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Wednesday, September 5, 2018

Trump Wanted Assad Assassinated, But Mattis Ignored Him, Says Book Quoting Top Aides

Washington: US President Donald Trump wanted to have a Syrian President Bashar al-Assasd assassinated last year but his Defence secretary ignored the request, according to a new book that depicts top Trump aides sometimes disregarding presidential orders to limit what they saw as damaging and dangerous behavior.


Trump Wanted Assad Assassinated, But Mattis Ignored Him, Says Book Quoting Top Aides



Excerpts from the book Fear: Trump in the white House, written by famed Watergate reporter Bob Woodward,were published by the Washington post on Tuesday. The book, which is scheduled for release on September 11, is the latest to detail tensions within the White House under Trump's 20-month-old presidency.

It's just another bad book,'Trump told the Daily Caller.

The Republican president said in a Twitter post that quotes in the book attributed to Defence secretary James Mattis, White House chief of staff John Kelly and others 'were made up frauds, a con on the public.'
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The book portrays Trump as prone to profane outbursts and impulsive decision-making, painting a picture of chaos that Woodward says amounts to an 'administrative coup d'etat' and a 'nervous breakdown' of the executive branch.

According to the book, Trump told Mattis that he wanted to have Assad assassinated after the Syrian president launched a chemical attack on civilians in April 2017.




Mattis told Trump he would 'get right on it,' but instead developed a plan for a limited air strike that did not threaten Assad personally.

Mattis told associates after a separate incident that Trump acted like 'a fifth-or sixth-grader,' according to the book.

The Pentagon declined to comment. reporting on the Watergate scandal in the 1970 and has since written a series of books that provided behind-the- scenes glimpses of presidential administrations and other insiders with the understanding that he would not reveal how he got his information, the Post said. Among his other revelations: Farmer to economic adviser Gary Cohn stole a letter off Trump's desk that the president planned to sign that would withdraw the United States from a trade agreement with South Korea. 


Cohn, who tried to rein in Trump''s protectionist impulses, also planned to remove a similar memo that would have withdrawn the United States from the North American Free Trade Agreement with Mexico and Canada, Woodward Wrote.


In a statement on Tuesday,Mattis dismissed the book as 'a uniquely Washington brand of literature' and said the contemptuous words about Trump attributed to himh  'were never uttered by me or i


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