US President, Donald Trump, has threatened that former National Security Advisor, John Bolton, could face criminal prosecution for the contents of his forthcoming book about working for Trump in the White House.
ABC News
announced that Bolton had recorded a sit-down interview with Martha Raddatz
that will air Sunday night and the news network has billed the Sunday night
interview as ‘primetime’.
The network
also announced that Bolton will discuss some contents in the book and also talk
about why he didn’t testify against Trump to congress during the President’s
impeachment trial last year.
According to
the publisher of the book, Bolton is set to release ‘The Room Where It
Happened: A White House Memoir’ next Tuesday, June 23, which will paint a
picture of ”chaos and a president focused exclusively on his own re-election”
ABC news
network reports that the White House is expected to file a lawsuit to keep
Bolton’s book, in its current form, off stores and book shelves.
According to
Trump, Bolton who was fired last year for advising him to go to war with Iran
and North Korea, will be disclosing vital National Security information if he
releases details of his conversation with Trump in a book.
“Somebody
said he went out and wrote a book.” “If
he wrote a book”
“I can’t
imagine that he can because that’s highly classified information.” Trump said,
while sitting with Attorney General Bill Barr, told reporters in response to if
he’ll permit the release of the book.
“Even
conversations with me, they’re highly classified
“If he wrote
a book, and the book gets out, he’s broken the law,” Trump claimed. “I would
think he would have criminal problems. I hope so.”
‘I will
consider every conversation with me as president highly classified,’
‘So that
would mean that if he wrote a book and if the book gets out he’s broken the
law.
Trump was
noncommittal when asked about the possibility of a lawsuit — he said “they’re
in court, or they’ll soon be in court” over the book.
Bill Barr in
response said the current goal was to get Bolton to finalize the National
Security Council security review process.
‘The thing
that is front-and-center right now is trying to get him to complete the
process, go through the process and make the necessary deletions of classified
information,’ Barr said.
Barr
continued to maintain that without the letter, Bolton wasn’t done yet.
‘And we don’t
believe Bolton went through that process, hasn’t completed the process and
therefore is in violation of that agreement,’ Barr said.
Trump chimed
in adding, ‘And that’s a criminal liability.
‘By the way,
you’re talking about, you’re not talking about like he’s going to return $3
that he’s made on the book,’ the president continued. ‘By the way, you’re
talking about, you’re not talking about like he’s going to return $3 that he’s
made on the book.’
‘You know
Hillary Clinton, she deleted 33,000 emails. And if we ever found out what those
emails said, she’d have a liability. That’s what you have, you have a
liability,’ the president continued, referencing his former political rival’s
decision to use a private email account during her time serving as secretary of
state, which she deleted messages from.
Bolton’s book
has already been delayed due to the standard vetting that former and current
employees of the National Security Council (NSC) have to undergo in order to
determine if their works contain classified information.
Bolton’s
lawyer Chuck Cooper said the vetting process was unfair to his client in a June
10 op-Ed to the Wall Street journal.
‘What
followed was perhaps the most extensive and intensive prepublication review in
NSC history,’ Cooper said.
In a printed
press release given to reporters last week, Bolton’s publisher said he had
worked to address NSC’s concerns and the ‘final published version of this book
reflects those changes.’
Cooper said
he had worked with Ellen Knight, the NSC’s senior director for prepublication
review of materials written by NSC personnel, to determine what could be
removed from the book and by late April she informed Bolton ‘that’s the last
edit I really have to provide for you,’
The White
House, according to Cooper have since refused to give Bolton a letter saying
the book had been cleared and that Bolton hadn’t heard from Knight since May 7.
According to
Cooper, on June 8 , John A. Eisenberg,
the president’s deputy counsel for national secuirty, reached out to Bolton
saying the manuscript contained classified information and publishing the book
would violate Bolton’s non-disclosure agreement he signed before the president
employed him.
‘This
last-minute allegation came after an intensive four-month review, after weeks
of silence from the White House, and – as Mr. Eisenberg admits in the letter –
after press reports alerted the White House that Mr. Bolton’s book would be
published on June 23,’ Cooper argued.
‘This is a
transparent attempt to use national security as a pretext to censor Mr. Bolton,
in violation of his constitutional right to speak on matters of the utmost
public import,’ Cooper wrote. ‘This attempt will not succeed, and Mr. Bolton’s
book will be published June 23.’
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