• Hey, guest user. Hope you're enjoying NeoGAF! Have you considered registering for an account? Come join us and add your take to the daily discourse.

Washington Loves General McMaster, But Trump Doesn't

Tovarisc

Member
The national security adviser has lost sway. The White House says everything's fine.

------

For the Washington establishment, President Donald Trump's decision to make General H.R. McMaster his national security adviser in February was a masterstroke. Here is a well-respected defense intellectual, praised by both parties, lending a steady hand to a chaotic White House. The grown-ups are back.

But inside the White House, the McMaster pick has not gone over well with the one man who matters most. White House officials tell me Trump himself has clashed with McMaster in front of his staff.

On policy, the faction of the White House loyal to senior strategist Steve Bannon is convinced McMaster is trying to trick the president into the kind of nation building that Trump campaigned against. Meanwhile the White House chief of staff, Reince Priebus, is blocking McMaster on a key appointment.

McMaster's allies and adversaries inside the White House tell me that Trump is disillusioned with him. This professional military officer has failed to read the president -- by not giving him a chance to ask questions during briefings, at times even lecturing Trump.

Presented with the evidence of this buyer's remorse, the White House on Sunday evening issued a statement from Trump: "I couldn't be happier with H.R. He's doing a terrific job."

Other White House officials however tell me this is not the sentiment the president has expressed recently in private. Trump was livid, according to three White House officials, after reading in the Wall Street Journal that McMaster had called his South Korean counterpart to assure him that the president's threat to make that country pay for a new missile defense system was not official policy. These officials say Trump screamed at McMaster on a phone call, accusing him of undercutting efforts to get South Korea to pay its fair share.

This was not an isolated incident. Trump has complained in front of McMaster in intelligence briefings about "the general undermining my policy," according to two White House officials. The president has given McMaster less face time. McMaster's requests to brief the president before some press interviews have been declined. Over the weekend, McMaster did not accompany Trump to meet with Australia's prime minister; the outgoing deputy national security adviser, K.T. McFarland, attended instead.

....

The roots of the McMaster-Trump tensions begin in February, when the general was hired after his first meeting with the president. McMaster replaced another general, Michael Flynn. Both Vice President Mike Pence and Priebus supported getting rid of Flynn, after they alleged he misled his colleagues about conversations with the Russian ambassador.

....

In this sense, McMaster came into the job with one strike against him. He has accumulated more. The first conflict between McMaster and Trump was about the major speech the president delivered at the end of February to a joint session of Congress. McMaster pleaded with the president not to use phrase "radical Islamic terrorism." He sent memos throughout the government complaining about a draft of that speech that included the phrase. But the phrase remained. When Trump delivered the speech, he echoed his campaign rhetoric by emphasizing each word: "Radical." "Islamic." "Terrorism."

Then Trump's inner circle began clashing with McMaster over personnel. This began with Ezra Cohen Watnick, who remains the senior director for intelligence at the National Security Council. McMaster initially sided with the CIA and wanted to remove this Flynn appointee from his position, but eventually McMaster changed his mind under pressure from Bannon and Trump's son-in-law, Jared Kushner.

That dispute was followed by a bigger one. Bannon and Trump, according to White House officials, pressed McMaster to fire a list of Obama holdovers at the National Security Council who were suspected of leaking to the press. The list of names was compiled by Derek Harvey, a former Defense Intelligence Agency colonel who was initially hired by Flynn. McMaster balked. He refused to fire anyone on the list and asserted that he had the authority to fire and hire National Security Council staff. He also argued that many of these appointees would be ending their rotation at the White House soon enough.

And finally, the White House chief of staff himself blocked McMaster this month from hiring Brigadier General Ricky Waddell as his deputy, complaining that McMaster failed to seek approval for that pick. McMaster had asked his inherited deputy to leave by May 10; she is now expected to stay on for the time being.


Source: https://www.bloomberg.com/view/arti...gton-loves-general-mcmaster-but-trump-doesn-t

Hiring not-a-yes-man not paying off for EasyD?

Edit: Twist in a story

o6Jgph7.png

https://twitter.com/JoeNBC/status/861720935359021056
 

HStallion

Now what's the next step in your master plan?
This was already posted in another thread but I don't believe the Bannon part was. That would be something if he's already trying to sew discord.
 

Hexa

Member
This is getting way too complicated. There are leaks about leaks. Can't trust anything.
 

HStallion

Now what's the next step in your master plan?
shyamalan.jpg

That actually makes so much more sense. The optics of firing McMaster would be terrible because McMaster is a general and got put in the position because he couldn't say no.

The fallout if Trump was forced to can Bannon for this kind of shit would epic.
 

E-Cat

Member
'McMaster' sounds like the fruit of a would-be GOP lab experiment where they made the ideal square-jawed, stoic General that is a "true patriot and not a commie fag". I can't get over it.
 

Mortemis

Banned
So McMaster is either pissing off Bannon or Trump and Bannon.

Sounds like he's doing a good job to me either way.
 

Madness

Member
So the distinguished general who is revered and liked among both parties and one who assures allies like SK and provides Trump with briefings and urges him not to stoke flames is the problem... I honestly belive Donald Trump is senile. A man born with a silvet spoon who took great pleasure in life firing people or making them feel bad, who now is President and seeing he actually has a fraction of the power he thought he had. I would rather have military individuals like McMaster and Mattis than civilians morons like Trump and Bannon etc.
 
Yeah Trump is definitely the definition of someone who can't abide anyone in the same room as him being smarter/more experienced than him except family of course
 
Top Bottom