tax-dodging scheme of making corporate gifts instead of increasing salary that would be taxed.

"He was, she answered.

"Weisselberg then provided key details for investigators. In January 2012, inside Trump’s office at Trump Tower on Fifth Avenue, Jennifer Weisselberg watched as Trump discussed compensation with her husband and her father-in-law, both company employees. Her husband wouldn’t be getting a raise, but their children would get their tuition paid for at a top-rated private academy instead.

"Weisselberg allegedly relayed to prosecutors that Trump turned to her and said: "Don’t worry, I’ve got it covered.”

"Prosecutors were astonished, according to one source.

"The Daily Beast received descriptions of the call from two people familiar with the details of the call."

Rach3
Posts: 9173
Joined: Tue Apr 03, 2018 9:17 am

Re: Book: Joint Chiefs general, fearing Trump might try to seize power, took measures to block a coup

Post by Rach3 » Wed Jul 21, 2021 8:54 am

From AxiosAm today :

The new book by The Wall Street Journal's Michael Bender — "Frankly, We Did Win This Election: The Inside Story of How Trump Lost" — pinpoints the moment that the relationship between former President Trump and Joint Chiefs Chairman Mark Milley began to disintegrate.

It came last year during a fiery Oval Office confrontation over Milley's public apology for appearing in a photo op with Trump at St. John's Church:

"Why did you apologize?" Trump asked him. "That’s weak."

"Not where I come from," Milley said. "It had nothing to do with you. It had to do with me and the uniform and the apolitical tradition of the United States military."

"I don’t understand that," Trump said. "It sounds like you're ashamed of your president."

"I don’t expect you to understand," Milley said.

Flashback ... Bender reports that former White House chief of staff John Kelly warned Milley not to accept Trump's offer to become Joint Chiefs chairman in December 2018: "I would get as far away from this f------ place as I f------ could."

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