President Trump poured fuel
on the fire in his fight with Congress
over Syria, lashing out at Democrats
during a closed-door White House meeting
on Wednesday and sparring publicly with
Republican allies.
The chaotic day was a U-turn from
earlier this week when the
administration applied new sanctions on
Turkey in an effort to combat fierce
criticism from Capitol Hill and when
Republicans were dialing back their
furor in an effort to get on the same
page as Trump.
But the unity effort went off the
rails in a closed-door meeting between
Trump, congressional leadership and key
committee members, which was preceded by
hours of fighting between Trump and
lawmakers.
Congressional Democrats and sources
say the president used the meeting to
fume at Democrats and former
administration officials, at one point
calling Speaker
Nancy Pelosi (D-Calif.) a
“third-rate politician” and former
Defense Secretary
James Mattis “the world’s
most overrated general.”
“What we witnessed on the part of the
president was a meltdown, sad to say,”
Pelosi told reporters after she left the
meeting with Senate Minority Leader
Charles Schumer (D-N.Y.) and
House Majority Leader
Steny Hoyer (D-Md.).
“We have to pray for his health
because this was a very serious meltdown
on the part of the president,” she added
after returning to the Capitol.
Schumer said Trump was “insulting” to
Pelosi.
“She kept her cool completely, but he
called her a third-rate politician,”
Schumer said. “I mean, this was not a
dialogue. It was sort of a diatribe, a
nasty diatribe.”
A Democratic source familiar with how
the meeting transpired said it “devolved
into the president calling the Speaker a
name. He was quite nasty, so she stood
up to go. She started to sit back down
but Rep. Hoyer got her to go. Pelosi and
Hoyer walked out of the meeting.”
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The source added that when Pelosi and
Hoyer were preparing to walk out of the
meeting, Trump said to them: “I’ll see
you at the polls.”
The White House hit back at Democrats
in a statement and defended Trump. White
House press secretary
Stephanie Grisham described
Trump as “measured, factual and
decisive.”
“Speaker Pelosi’s decision to walk
out was baffling, but not surprising.
She had no intention of listening or
contributing to an important meeting on
national security issues,” Grisham said.
She also knocked Democrats for
leaving the meeting, saying they “chose
to storm out and get in front of the
cameras to whine” while “everyone else
in the meeting chose to stay in the room
and work on behalf of this country.”
The standoff at the White House was
the latest twist in a dramatic Wednesday
that started with Republicans and Trump
moving toward the same page and ended
with the president waging a high-stakes
battle with Democrats and GOP allies
alike.
“I think he just needs to understand
that this was a mistake and he needs to
work with us,” Sen.
John Thune (R-S.D.) told
reporters, outlining his hopes for the
meeting.
Trump infuriated Republicans when he
dismissed the Kurds during an Oval
Office meeting by saying they were “no
angels.” He also downplayed the need for
the United States to become actively
involved in ending Turkey’s military
invasion of Syria, saying “it’s not our
border.”
Senate Majority Leader
Mitch McConnell (R-Ky.)
offered an unprompted defense of the
Kurds during his weekly press
conference, and characterized Trump’s
decision to pull back troops as a
“mistake.”
“I don’t know how many times I need
to say it, and I think I’m speaking for
most members of my conference, that this
was a mistake and I hope it can be
repaired,” McConnell said.
Told about Trump’s comments, Sen.
Mitt Romney (R-Utah) added:
“Oh my goodness gracious. Oh my goodness
gracious.”
“Abandoning them was a very dark
moment in American history,” he added.
“The door was opened for what is
occurring by the decision taken by the
administration. So for us to be shocked
and to look at Turkey and say, ‘My
goodness, we can’t believe what you’re
doing’ — we were the ones who opened
that door.”
The pushback is a stark reversal from
Tuesday, or even earlier Wednesday, when
Republicans seemed to be making an
effort to align themselves with Trump
after he announced sanctions on Turkey
and deputized Vice President Pence and
Secretary of State
Mike Pompeo to travel to
Turkey to try to negotiate an offramp.
Underscoring the reversal, Sen.
Lindsey Graham (R-S.C.)
started Wednesday by publicly blaming
Turkey for the current situation in
Syria. By lunchtime, he was locked in
another spat with Trump, who publicly
called him out during a meeting at the
White House.
“I think I’m elected to have a say
about our national security, that in my
view what is unfolding in Syria is going
to be a disaster. I hope I’m wrong. I
will not be quiet,” Graham told
reporters. “The president’s decision
here, I think, is the biggest mistake of
his presidency. And I will not ever be
quiet — I will not ever be quiet about
matters of national security.”
He added in a tweet that Trump
“appears to be hell-bent on making the
same mistakes in Syria as President
Obama made in Iraq.”
The House and Senate were supposed to
receive classified briefings on the
situation Thursday, but the briefings
were nixed.
Pelosi tweeted Wednesday afternoon
she was “deeply concerned that the White
House has canceled an all-Member
classified briefing on the dangerous
situation the President has caused in
Syria, denying the Congress its right to
be informed as it makes decisions about
our national security.”
A Senate aide confirmed that the
upper chamber’s briefing was canceled,
as well.
A Democratic aide told The Hill that
the White House gave “no credible
justification” for the cancellation.
The canceled briefings came hours
after lawmakers overwhelmingly voted
Wednesday to oppose withdrawing from
Syria and to back the Kurds, a symbolic
rebuke of Trump’s strategy.
In a 354-60 vote — with 129
Republicans voting “yes” — the House
passed a resolution from Reps.
Eliot Engel (D-N.Y.) and
Michael McCaul (R-Texas) that
“opposes the decision to end certain
United States efforts to prevent Turkish
military operations against Syrian
Kurdish forces in northeast Syria.
It also calls on Turkey to end its
military action, says the United States
should protect the Kurds and calls on
the White House “to present a clear and
specific plan for the enduring defeat of
ISIS.”
While the resolution condemns Trump’s
decision, the president is named just
once in the measure, when it notes he
spoke with Turkish President Recep
Tayyip Erdogan on Oct. 6.
Nonetheless, Pelosi said Trump
appeared “shaken” by the overwhelming
nature of the House vote.
In his remarks after the White House
meeting, Schumer called on McConnell to
take up the resolution. A Senate version
of the measure has been introduced by
Sens.
Bob Menendez (D-N.J.) and
Todd Young (R-Ind.).
“We urge Leader McConnell to not just
condemn the president, but put this
resolution on the floor,” Schumer said.
“The safety of America, the safety of
the Kurds are in the hands of one
person, President Trump, and the best
way to pressure him is a strong,
bipartisan resolution.”
– Alexander Bolton contributed
This article was originally
published by "The
Hill"-
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