The US president says the acclaimed journalist’s White House portrayal is a ‘con’
Donald Trump has dismissed a highly critical book on his presidency by the respected investigative journalist Bob Woodward as a politically motivated “con of the public”.
Woodward, one of the journalists who helped uncover the Watergate scandal, portrays the Trump White House as chaotic and dysfunctional in his new book Fear.
Woodward, who based his book on hundreds of hours of interviews with key players in the Trump administration, claimed some of these figures had deliberately protected the US from its president, by ignoring his often intemperate orders.
Trump has hit back in a series of tweets claiming that Woodward was working for the Democratic party and that publication of the book was timed to damage the Republicans in the midterm elections in November.
The White House press secretary, Sarah Sanders, dismissed the book as “nothing more than fabricated stories, many by former disgruntled employees”.
She claimed in a statement: “While it is not always pretty, and rare that the press actually covers it, president Trump has broken through the bureaucratic process to deliver unprecedented successes for the American people. Sometimes it is unconventional, but he always gets results. Democrats and their allies in the media understand the president’s policies are working and with success like this, no one can beat him in 2020 – not even close.”
The White House also issued a statement from the chief of staff, John Kelly, a source quoted in the book, denying one of its claims.
Trump accused Woodward of making up quotations attributed to Kelly and the US defence chief, James Mattis.
According to the book, Kelly was said to be so incensed by Trump’s behaviour that he privately described the president to other aides as an “idiot” and complained that they were in “Crazytown”.
“The idea I ever called the president an idiot is not true,” said Kelly.
Meanwhile Trump’s former lawyer John Dowd told Axios he had never called Trump a “fucking liar”, as Woodward reported.
According to Woodward, Mattis told staff to ignore a tirade by Trump against Syria’s president Bashar al-Assad in the wake of a chemical weapons attack in April 2017 and the US president’s alleged statement: “Let’s fucking kill him!”
Woodward quoted Mattis as telling staff: “We’re not going to do any of that. We’re going to be much more measured.”
Woodward was denied access to Trump during his research despite repeated requests. But he was granted a phone interview with Trump after completing the book. In a recording of the conversation, released on Tuesday by the Washington Post, Trump told Woodward: “you’ve always been fair”.
But after publication of the book Trump challenged Woodward’s integrity.
The book quoted Trump accusing his attorney general, Jeff Sessions, of being “mentally retarded”. Woodward claimed he went on: “He’s this dumb southerner [who] couldn’t even be a one-person country lawyer down in Alabama.”
Trump has publicly criticised Sessions, but on Wednesday he denied ever using such language to describe anyone.