Saturday, September 05, 2020

All the Corroboration for the Atlantic Story on Trump Attacking Troops

You know Trump has really stepped in it when even Fox News - a/k/a Faux News on this blog - confirms a story that Trump denigrated service members who died for the country.  As is the norm, Trump lied and denied the story and one has to imagine his rage when even Fox showed him to be a liar. But even without the Fox News corroboration, there is a plethora of events and statements that corroborate that Trump views members of the military as little more than props for his photos and has no concept whatsoever of the "duty, honor country" mindset that motivates so many in the armed forces. To Trump only two things matter: himself and satiating his ego.  No one and nothing else exists on his radar. A piece in New York Magazine looks at all the corroboration that Trump's foul comments did in fact happen.  Here are excerpts:

Whenever a new report with an inside account of President Trump’s immorality or ignorance appears in the press, it includes a paragraph for official White House spokespeople to issue an indignant denial calling the media and its dozen or two sources liars. Jeffrey Goldberg’s blockbuster revelation in The Atlantic followed the ritual in form, though not in degree. The scope and intensity of the pushback was nuclear: Virtually every White House press official, past and present, denounced the story.

Trump seemed to believe, correctly or otherwise, that the contempt for military service described in this report would be particularly damaging, given the emphasis he has placed on his standing as friend and protector of the troops.

[T]raditional journalistic practice grants more credence to on-the-record sources than anonymous ones, because sources who put their name behind a claim are risking reputational embarrassment if it is falsified. That method would lend more credence to the named sources denying Goldberg’s account than to the unnamed ones endorsing it.

However, that principle obviously does not apply to this administration. Lying is not only common in the Trump administration, it is the cultural glue that holds the president’s coalition together. A willingness to endorse his lies is the most common method Trump uses to identify his loyalists.

While it’s impossible to directly prove any of these allegations, there is an impressive amount of corroborating evidence. Almost all of it supports Goldberg’s reporting.

One piece of evidence works against The Atlantic: John Bolton’s memoir emphasizes different reasons Trump canceled a visit to an American military cemetery in France in 2018. Goldberg’s four sources say Trump worried about the effect of rain on his hair, and commented, “Why should I go to that cemetery? It’s filled with losers.”

Bolton says the visit was canceled because the rain complicated helicopter travel, and the drive would have taken too long. Of course this does not directly contradict Goldberg’s reporting.

On the other side, however, there are many pieces of supporting evidence. The Associated Press, New York Times, Fox News (!) and Washington Post quickly confirmed Goldberg’s reporting. The Post added several related details, in addition to Trump describing fallen soldiers as “losers.” “In one account, the president told senior advisers that he didn’t understand why the U.S. government placed such value on finding soldiers missing in action because they had performed poorly and gotten caught and deserved what they got, according to a person familiar with the discussion.”

What’s more, other sources have claimed that Trump dismisses the value of military service. Michael Cohen testified in 2018 that Trump admitted faking bone spurs to avoid serving in Vietnam and told him, “You think I’m stupid? I wasn’t going to Vietnam.” Mary Trump, in a previously recorded interview, said Trump threatened to disown one of her sons if he enlisted in the military.

(It’s significant that she offered this account before Goldberg’s story, and thus could not have crafted it to fit a narrative created by Goldberg.)

Trump’s denial itself contains provable falsehoods:

First, Trump did call McCain a “loser.” It’s on video. Trump even tweeted the video of himself saying it . . . . .

Trump also made a version of the same attack in a 1999 interview, when he said of McCain, “He was captured,. Does being captured make you a hero? I don’t know. I’m not sure.”

Second, while Trump claims he lowered the White House flag to half-mast to honor McCain’s death “without hesitation or complaint,” four sources told the Times in 2018 that Trump stubbornly refused until finally and belatedly submitting. Former Homeland Security chief of staff Miles Taylor confirmed the account today, on the record.

And finally there is the obvious fact that Trump, in 2015, disparaged John McCain for being captured. That is to say, the private comments Trump is fervently denying are merely grosser versions of his publicly explicated view, that being captured because his plane was shot down makes McCain a loser and not a hero.

This is the most remarkable fact about the defenses of Trump pouring in from the right. Trump is obviously a massive liar. He has already made clear that he does not respect military service. They are throwing what’s left of their reputations on the line to deny nothing more than an incrementally worse version of a reality that Trump has already revealed.

1 comment:

EdA said...

I haven't read Paper Kittem Bolton's apologia, although there was an excerpt in the article by fellow traveler Byron York of the Washington Unexaminer.

That excerpt makes no mention of the claim that the Marine One crew claimed that while they certainly COULD make the flight, they didn't want to with POTUS on board. Which is not at all the same thing.

https://www.foxnews.com/politics/john-bolton-memoir-atlantic-trump-france

There is no indication in the excerpt that our Quisling "president" felt any disappointment at having his trip cancelled. There is no indication that the First Floozy go in Degenerate Don's place.

People can draw their own conclusions. The New York Post writes that nearly 700 alleged veterans signed a letter to Breitbart claiming to believe Private No Class Bone Spurs. Adjacent to the article about that letter was a news item, "Trump reportedly loaded Air Force One with artwork from US embassy in Paris." This apparently refers to about $750K worth of art loaned to the Ambassador's residence that has been confiscated to be displaye in what a spokesman for the White Supremacist House described as the "People's House."