Trump says John Bolton will have a 'really big price to pay' for releasing classified information in his tell-all White House book after judge allowed its release but warned the ex-NSC adviser has 'gambled' with national security
Donald Trump has said John Bolton will have a 'really big price to pay' for releasing classified information in his tell-all White House book, after a judge allowed its release but warned the ex-national security adviser has 'gambled' with US security.
The president took to social media in outrage over Saturday's ruling by a federal judge denying the Trump administration's attempt to block the release of Bolton's memoir 'The Room Where It Happened: A White House Memoir'.
Trump slammed the decision on Twitter branding Bolton 'despicable man' who broke the law and warned that he must pay a 'very big price'.
'Wow, I finally agree with failed political consultant Steve Schmidt, who called Wacko John Bolton “a despicable man who failed in his duty to protect America.”' he tweeted.
'Also stated that he should never be allowed to serve in government again. So true! Plain and simple, John Bolton, who was all washed up until I brought him back and gave him a chance, broke the law by releasing Classified Information (in massive amounts).'
Trump added that Bolton must pay a 'very big price': 'He must pay a very big price for this, as others have before him. This should never to happen again!!!'
The Justice Department's attempt to block the release of John Bolton's (left) tell-all book has been denied. The book makes some explosive claims about President Trump (right)
Judge Royce Lamberth denied the request to block the sale of the former national security adviser's memoir in a ruling Saturday.
Lamberth ruled in favor of Bolton saying 'the damage is done' after 200,000 copies have already been circulated around the US but admitted the former aide's conduct 'raises national security concerns'.
The Trump administration sued John Bolton on Tuesday, trying to stop the release of his White House memoir, due out June 23
This came after the Trump administration sued Bolton on Tuesday in order to postpone the release of his book because of concerns that classified information could be exposed.
Copies of the book were then leaked to the media the next day.
The memoir from the president's top aide, who was controversially fired back in September, contains a number of explosive claims about Trump, including that he asked China for help with his re-election bid - a move similar to how Trump interacted with Ukraine, which led to him being impeached.
The federal judge ruled in favor of Bolton Saturday saying he can move forward in publishing his tell-all book despite efforts by the Trump administration to block it.
Lamberth said that with 200,000 copies already distributed to booksellers across the country, attempting to block its release would be futile.
'A single dedicated individual with a book in hand could publish its contents far and wide from his local coffee shop,' Lamberth wrote.
'With hundreds of thousands of copies around the globe - many in newsrooms - the damage is done. There is no restoring the status quo.'
The decision marks a victory for Bolton in a court case that involved core First Amendment and national security concerns.
But the judge also blasted Bolton for the way he went about publishing the book saying he had taken it 'upon himself to publish his book without securing final approval from national intelligence authorities' and that he could have caused irreparable harm to national security.
Lamberth said Bolton had 'gambled with the national security of the United States' by opting out of a prepublication review process meant to prevent government officials from spilling classified secrets in memoirs they publish.
The ruling clears the path for a broader election-year readership and distribution of a memoir, due out Tuesday, that paints an unflattering portrait of Trump's foreign policy decision-making during the turbulent year-and-a-half that Bolton spent in the White House.
Trump slammed the decision on Twitter branding Bolton a 'despicable man' and claimed he was 'all washed up' until he 'brought him back and gave him a chance'
EXPLOSIVE CLAIMS MADE IN THE BOOK:
- Trump agreed to 'back off' criminal probes as 'personal favors' to dictators
- Told Chinese President Xi Jinping he should go ahead with building camps the regime was constructing for Chinese Uighurs
- Put Jared Kushner in charge of several foreign policy matters
- Spent part of Osaka summit 'pleading with Xi to ensure he'd win' reelection by buying US crops'
- Believed Finland was part of Russia
- Said invading Venezuala was 'cool' and said the nation was 'really part of the United States'
- Made it a 'high priority' to get Mike Pompeo to hand a copy of Elton John's 'Rocket Man' to North Korean Dictator Kim Jong-Un
- Did not know Great Britain was a nuclear power
- Defended Saudi Crown Prince Mohammed bin Salman over the killing of Jamal Khashoggi to distract attention from Ivanka Trump using her personal email
- Postponed removing the US from the Iran deal so Melania Trump could announce her Be Best campaign
- Claimed he was going to be nominated for a Noble Peace Prize for his North Korea summit
- Said he always broke up with women he dated because he didn't like being dumped
- Referred to his former UN.Ambassador Nikki Haley as a 'c***' while Jared Kushner and Ivanka Trump wanted her to replace Mike Pence
Lamberth, a Reagan appointee, heard arguments Friday over Zoom from Bolton's lawyer Charles Cooper and Deputy Assistant Attorney General David Morrell, representing the government.
Cooper had argued that it was too late to ban its publication now that Bolton's book was in the hands of journalists and hundreds of thousands of copies had been sent to bookstores nationwide and abroad.
'It seems to me, as we used to say in Texas, that the horse is out of the barn,' Lamberth said. 'What am I supposed to do?'
Copies of the book ended up in the hands of reporters working for The New York Times and The Washington Post on Wednesday - one day after the Trump administration filed a lawsuit to block its publication.
DailyMail.com obtained a copy Wednesday evening.
'Indeed, the surreal nature of the Government's request to enjoin publication and distribution of the book was driven home earlier today when a CBS News reporter, holding a copy of the book in her hand, questioned the President's press secretary about passages in the book on the White House lawn,' Bolton's legal team said, referencing CBS' Paula Reid, who questioned press secretary Kayleigh McEnany over some of its contents in the White House driveway.
'For the Government is asking the Court to order Ambassador Bolton to do something he is powerless to do,' they said.
'The practical reality is that neither Ambassador Bolton nor his publisher, Simon & Schuster, has any ability to stop copies from being sold to the general public on June 23.'
The book contains a number of explosive claims about President Trump, including that he asked China for help with his re-election bid - a move similar to how Trump interacted with Ukraine, which led to him being impeached
During court Friday, Morrell suggested the judge could order digital and audio copies of Bolton's book not be sold.
'There is still an interest we have in limiting the further mass dissemination of this book,' he said.
Morrell argued that Bolton shouldn't have gone ahead with publication of the book because he never finished a review process, which would determine if the book contained classified information - something the president argues it does.
In court, Cooper suggested questions about whether the book contained classified information could be saved for a later date.
That being said, the lawyer also revealed what he called a 'troubling revelation,' that the Trump political appointee called in to take over the classification review of Bolton's book never got the proper training until June 10 - nine days ago.
Cooper argued that the administartion rushed Michael Ellis, the NSC's senior director for intelligence programs, onto the job to overrule Ellen Knight, the National Security Council's senior director for prepublication review, who's in charge of reviewing manuscripts so no classified information slips out.
She had informed Bolton on April 24 that after a nearly four-month back-and-forth over the manuscript's contents, 'that's the last edit I really have to provide for you.'
In the Thursday night filing from Bolton's legal team, the lawyers wrote, 'At that moment, Ambassador Bolton fulfilled any obligation he had under the express terms of his non-disclosure agreement with the government.'
'Nevertheless, the President, and those acting at his direction, have sought to delay publication of the book until after the election by withholding the customary pro-forma letter confirming that the book was cleared for publication,' the filing read.
Judge Lamberth asked Friday why Bolton didn't go to court to get its permission, instead of simply deciding to go ahead and publish the tome.
In the government's lawsuit, the Department of Justice blasts Bolton for 'unilaterally deciding that the prepublication review process is complete and deciding for himself whether classified information should be made public.'
Lamberth also asked Morrell if it was unusual that a senior official would intervene in the review process of a book after a career official had already deemed no classified information was present.
John Bolton's lawyers had argued that distribution of the book couldn't be stopped, using as an example the fact that CBS News reporter Paula Reid (right) brought a copy to the White House and held it in her hand as she questioned press secretary Kayleigh McEnany (left)
Morrell knew of no other example, but argued that Bolton was an extraordinary circumstance because of the role he held - that of national security adviser - and because he had very recently served the administration, leaving in September 2019.
Most of Friday's back-and-forth revolved around the book already being widely disseminated and if it contained classified information.
The legal document filed Thursday night by Bolton's team also argued he should be allowed to go ahead with his book release on First Amendment grounds.
'If the First Amendment stands for anything, it is that the Government does not have the power to clasp its hand over the mouth of a citizen attempting to speak on a matter of great public import,' Bolton's lawyers wrote.
They charged the US government with asking the court to stop the book's distribution 'for the transparent purpose of preventing Ambassador Bolton from revealing embarrassing facts about the President’s conduct in office.'
'It is difficult to conceive of speech that is closer to the core of the First Amendment than speech concerning presidential actions in office, including actions at the heart of the President’s impeachment, and it is difficult to conceive of a greater attack on the First Amendment than the suppression of that speech in the service of a reelection campaign,' the lawyers said.
Bolton's team argued that this was 'precisely' what was happening.
On Tuesday, the same day the White House sued the former Trump aide, Bolton was informed by the Trump administration of more changes that needed to be made to the book.
They included 'passages describing or recounting a significant majority of the President's conversations with his advisors and with foreign leaders.'
'The government also deleted numerous passages portraying President Trump in an unflattering light,' the lawyers said.
A day before, Trump told reporters, 'I will consider every conversation with me as president highly classified.'
'So that would mean that if he wrote a book and if the book gets out he's broken the law. I would think he would have criminal problems,' Trump said of Bolton.
Bolton's book portrays a White House filled with chaos - a president with no real understanding of world affairs, a son-in-law wielding powers in areas out of his depth, and in-fighting and backstabbing among different power centers.
The bombshell claims made include that Trump made 'personal favors' to dictators, bedded Chinese President Xi Jinping to help him win the 2020 presidential race and delayed pulling out of the Iran deal to let Melania launch her own initiative first.
Bolton became Trump's national security adviser in April 2018 and left in September 2019.
Trump claims he fired him but Bolton has said he left because he clashed with the president on several policy issues, including Iraq, Afghanistan and the Ukraine.
The book, which marks the first memoir from a high-ranking official in the Trump administration, has been the subject of an ongoing legal battle.
The Justice Department sued him to stop its publication, claiming it contains classified information.
Trump's administration has also hit back at Bolton, with officials saying he was disliked by his White House staff and demanded his own Air Force jet to London for Trump's state visit to the United Kingdom.
'Bolton was just a mean, nasty human being,' a high-ranking administration official told DailyMail.com.
'He was broadly disliked in the building, including by many on his own staff.'
Trump says John Bolton will have a 'really big price to pay' for releasing classified information in his tell-all White House book after judge allowed its release but warned the ex-NSC adviser has 'gambled' with national security
Reviewed by Your Destination
on
June 21, 2020
Rating:
No comments