“There are exactly two possible explanations for the shameful
performance the world witnessed on Monday, from a serving American president.
“Either
Donald Trump is flat-out an agent of Russian interests—maybe witting, maybe
unwitting, from fear of blackmail, in hope of future deals, out of manly
respect for Vladimir Putin, out of gratitude for Russia’s help during the
election, out of pathetic inability to see beyond his 306 electoral votes.
Whatever the exact mixture of motives might be, it doesn’t really matter.
“Or he is
so profoundly ignorant, insecure, and narcissistic that he did not realize
that, at every step, he was advancing the line that Putin hoped he would
advance, and the line that the American intelligence, defense, and
law-enforcement agencies most dreaded.
“Conscious tool. Useful idiot. Those are the choices, though both
are possibly true, so that the main question is the proportions.
“Whatever the balance of motivations, what mattered was that
Trump’s answers were indistinguishable from Putin’s, starting with the
fundamental claim that Putin’s assurances about interference in U.S. democracy
(‘He was incredibly strong and confident in his denial’) deserved belief over
those of his own Department of Justice (‘I think the probe is a disaster for
our country’).
“I am old enough to remember Lyndon Johnson and Richard Nixon
telling lies on TV, about Vietnam in both cases, and Watergate for Nixon. I
remember the travails and deceptions of Bill Clinton, and of George W. Bush in
the buildup to the disastrous Iraq War.
“But never
before have I seen an American president consistently, repeatedly, publicly,
and shockingly advance the interests of another country over those of his own
government and people.
“Trump
manifestly cannot help himself. This is who
he is.
“Those who could do something are the 51 Republican
senators and 236 Republican representatives who have the power to hold
hearings, issue subpoenas, pass resolutions of censure, guarantee the integrity
of Robert Mueller’s investigation, condemn the past Russian election
interference, shore up protections against the next assault, and in general defend their country rather than the damaged
and defective man who is now its president.
“For 18
months, members of this party have averted their eyes from Trump, rather than
disturb the Trump elements among their constituency or disrupt the party’s
agenda on tax cuts and the Supreme Court. They already bear responsibility for
what Trump has done to his office.
“But with
every hour that elapses after this shocking performance in Helsinki without
Republicans doing anything, the
more deeply they are stained by this dark moment in American leadership.”
James Fallows is a national
correspondent for The Atlantic and has written for the
magazine since the late 1970s. He has reported extensively from outside the
United States and once worked as President Carter's chief speechwriter. He and
his wife, Deborah Fallows, are the authors of the new book Our Towns: A 100,000-Mile Journey
Into the Heart of America, which has been a New
York Times best-seller and is the basis of a forthcoming HBO
documentary.
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