President Donald Trump then asked his defense secretary, Mark Esper, if he could fire missiles at the United States to destroy cartel -led drug laboratories in Mexico to keep military operations secret, Asper wrote in recent memoirs, which are in the White House. According to the New York Times.
Trump has read about it at least twice, Esper recalls in the book “Secret Oath: Secretary of Defense Memoirs in an Emergency Time,” an advanced copy reviewed by the Times. Tommy will appear on Tuesday and pass the Pentagon Standard Security Clearance Selection.
The conversation took place in the summer of 2020, at the height of that year’s presidential election campaign, when Trump became frustrated with the flow of drugs from south of the border. Keep the key During his tenure. Trump asked if the U.S. military could “launch missiles to destroy drug laboratories in Mexico,” Asper said the Mexican government has “no control” over the country.
“No one will know that we will,” Trump said after Esper protested, adding that he was prepared to publicly deny the coup.
The book contains another surprising anecdote. In one of the stories, Esper said Stephen Miller, a former Trump policy adviser, offered to take over the head of the late Islamic State leader Abu Bakr al-Baghdadi-who died in a crackdown on US in 2019 – and he drowned in pig’s blood. . Miller offered to bring a body part to warn the terrorists.
Esper said it was a war crime. Miller denied the incident to the Times, saying the former defense minister was a “fool”.
The former Pentagon chief is the latest member of Trump’s inner circle to capture the turbulent last days of his administration, describing the former president as obsessed with re-election and daring to justify his first impeachment trial. Esper said he often remained silent on Trump’s request, but he did not resign because he believed he was one of the few people in the west wing who could have avoided the disaster.
Esper said he doesn’t believe Trump’s behavior has reached the point of calling for his removal through the 25th Amendment, the Times added.
Axios reported this week that Esper also recalled a time when Trump asked if he could order his senior military officials to shoot protesters who were organizing a demonstration following the assassination of George Floyd.
“The good news is it wasn’t a difficult decision,” Asper wrote. “The bad news: I have to find a way to get Trump back so I don’t make the mess I’m trying to avoid.”
Trump fired Asper in November 2020 after losing the presidential election to Joe Biden.
Source: Huffpost