BFF-19 Tillerson backs Trump as book casts mental health doubts

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BFF-19

US-POLITICS

Tillerson backs Trump as book casts mental health doubts

WASHINGTON, Jan 6, 2018 (AFP) – Washington’s chief diplomat Rex Tillerson
found himself obliged to defend President Donald Trump’s fitness for office
Friday after a bombshell new book called into doubt his mental health.

In an extraordinary portion of a television interview on foreign policy
challenges, Tillerson was asked about claims that Trump has a short attention
span, regularly repeats himself and refuses to read briefing notes.

“I’ve never questioned his mental fitness. I’ve had no reason to question
his mental fitness,” said Tillerson, whose office was last year forced to
deny reports that he had referred to Trump as a “moron” after a national
security meeting.

And, even in defending Trump, the former ExxonMobil chief executive
admitted he has had to learn how to relay information to a president with a
very different decision-making style.

“I have to learn how he takes information in, processes it and makes
decisions,” Tillerson told CNN. “I’m here to serve his presidency. So I’ve
had to spend a lot of time understanding how to best communicate with him.”

But Tillerson emphasized the right decisions had been made and that the
United States is in a stronger place internationally thanks to Trump’s
policies.

– ‘Not a typical president’ –

“He is not a typical president of the past, I think that’s well recognized
— that’s also why the American people chose him,” he said, insisting that he
does not expect to be asked to resign in the coming year.

Tillerson was forced to mount his defense as Washington devoured a new
supposed tell-all — Michael Wolff’s “Fire and Fury: Inside the Trump White
House” — rushed into bookstores after the White House failed to suppress it.

The book quickly sold out in shops in the US capital, with some people
even lining up at midnight to get their hands on it and others circulating
pirated copies. Trump has decried the instant best-seller as “phony” and
“full of lies.”

Journalist Wolff, no stranger to controversy, quotes several key Trump
aides expressing doubt about Trump’s ability to lead the world’s largest
economy and military hegemon.

“Let me put a marker in the sand here. One hundred percent of the people
around him” question Trump’s fitness for office, Wolff told NBC’s “Today”
show.

“They all say he is like a child. And what they mean by that is he has a
need for immediate gratification. It’s all about him.”

The 71-year-old Republican president, approaching the first anniversary of
his inauguration, has responded to the book with fury.

– Criticism from aides –

“I authorized Zero access to White House (actually turned him down many
times) for author of phony book! I never spoke to him for book. Full of lies,
misrepresentations and sources that don’t exist,” Trump tweeted Thursday.

But Wolff countered: “I absolutely spoke to the president. Whether he
realized it was an interview or not, I don’t know, but it certainly was not
off the record.”

The book includes extensive quotes from Steve Bannon, Trump’s former chief
strategist, and its publication sparked a very public break between the
former allies.

Bannon is quoted accusing Trump’s eldest son Don Jr of “treasonous”
contacts with a Kremlin-connected lawyer, and saying the president’s daughter
Ivanka, who imagines running for president one day, is “dumb as a brick.”

But it is Trump himself who is cast in the most unfavorable light.

Late Friday Trump fired another bitter tweet, calling Wolff “a total loser
who made up stories in order to sell this really boring and untruthful book.”

“He used Sloppy Steve Bannon, who cried when he got fired and begged for
his job. Now Sloppy Steve has been dumped like a dog by almost everyone. Too
bad!”

The book claims that for Treasury Secretary Steve Mnuchin and former White
House chief of staff Reince Priebus, the president was an “idiot.” For chief
economic advisor Gary Cohn, he was “dumb as shit.” And for National Security
Adviser H.R. McMaster, he was a “dope.”

The publication came as it emerged that at least a dozen members of the US
Congress were briefed last month by a Yale University professor of psychiatry
on Trump’s mental health.

“Lawmakers were saying they have been very concerned about this, the
president’s dangerousness, the dangers that his mental instability poses on
the nation,” Bandy Lee, a doctor, told CNN. – ‘Minute-by-minute’ –

The White House issued a scorched-earth dismissal of “Fire and Fury” along
with its author and his sources, with Press Secretary Sarah Sanders calling
it “complete fantasy.”

First lady Melania Trump’s spokeswoman, Stephanie Grisham, told CNN that
it is “a work of fiction. It is a long-form tabloid that peddles false
statements and total fabrications.”

Behind the scenes, though, Trump has been enraged by the betrayal by
Bannon — a man who engineered the New York real estate mogul’s link to the
nationalist far right and helped create a pro-Trump media ecosystem.

Sanders suggested that Bannon’s employer, Breitbart News, should consider
firing him.

He wasn’t fired, but Bannon’s main financial backer is formally cutting
ties with him, The Washington Post reported.

Bannon, who left the White House in August, is also quoted in the book as
saying that the investigation by special counsel Robert Mueller into Russian
interference in the 2016 election — and possible collusion by the Trump
campaign — will focus on money laundering.

Wolff confidently defended himself against attacks on his credibility,
which have included threats from Trump’s lawyers of a libel suit.

“My credibility is being questioned by a man who has less credibility
than, perhaps, anyone who has ever walked on earth at this point,” Wolff
said.

“I spoke to people who spoke to the president on a daily, sometimes
minute-by-minute basis,” he added.

“I am certainly absolutely in every way comfortable with everything I’ve
reported in this book.”

BSS/AFP/GMR/1146 hrs