Call sound: What do they find out about Donald Trump?

For Donald Trump, all politics is personal”, Stephen Collinson writes on CNN.com. The emerging transcripts of President Trump's calls in January with Mexican President Enrice Peña Nieto and Australia's Prime Minister Malcolm Trandall discover a president who sees complex global issues only in light of his personal political subx2ndmark”. In conversations [...]
The emerging transcripts of President Trump's calls in January with Mexican President Enrice Peña Nieto and Australia's Prime Minister Malcolm Trandall reveal a president who sees complex global issues only in light of his personal political subx0mmarket”.
In conversations published by the Washington Post last week, Trump tells Peña Nieto to stop telling the media that Mexico will not pay for the wall promised by him, because that makes Trump look bad. “cannot live with this”, Trump says.
In a “combative call” with Turnbull, Trump with anger, complains that it should respect the “bulls <x3nd> agreement of President Obama to accept 1,250 refugees from Atsalalia, even though they are very much controlled. This “will make me look terrible”, Trump says.
Despite Trump's statements, neither Peña Nieto nor Turnbull releases a centimeter, writes Michelle Goldberg in Slate.com. So did the “ide that the alleged author of the book Art of Agreement is capable of making the deal”.
These “conversations should not have been detected”, writes Elliot Kaufman at National Review.com.
The presidents need security of privacy in their discussions with foreign leaders, so they can speak “fairly and openly”. Now, “Trangle, Pena Nieto and any foreign leader will think twice about speaking up”.
Yes, it is strange to see Trump's hypocrisy on the walls at the border, his obsession with press coverage, and his strange choice of words. But some laughter is not worth “to damage the US government”. Whoever released these transcripts “has only brought a new kind of instability to the international order”, writes John Podhoretetz in the CommentaryMagazine.com.
Attorney General Jeff Sessions has vowed to prosecute those who have released them, “, and I hope that what they have done, expose and shame”.
Although the flow of presidential calls is potentially harmful, in this case “is justified”, Jennifer Rubin writes at The Washington Post.
Trump is discovered as the “fearfully obsessed with itself and with its image”, and will not be aware of other world leaders' concerns.
Trump's narcism “allows for flattery” by opponents like Vladimir Putin of Russia, suggesting that “ai would be more than willing to do the country's interests, submit to his need for personal affirmation”.
Our president simply “cannot fulfill the role of Commander General” and this is a much greater risk to national security than the flow of several calls. /Bota.al/












