The Australian media is (rightly) in a tizz about the leaked transcript of the phone call between US President Donald Trump and Australian Prime Minister Malcolm Turnbull, where the tensions between the two are laid bare.
The first conversation between the two heads of state since Trump’s election turned sour, with the President actually telling Malcolm he had a more “pleasant” talk with Putin. In the end, Turnbull got his deal, and Trump — ostensibly — got to bully the Aussie PM.
The Washington Post scoop is top of the news in Australia, but how do our friends in the US feel about it? In a news environment where Trump stories change in a matter of minutes, how does it rate? This is what the US press thought of the transcript:
Greg Miller, The Washington Post:
“Produced by White House staff, the documents provide an unfiltered glimpse of Trump’s approach to the diplomatic aspect of his job, subjecting even a close neighbor and long-standing ally to streams of threats and invective as if aimed at U.S. adversaries.”
Peter Baker, The New York Times:
“But the full accounts of the conversations illustrated Mr Trump’s approach with foreign leaders — flattering his counterpart one moment, badgering him the next, always conscious of how the policies being discussed connected to his campaign promises and how they would affect his domestic political standing.”
“The Turnbull call ends in some bitterness, but it’s notable that Trump basically concedes to Turnbull, admitting the U.S. would follow through on an agreed-upon intake of refugees. (Despite declaring it a ‘dumb deal’ on Twitter following the call, Trump never backed out of it.)”
“Turnbull’s theory seems to be that Trump understands force and will respond to it, and he too seems to have been proven right.”
“Two countries, two leaders, two approaches — yet both succeeded, for different reasons. The calls with Malcolm Turnbull and Enrique Pena Nieto are not only a valuable document of how diplomacy works; they would also set a pattern. Time and again, foreign leaders have found that Trump is hardly the hardened negotiator he claims, but is instead a pushover. If they can get into a one-on-one conversation with Trump, they can usually convince him to come around to their position. If that was true on paying for the wall and taking refugees, it stands to reason it would be true for lesser Trump priorities, too.”
Jonathan Chait, New York Magazine:
“The transcript of Donald Trump’s discussion with Australian prime minister Malcolm Turnbull obtained by the Washington Post reveals many things, but the most significant may be that Trump in his private negotiations is every bit as mentally limited as he appears to be in public … By the time I was halfway through it, my brain could not stop screaming at Trump for his failure to understand what Turnbull was telling him.”
“It shows Trump misunderstands the refugee issue in Australia and views people who fled their countries as exclusively ‘bad’ — potential terrorists who were detained because they aren’t good people, not because of the country’s laws.”
“… Trump carried out a phone conversation with Australian Prime Minister Malcolm Turnbull, which grew sour when Trump rejected an agreement to take in refugees. The transcript shows Trump growing progressively more agitated, eventually telling his Australian counterpart the call was the most irksome of the day.”
“A day before Attorney General Jeff Sessions is set to discuss a new leak crackdown, the transcripts of two heated January phone calls President Trump held with foreign leaders spilled into the headlines.
“The report … aired new details over the president’s infamously tense phone call the next day with Australian Prime Minister Malcolm Turnbull.”
Charlie Spiering, Breitbart News:
“The transcripts feature Trump’s phone calls to the pair of world leaders, created by White House staff. Details of the documents were revealed in the first months of the Trump administration, but this is the first time the full texts of the conversations have been published entirely.
“The president was more frank with Turnbull, raging against a refugee deal made by the Obama administration. ‘This is a stupid deal. This deal will make me look terrible,’ he said, denying Turnbull’s insistence that it would look good for the United States. ‘This shows me to be a dope.’”
“Such documents should have been very closely held, accessible to only a few senior officials. Their publication reflects the intensity of the war inside the White House between rival factions — and a reminder that, for all his well-advertised toughness, the new chief of staff, John Kelly, is going to find it very hard to impose discipline on an institution that is dysfunctional from the top down … The transcripts of his conversations with Enrique Pena Nieto and Malcolm Turnbull show the president to be no more coherent in private than he is public: ill-informed — even about a major attack on US soil — and narcissistic to the point of absurdity.”
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