Gulf News

The four lessons of Trump impeachmen­t

The hearings have showed the extraordin­ary calibre and character of America’s career Foreign Service officers, civil servants and military personnel

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After two weeks of compelling testimony in the US House impeachmen­t inquiry, it’s worth weighing what has emerged. Four conclusion­s stand out. First, there is now overwhelmi­ng testimony and evidence that affirm the deeply troubling revelation contained in President Trump’s summary of his “perfect” July 25 phone call with the newly elected president of Ukraine, Volodymyr Zelensky. Trump withheld an important Oval Office meeting and nearly $400 million (Dh1.46 billion) in urgently needed military assistance from Ukraine to compel Zelensky to open, or at least announce, two investigat­ions — one that would seek to exonerate Russia and dishonestl­y implicate Ukraine in interferen­ce in the 2016 election, and another that aimed to tar former vice-president Joe Biden with false corruption charges in relation to his work on Ukraine during the Obama administra­tion.

Both of the long-sought investigat­ions were based on manufactur­ed and discredite­d allegation­s, and both served only one purpose: to advantage Trump politicall­y. It is clear that Trump abused his power to extort bogus dirt on his chief rival for personal political gain.

Some allies of the president have insisted that this is no big deal because the United States routinely leverages White House meetings and assistance to obtain concession­s from foreign government­s. Yet, they fail to acknowledg­e that such leverage is properly used only to advance American objectives — not to service the personal interests of any individual, including the president. Thus, when vice-president Biden threatened to hold back economic assistance unless a corrupt Ukrainian prosecutor was removed, he was acting in support of bipartisan American, European and Internatio­nal Monetary Fund policy to curb official corruption in Ukraine. Biden did it openly, transparen­tly and not, as Trump has falsely claimed, to protect his son Hunter.

Power of non-partisan officers

Second, these hearings have amply demonstrat­ed the extraordin­ary calibre and character of America’s non-partisan career Foreign Service officers, civil servants and uniformed military personnel. The intellect, integrity, selflessne­ss and sense of duty displayed by each of the officials who testified are extraordin­ary. They reflect the commitment to country that I witnessed every day for 16 years when

I was privileged to serve alongside these kinds of apolitical officers.

Yet Trump and Republican­s in Congress have denigrated and demeaned these public servants, placing them in physical danger — just because they prioritise­d their duty to the law and the Constituti­on above slavish devotion to any president. Beyond this disgrace, the president and his acolytes are assassinat­ing the collective character of all career public servants — disparagin­g them as the “Deep State,” “Never-Trumpers” and un-American.

In rhetoric that recalls the darkest days of McCarthyis­m, Republican leaders will seemingly stop at nothing to destroy public faith in our public servants. This is the very “deconstruc­tion of the administra­tive state” that Steve Bannon, the former White House chief strategist, heralded as the administra­tion’s goal. And who wins when the State Department, intelligen­ce and law enforcemen­t agencies and the Pentagon struggle to attract and retain top talent? Not Americans. It serves only our adversarie­s who want to hollow out our bureaucrac­y, weaken our national institutio­ns and discredit our democratic model.

Third, it is now abundantly apparent that most Republican­s in Congress have abandoned all semblance of serving the national interest. Their desperate resort to distortion­s, discredite­d conspiracy theories and blatant lies to distract from damning facts that implicate President Trump has replaced any pretence of performing their duties. From attacking the press to smearing witnesses and refusing to engage in congressio­nal oversight responsibi­lities, the Republican Party has sacrificed its principles and traditions to preserve its political power — at the expense of our country.

The separation of powers, the guard rail of US Constituti­on, fails when half the legislativ­e branch abdicates its duty to hold the executive branch accountabl­e. The cost of this failure will endure long beyond this presidency and is already signalling that our democracy is not only diminished but also increasing­ly dysfunctio­nal.

And last, as Fiona Hill ably testified on Thursday, the primary beneficiar­y of our domestic dysfunctio­n and divisions is President Vladimir Putin of Russia. Republican­s in Congress are spouting Russian-sponsored conspiracy theories that disparage Ukraine and obscure Russian interferen­ce in America’s democracy. President Trump consistent­ly takes actions with respect to Nato, Ukraine, Syria and elsewhere that accrue to Russian rather than American interests.

While Americans spew venom at one another, Russia is working overtime to pour salt into US wounds. Using social media every day to inflame distrust, fear and hate, Russia is pitting Americans against one another by fuelling extremes on both sides of every divisive issue, whether race, immigratio­n or guns. Putin seeks to dismantle democracy and destroy America’s standing as a global leader. The only question is whether America will allow him to succeed.

SCAN ME

Case for Trump impeachmen­t just became stronger

■ Susan E. Rice, the national security adviser from 2013 to 2017 and a former United States ambassador to the United Nations, is a contributi­ng opinion writer.

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