Trump’s response to Bolton: No, you’re the threat

John Bolton’s book is titled “In the Room Where It Happened,” but White House officials are eager to paint a different picture — that he wasn’t always there.

Of the times that he was, they note, President Donald Trump’s former national security adviser is either lying about what he saw or leaking classified information about what happened.

The coordinated attack is ultimately an attempt to counteract Bolton’s central thesis as he promotes his book: Trump poses a danger to the country. It’s the other way around, Trump and his aides are insisting: Bolton is the national security threat.

An array of current and former White House aides surfaced to make these points on Monday, both publicly and privately. The White House is promoting statements from top intelligence officials testifying that Bolton’s book, which will be published on Tuesday, is endangering American intelligence sources. And the president is trumpeting the words of a judge who refused to stop Bolton’s book from coming out but excoriated the author for imperiling national security with his efforts.

It’s an argument that often shifts, at times confusingly, based on the situation. It’s unclear how Bolton can be both lying about crucial moments and leaking classified information about them, all while operating independently of the president. And there are few specific allegations that Bolton wasn't present at the most salacious moments in his book. But the focus on his threat to national security has gained purchase.

“At first I thought it was all just political parlor games,” said Guy Snodgrass, a former speechwriter and aide to Jim Mattis when he was Defense secretary. Then, he said, National Security Agency Director Paul Nakasone filed an affidavit in the government's suit against Bolton arguing that the book included classified information. “Until I saw Gen. Nakasone at Fort Meade releasing a statement saying he was concerned about potentially classified material in the book and his concerns it would harm security abroad. This is someone with a fairly independent streak, and this was telling.”

Current and former officials tried to play up that "independent streak" on Monday.

Former White House press secretary Sarah Sanders shared an excerpt from her coming tell-all book, “Speaking for Myself,” that paints Bolton as “drunk on power,” and said that “often Bolton acted like he was the president, pushing an agenda contrary to President Trump’s.”

“As he did on many of our foreign trips, Bolton had a separate agenda and often arrived and departed on a different plane because he didn’t want to travel on Air Force One with the President and his team,” Sanders wrote. “Bolton apparently felt too important to travel with the rest of us.”

One senior administration official noted Bolton’s decision to not travel with the president on Air Force One may have cost him valuable face time with the president, but said it was just in his style to be “incredibly independent.”

The administration's argument against Bolton has evolved in recent days as Bolton has gone on a media blitz, promoting his book in a prime-time special with ABC News, as well as in interviews with USA Today, NPR and others. While at first discrediting Bolton, White House officials have latched on to intelligence community assessments that the book contained information that jeopardized the safety of the American people.

The director of National Intelligence, John Ratcliffe, wrote in a statement — noted by White House press secretary Kayleigh McEnany in a briefing on Monday — that “unauthorized disclosures of classified information damage our national security and threaten the sources and methods the Intelligence Community relies upon to safeguard the American people.”

The evaluations differed from an initial conclusion by the National Security Council that the book was free of classified information, and Bolton has defended himself against accusations that he put profit ahead of security.

“I am confident that there’s no national security information, no classified information in the book,” he told ABC News. “I didn’t intend to write anything that revealed classified information. I don’t wanna do anything that would benefit our adversaries around the world.”

For months, the manuscript for Bolton’s book was scrutinized line by line by the White House for classified material. As the Justice Department acknowledged, an administration official signed off on the book. But then the review process — which Bolton alleged turned political — was started again. Bolton sees the push by the administration to block his book as an attempt to help the president save face from embarrassing and salacious details about his leadership capacity and decision-making skills before the election.

“He didn't want the book to be published before the election. After it, different story. That tells you this is not about national security. The national security equities don't change depending on who wins the election. This is about suppressing an unfavorable account of his presidency,” Bolton told ABC News.

And in turn, Bolton has been attacked by Democrats for not testifying about his findings when he had the chance during impeachment hearings on Capitol Hill.

“It’s a blood sport. When someone decides to break ranks from their boss, suddenly they’re the worst person in the world and they’re horrible to work with,” Snodgrass said. “That’s politics 101.”

The concerns about the sensitive nature have gone beyond U.S. circles. On Monday, Chung Eui-yong, a top national security adviser for President Moon Jae-in of South Korea, said in a statement, “It does not reflect accurate facts and also distorts a large portion of facts considerably.”

“Unilaterally publishing consultations made based on mutual trust violates the basic principles of diplomacy and could severely damage future negotiations,” Eui-yong said.

Bolton’s book goes into detail about discussions between the United States, South Korea and North Korea surrounding summits between Trump and the North Korean dictator Kim Jong Un.

“I was concerned there are far too many pieces of confidential information on Trump administration policymaking in this book, but it hadn’t occurred to me there might be information on our agreements with other countries,” said Fred Fleitz, a former CIA analyst who served as Bolton’s chief of staff when he was national security adviser.

“It’s just one of many reasons why a senior U.S. official should never publish a book like this before the president leaves office," he added. "It betrays confidence, it discourages the president to confide in his trusted leaders and now we see it could actually affect our relations with other countries.”

On the eve of the book’s release, Trump and his allies leaned on character assassinations. Trump tweeted that Bolton is “grossly incompetent and a liar.” Former chief of staff Mick Mulvaney called Bolton’s television interview “a classless display.”

“I imagine former chief of staffs, former national security advisers, former Cabinet members from all administrations cringed to watch the sort of betrayal of confidence last night from John Bolton,” Mulvaney said during an appearance on “Fox & Friends” on Monday. “It was really a classless display.”

The White House, the Republican National Committee and political allies are expected to continue the attacks even after the book is released. The RNC's rapid-response director, Steve Guest, wrote in an email: “John Bolton is a liar and a warmonger and as Bolton’s self-aggrandizing book and TV interviews show, Bolton is only out for himself, not America’s national security.”

Just hours before the book’s release, the attacks and warnings about classified information appeared to have only boosted Bolton’s book. It is currently No. 1 on Amazon’s bestseller list.