The Bulwark Podcast - Susan Glasser: Giving Away the Store to Putin
Episode Date: February 18, 2025Trump is A-OK with all the murder and mayhem Russia has unleashed on Ukraine, and he's making a mockery of all his enablers who claimed he'd do a Reagan-esque kind of deal. Instead, Ukraine wasn't eve...n invited to the "peace" talks, while Trump tries to impose an extortion deal on the Ukrainian people for daring to fight back against the Russian invasion. Plus, the danger to our constitutional system if the main guy in the Oval Office defies a court order, the real live threat to the First Amendment from the White House's lockout of the Associated Press, and the origin story of Trump's obsession with Greenland. Susan Glasser joins Tim Miller. show notes It Took Trump Only Twenty-four Days to Sell Out Ukraine Tim's new Gen Z politics show, "FYPod" The NYT story on the Panama hotel that Susan mentioned Larry Diamond's piece in Persuasion
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Hey, y'all. We've got a couple of new things I want to point you to. First up, today, Tuesday, I am starting a new pod called FYPod that is focused on Gen Z issues. I'm doing it with my
buddy Cameron Caskey. He was the kid that started March for Our Lives after the Parkland shooting.
We are going to bring on a wide array of Gen Z influencers and activists and people, anxious kids with takes to talk particularly
about what's happening with young men, but what's happening politically with Gen Z.
The reason why I'm doing this, it's not enough you notice, I got a lot of my plate.
I'm promising you that this is the last one.
I'm not doing any other, not adding any other pods this year.
But for 2025, I thought one area know, one area where I could potentially
add some value both to my own growth, but also to the discourse, quote unquote, was
by talking to and about these young men and also listening to them. Because, you know,
we saw this happening, right? It's not as if we were totally blindsided by the move towards Trump among younger men.
But I think the degree to which it happened was, I think, pretty shocking to everybody.
And you know, as a millennial who has a seven-year-old, like, I don't have a ton of Gen Zs in my life,
right?
I don't have a ton of Zoomers in my life.
I thought it'd be valuable for me over the course of this year to both go into other
platforms that are more populated by 20-somethings than this one.
We appreciate people of all ages listening to this podcast, but also by hosting some
20-somethings on the platform that we've created here.
I'm pumped that Cameron's going to do it with me.
He's so funny and he has a huge network from his time
at March for Our Lives.
So we're gonna bring in a bunch of different people.
It won't just be young guys,
it'll also be some young women,
but we'll be focused particularly
on the challenges facing young men.
I think it'll be a fun pod.
Please go subscribe to it.
There's a link in the show notes.
Again, it's called FYPod or 4uPod. It's a link in the show notes. Again, it's called FY pod or for you pod.
It's a play on the for you page on a,
on Tik TOK and on other social media accounts
where you're getting fed news by the algorithm.
We're going to feed people some news
via our mental algorithm.
And we take the first episode
with a guy named Dylan Geich.
He's famous if you're like 23, apparently.
I'd never heard of him, but he was so charming.
It was a fun episode. Check it out. If you're like 23, apparently, I'd never heard of him, but he's so charming. It was a fun episode
Check it out. If you have zoomers in your life
Do you think might like it send it to them if you're a parent of a zoomer?
And you think it might give you some insight into what's happening with your kids
You should listen to it or anybody else in between so I hope you enjoy for you pod one other thing
As I've mentioned several times we are popping on YouTube over the course of the day with breaking news
Shorter takes you know something's happening that is outside of the podcast cycle
Either me or Sam Stein or sometimes Sarah and JBL will Salatin others are jumping on YouTube for shorter
You know video reactions to what's happening in the news
We've heard from people that some of you who are just like podcast only, who don't use
YouTube don't want to miss what we're doing over there.
We've been posting those videos on Substack for people that are Bullwork Plus subscribers,
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give us five stars, give us a little review. It helps us with the algorithm. It helps more
people discover us. Really appreciate that. I'm excited to start these projects and appreciate
you all for being along the ride with us. Up next, Susan Glasser.
Hello and welcome to the Bullard podcast. I'm your host, Tim Miller. I'm delighted to be
back today with staff writer at the New Yorker, Susan Glasser. She's got her weekly column on
life in Washington. She's also the co-author most recently of The Divider, a history of Donald Trump in the White House,
which she co-wrote with her husband, Peter Baker. And I got to hang out with her son
Theo in Palm Springs a couple of weekends ago. That was just such a delight. He's so
great.
Oh man, you know how to get right at a mom's heart here, right? By the way, the best title
of all, I must say, is parent for sure.
Yeah. I mean, he was just such a delight to be around. Good hang, annoyingly smart. I'm
looking for flaws. I didn't find any in Palm Springs. I'm sure some would emerge with a
longer time. We can't all be perfect. Tim, you do do flattery well.
longer, with a longer time. We can't all be perfect. Ah, Tim, you do do flattery well.
I don't actually. I do real talk. You can tell when I'm fake flattering, I promise.
Well, way to lead off with a mom.
Okay. We've got to talk, I think mostly today about the ongoing negotiations, if you want to
call them negotiations, surrender between the United States and Russia. It's happening in Saudi Arabia as we speak. We have some developments this morning.
It's possible some new stuff will come up here in the hours between now and when it publishes.
Just before we get into what's happening today, just for folks' background, you spent four years
as Washington Post bureau chief in Moscow. Your most recent article was about, your most
recent column rather, was about how Trump has basically been giving away the store to Putin
over the first, then it was 24 days. It's been about another week since then. So just kind of
talk about your perspective having been in Moscow and then kind of the biggest picture of what you're
seeing here, then we'll kind of get into the details. Yeah. I mean, look, it's, uh, it's two decades or more since Putin came to power in
Russia and of course the biggest transformation is not only the return to
dictatorship inside Russia, but the idea that the United States would come full
circle and elect a president like Donald Trump, who, uh, rather than view Putin
as an adversary is now seeking to welcoming him back into
the family of nations after the largest unprovoked land war in Europe since the end of World
War II.
We are talking a mass casualty event with extraordinary implications for American security
as well as European security,
not to mention the message that Putin's invasion has sent to Xi Jinping and to others who would
seek to revise by force the international boundaries.
I mean, it's just the act of lawlessness and murder, mayhem that is being sort of condoned
by Donald Trump is pretty extraordinary.
I think that it's another of those clarifying moments in which Donald Trump specializes,
right, Tim?
He loves to almost make a mockery of his apologists and enablers.
Frankly, for months I was hearing, even before the election from the sort of more
conventional Republican types here in Washington, every kind of BS and gaslighting and, oh,
don't worry, Donald Trump is going to piece through strength.
He's not going to sell out Ukraine.
He's actually going to give more weapons to Ukraine.
He's actually going to shore up Ukraine.
He's going to show Putin how tough we are.
Okay, fine.
Donald Trump laughing at those people.
But I think you see why that kind of gaslighting is successful.
Europeans were shocked and terrified to realize that all their sort of fantasy hopes of maybe
it won't be so bad after Trump gets reelected, dashed almost in an instant in the last few
weeks.
So we don't know yet what's going to happen in these talks specifically, but I think we
understand now in a big picture sense where Trump is headed with this.
I do wonder sometimes whether those types of Republicans were like gaslighting themselves
or us or both.
You know, I was in a debate, if you'll call it that, with Dan Crenshaw before the election.
This was the message that he was saying that I was delusional that if you just actually look
at the record from the first term, maybe you didn't like Trump's tweets, but he actually was
very strong on countering Russia and much stronger than Biden even and I accused making the pitch as if Trump was going to get in there and
You know send some nice tweets to Putin but that the policy would all be you know
Something out of whatever the Reagan administration and that was just so obviously delusional at the time
I guess it doesn't really matter whether they're diluting themselves or not
But it is that is a true observation, right? Like, like when you're around, you know, you're doing this, the
circuit around Washington.
Many people thought that it was possible that that was what was going to happen
rather than that he was going to do exactly what he told us he was going to do.
Correct.
Uh, and I actually think it does matter.
I mean, you know, but to your point, I remember a debate I had over dinner at,
uh, a very senior European ambassadors home with
a Republican who just this morning I saw tweeting, it's the first critical tweet I've ever seen
this Republican who's very pro-Trump make about Trump.
It was specifically in regards to Putin, something like, gee, you wouldn't want to invite Hannibal
Lecter to dinner.
This is a guy who was literally in a knockdown,
drag out argument with me to the point
that it was clearly rude at this ambassador's home going on
and on about we were just fantasizing.
We were just absolutely victims of Trump derangement syndrome.
And Donald Trump was actually going
to be great for Ukraine and great for European security.
There was no issue, nothing to worry about for NATO.
The people at the dinner were like, what is this man talking about?
But I think that lying to people over and over again, whether you really believe the
lies or not, that's something I feel like you have to answer for your own character. But the net effect is that the lies have consequences.
And when you see the comments and you see the visible shock and dismay that were written
all over the faces of Europe's leaders over the weekend at the Munich Security Conference,
as they understood that they had both been lied to and also clearly
lied to themselves about what was happening.
And, you know, that has consequences.
It certainly means, at a minimum, Tim, that they were not prepared adequately for a scenario
that they should have been very, very prepared for.
Just tell me a little bit more about that.
I mean, obviously, I guess you were having conversations with those folks from Europe.
I mean, how are they are they processing all of this?
Is it going to be total submission to whatever Trump and Putin decide?
Is there European resistance to this emerging?
Obviously, there's going to be long-term ramifications about that Europe no longer feeling like they
can trust us or to be part of their security blanket.
But what about the short term?
Well, what's remarkable is that you saw some comments suggesting that even from the first
Trump term on, Europeans understood that the United States was not necessarily an unwavering
partner that they could always count on, that we were having these sort of four-year wild
oscillations in our policy that would affect them at a minimum because of our inconstancy
and that we might make a pledge now that we wouldn't be able to redeem for six years on.
But to take it from an unreliable ally to some of the comments saying the US is now
the adversary, that the US is
now undermining in an active sense European security.
That's something new.
You saw, however, the continued, frankly, fecklessness of the response on the part of
the Europeans.
They have, in fact, relied upon American security guarantees on American military leadership on until recently
American diplomatic leadership.
NATO has been established by the US and led by the US since its inception in the aftermath
of World War II.
It's hard to see what a NATO without the US in the lead or possibly what a NATO without
the US at all lead or possibly without a NATO, without the US at all, would actually
mean.
And they called an emergency summit President Macron did in France on Monday in the aftermath
of Trump's phone call with Putin last week and the comments by JD Vance at the Munich
Security Conference.
I can't say that that summit came out with a resounding sense of how Europe is going
to proceed going forward.
And remember, there are multiple interlocking issues here.
It's not just, well, gee, is Trump going to pull the plug on US assistance for Ukraine?
Is Trump going to make a bad deal or a separate peace with Putin on Ukraine?
But also, he may actively and almost certainly will actively undermine NATO.
He might withdraw from it outright.
As you know, he's pledged to do that before.
Even if he doesn't, what if he pulls out US troops from their forward positions defending
the line essentially between NATO and Russia?
You know, that's a very real possibility.
It is.
Let's talk about this.
Obviously, this is a developing story.
I'm just going to read a couple of the reports about what the contours of the deal, so to
speak, are.
I hate even calling it that.
Fox this morning says the plan includes a ceasefire and then forcing elections in Ukraine
before signing a final agreement.
The notion there, I think think is that Putin thinks that an
election would yield a leader that is more amenable to him than Zelensky.
You wrote about some of this in the New Yorker Telegraph, wrote about this, which is the
Trump demand that part of the deal includes 500 billion in payback from Ukraine, including
the critical minerals, rare earth minerals, but also other stuff,
and that maybe that would include
some kind of security guarantee.
And then what you just mentioned there
is the FT was reporting European officials think Trump,
this part of the deal could move troops out of the Baltics,
which is something that obviously
the Europeans would be concerned about.
So that's just kind of developing,
but just wondering your thoughts on kind of all those
contours of what they're discussing.
Yeah.
Well, let's talk about that, you know, $500 billion extortion demand on Ukraine that the
United States essentially should be the owner of half of Ukraine's rare earth minerals.
First of all, let's put on the table that the United States has given nothing like $500
billion to Ukraine.
The idea that it's payback is ridiculous.
That's actually a straight out extortion blackmail demand.
The US has given tens of billions of dollars in military assistance and security aid to
Ukraine since the full scale invasion, a lot of which has gone to US military
suppliers who are then essentially the customers and sending weapons to Ukraine.
Europe, by the way, despite Donald Trump's lies about it, is now in the position of having
collectively provided more money to Ukraine since the full-scale invasion three years
ago this month.
So let's be clear, like under $100 billion in U.S. military assistance, you can't exactly
then demand half of the country's patrimony and rare earth minerals to the tune of $500
billion and say, oh, that's payback.
It's very much in keeping with Trump's view of the United States,
which he expressed even in his first term in office, right? There's nothing new with
Donald Trump here. He often expressed that this idea of the US as essentially a mercenary
force, by the way, that offended many of his more conventional Republican advisors in his
first term more than that. In fact, actually, it was his references over and over again to US soldiers as basically
mercenaries that so offended Rex Tillerson, his ill-fated first secretary of state, that
it prompted the Rex Tillerson fucking moron outburst at the Pentagon in the summer of
2017.
So in my role as a Trump historian here, I need to point that out because it's a kind
of a shocking view
of American power as that we're essentially the mob heavies here and give us money with
a gun pointed at your back or we won't do anything for you. It's a radically different
view of American security. So there's that we can talk about. But also to your point,
I just think the undermining of NATO has already occurred even short of
formally pulling out.
Our whole premise of NATO is essentially collective mutual defense, right?
All for one, one for all.
We're attacked on 9-11.
That's the only time NATO has ever invoked this principle of collective defense.
Donald Trump, do you believe right now that Donald Trump would go to war to protect Estonia?
Tim?
Are you kidding me?
How could anybody believe that?
This is a part of the whole bluff, I think.
I guess it's related, but just continue on that point.
But also, even if they did agree to a security guarantee, I mean, who would believe that
the Trump-Vance administration
would do anything to protect whatever part of Ukraine falls under that security guarantee
or the Baltics, right? Well, the Baltics are covered by NATO. They are members of NATO. We are
legally obliged to defend NATO. And by the way, I know we're talking about Greenland later.
Okay, just think about this. Wrap your mind around this insane situation that is an only in the Trump era situation.
Denmark, of course, is the power over Greenland right now. It is a NATO member, an ally of the
United States in good standing. If we militarily took over Greenland, we'd also be obliged to defend Greenland from our
own takeover.
You don't go to war with your allies, people.
And again, it's really a remarkable thing.
Trump in that sense has already made NATO's Article 5, the whole foundation of the Treaty
a dead letter because you laughed out loud when I asked, would we defend defend Estonia but that in fact is legally what we're obliged to do.
Would anybody think that we would at this point? And I find it just very hard to like what would
even be the case for the the argument that like Trump would make to people you know like he is
rhetorically even if he wanted to. The United States is legally obliged to do so.
That's the case.
Yeah, for sure.
But I just mean to his own voters.
Like, I mean, like his whole rationale has been that this is a waste.
We're getting screwed by these people.
We should focus on ourselves first.
Like the idea that Trump would send troops into Estonia, I think is farcical.
Hopefully we don't have to cross that bridge.
Well, to be clear, by the way, we already have a US military presence in the politics.
But I meant like combat troops.
Exactly.
And it's a reminder that Putin has won in every possible respect already by the fact of Donald Trump's re-election.
So now we're just learning the details.
And it's not an accident that the Russian state media, Russian newspapers calling this
Putin's success already.
Getting Trump back to the table with Russia in and of itself is a victory for Putin after
being isolated and
marginalized. Trump has already spoken out loud and said that he would like to welcome Russia back
into the G7 and turn it back into the G8, something that the other leading countries rejected out loud,
laughed out loud when he proposed this in his first German office. Now he's proposing this even after Putin has
launched this war. Again, the guy has been consistent in his preference for Putin,
in his preference for America's adversary and his attacks on America's
allies. We're the chumps who somehow haven't really fully understood that
Trump actually means to sell out the United
States to Russia.
Yeah.
You mentioned the Russian newspapers.
It was the one that you shared was dumbfounded Europe, need by America just below the belt
is still struggling to get its breath back.
It was a Russian columnist in the Russian paper.
I mentioned it briefly at the beginning, but the election thing is interesting that Russia
and all of the leaks about what Russia wants out of this deal, they do want elections.
I wonder if maybe that is partially, I don't know, maybe it's me not understanding, maybe
it's Putin not understanding the reality on the ground in Ukraine, but it does feel like
they think that they might be able to win this war without actually firing more shots.
That they might have an election and that the election might be won by some Russian
puppet type and they can just do this takeover quasi-electorily.
Yeah.
I mean, I think that was the original hope, frankly, of Putin.
He has a long history of manipulating Ukrainian elections and dominating the country through political
methods, disinformation methods. Remember that the invasion itself, for us Americans,
we tend to date it back three years to February of 2022, but for Ukrainians, they date the beginning
of this war to Russia's illegal annexation of Crimea and the launching of the
actual shooting war in the country's east. That followed on the revolution in the Maidan that
began in December of 2013 and was all about when Russia's essentially hand-picked guy as the president of Ukraine, Viktor Yanukovych,
was forced or chose to flee the country. Russia has subsequently called that an illegal coup,
but the guy was a corrupt dictator who fired on his own people and had negotiated a power
sharing arrangement and then overnight fled the country.
So, Russia has dominated Ukraine before in this way that you're suggesting it might want
to do again.
Obviously, that's a lot less costly of Russian lives if through manipulation and dirty dealings,
you can dominate a country in that kind of more soft power way.
Then absolutely, I think Russia's always
seen that as a possible outcome, that they wanted to gobble up as much territory as they could
militarily, but then seek to continue to dominate essentially a weakened Ukraine politically as part
of the aftermath. So yes, absolutely, they would seek to put a proxy leader in and replace Zelensky
in any way that they could.
One more thing on the negotiations in Saudi Arabia. So Zelensky was not included, of course.
Rubio this morning said, nobody's being sidelined here. The only thing President Trump's trying to
do is bring about peace. It's what he campaigned on. It's something the world should be thanking
President Trump for. It's like North Korean commentary there from the Secretary of State.
Then the other news item writers we were starting to tape is Zelensky was originally going to
go to Saudi Arabia tomorrow.
It was unclear what his plans were and whether that was going to be related to the negotiations
at all, but he's postponed that trip suggesting now he wants to avoid being linked at all
to these talks.
So I mean, I don't know who they're trying to fool there with the no one is being sidelined,
but like clearly the kind of lip service that Trump and Rubio have been giving to including
Zelensky in this seems to be dissipating.
You know, I was struck by that comment too, Tim.
You know, you can't sideline somebody that you haven't even let them to show up to the game.
They're not in the game.
You can't sideline somebody if they're not even allowed in the stadium.
Look, it's really remarkable.
At this point, Zelensky's hope is that he can rally Europe to his side, that he can
help work with them to come up with a united front and essentially
to negotiate among the allies.
It's also interesting and notable that the Russians came out of these preliminary talks
saying, well, we're not sure when Putin and Trump are going to meet.
Once again, it seems that Trump is the one who is always the eager suitor with Vladimir
Putin, always begging to meet with him, you know, and it's notable that Putin isn't rushing to
the table here. This seems to be on Trump's timeline and that he, as always, is
the eager suitor with Vladimir Putin. I think that's very notable.
Depressing there that you just, I don't know if you did it intentionally, but you were
referencing the allies there as Ukraine and Europe, not including us. That's kind of a depressing realization.
Bill Kristol is kind of writing about this this morning in the morning newsletter about
how strange a feeling it is to be like basically rooting for the US's diplomatic efforts to fail.
So anyway, such is life.
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The other kind of gift to Russia lately in China has been the gutting of USAID.
That's all happened since we last spoke. The news yesterday, the latest horror on this was that we've now, I guess, ended aid for
victims of Agent Orange in Vietnam.
And I think obviously that will be a massive propaganda win for the Chinese in addition
to just being totally wrong.
And it's such a minor part of the budget.
Donald Trump is like
Driving around on at the Daytona 500 I mean like the cost of the Daytona 500 and the Super Bowl trips for Trump like would cover the
Agent Orange victims for like another decade, but I'm wondering
You know kind of what your thoughts are just broadly on on the impact of the USAID gutter
Yeah, I mean first of all, I think you're really right to underscore that this isn't about
cost cutting.
And if you wanted to do what Elon Musk's stated purpose was of reviewing the government and
looking for areas for efficiency and savings, the last agency that you would focus on is
USAID, considering what a mincule part of the American federal
budget it was. We're talking under 1%. So you could eliminate every single program and
it would make literally zero impact on the overall US government spending. So it's not
about spending. Let's stipulate that. Even ideologically, it seems very much at odds
with what many Republicans, including the feckless Marco Rubio, were advocating for.
They always wanted to spend more money on this kind of programs that were smartly extending
American power in the world at a time when so much of our presence is militarized.
It's the leaders in the Pentagon who will tell you for decades that this was a much
more effective method of promoting American power.
Many of these programs, of course, were canceled so abruptly.
It's Elon Musk literally taking the knife to many of the poorest people in the world,
themselves victims of previous efforts to protect American power, like you mentioned
the agent orange.
And I think it tells you very much about Trump's approach to the world, which is my way and
everybody else be damned. And I think it's notable that many of the victims of this are the world's poorest and most vulnerable.
I think that's similar in the approach to how they're carrying out the immigration thing.
There was a piece today, which I definitely recommend to your listeners in the Times,
seeking to talk to some of the victims of the mass dragnet of deportations that are happening
apparently without regard to who's caught up in it.
And they're now housing some of these people in hotels in Panama.
They're shipping them to Panama, including this image that I'm going to have a hard time
getting out of my mind, Tim, of a woman desperately trying to open the window and escape from
this locked room in Panama
where she had been taken.
She sees reporters down below on the street, so she writes on a sign, Afghan, holds it
up and then pantomimes what appears to be an airplane and then her being killed.
The point being that if she was sent back to Afghanistan, she would be killed.
Remember, we fought in
Afghanistan for two decades. We broke our promises to these people. When they were evacuated, we said
those who had helped the United States could come to our country to escape the Taliban.
We're the ones who've broken our promises. And that image of that woman is really going to stick
with me. I haven't read that article yet. We'll put it in the show notes for people.
That is horrific.
Another just horror story on this front,
and just talking about kind of how stupid this is
and how inefficient it is and wrong.
And it's not just the people that we're helping
through USAID, it's people that work for USAID.
There was a horror story,
Kyle Cheney over at Politico was reporting about this.
A USAID employee's pregnant wife was
hemorrhaging. She was, I think, 31 weeks pregnant. And the doctor, whatever country they were
in, it doesn't, it's redacted, said that they should be medevaced out to a place where,
you know, there's better medical care. And there's a directive from Washington to not,
you know, not fund any of these emergency healthcare issues taking
place under USAID.
The senator for this person, also named Redacted, tried to intervene, but it was too late and
it was too dangerous now to move the woman.
It's just an unbelievable story.
There's no point to this and it's just capricious.
Well, that's right.
There's no point. this and it's just capricious. Well, that's right. There's no point.
It's capricious.
And I'll tell you, I mean, again, that is a horror story that really resonates for me
when I was a correspondent in Moscow more than two decades ago.
You mentioned it already, Tim.
The Washington Post paid for medical evacuation insurance for us.
And by the way, I needed to use that and in January of 2004 I was
evacuated from Russia to London because I was hemorrhaging with what turned out
to be a potentially fatal ectopic pregnancy. Wow. And you know I mean look
we're we're at war on on women now in this country, along with all
the many other shocking things that are occurring.
And I can tell you, if it was men who faced the possibility of, you know, bleeding out
and dying from ectopic pregnancies, then we wouldn't be talking about it like it was some
optional, like, you know, abortion procedure, which it's not.
You know, that's the world that we're living in right now.
So I appreciate you bringing it up, even though it's one example, I think it, you know, it's,
it speaks to a larger phenomenon that's, that's happening in our society due to, you know,
the toxic politics that we have.
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They're not going to get any breezier.
We should move to the questions here at home.
And I guess it's related to the USAID employees,
but you shared an article from Larry Diamond over at Hoover
about how the crisis of democracy is already here.
Obviously you're reporting from Washington
and there is huge churn and uncertainty among people that work for the federal government. A lot
of these legal questions are up in the air about how protected each of these employees
are. Just wondering what you're hearing on this front and your thoughts on these extrajudicial
attacks on the federal bureaucracy? Yeah, I mean, I really, again, that is a piece that I highly recommend. Larry Diamond is,
you know, one of the foremost scholars of democracy around the world,
scholar at Stanford University. And in this piece, he makes a distinction that I think is
really important because Trump has operated on such a broad front, you can conflate different things,
but not all aspects of this crisis are equal.
While there are, let's put aside for a second, the many extreme far-right policies that he
and his team are seeking to implement, many of which might be implemented by another Republican
president.
So even if you or I disagree with any aspect of it,
you know, there are the policy disputes that are extreme,
but fall within the spectrum of American political discourse.
But then there's the frontal attack
on the structures of American democracy.
And, you know, his point, which again,
I feel like it should be said again and again and again,
what's
dangerous is not that Donald Trump and Elon Musk don't like foreign aid to take the conversation
we're just having about USAID.
That's a policy fight in this country.
The thing that makes it radical and scary is the unilateral assertion of authority.
Congress has appropriated the money, has authorized the creation of this foreign
aid agency, has appropriated the billions of dollars to carry out this strategy. If
they don't like it, then they have to play by the rules of our system and negotiate with
Congress and have a political fight that yields a different result.
They control Congress also.
Again, it's amazing because they don't have the votes to do what they're doing by executive
fiat.
And the great fear right now that Larry points out and others do as well is that we're hurtling
toward a situation where with so many of these actions being challenged in court that Trump
might become really the first president of the post-American Civil War era, literally.
There's this line in that piece that says, no one has found any examples since 1865 of
a president refusing to carry out a judicial decree.
That's the fear right now that is animating many of the legal experts and that is animating
many of those who study democracy because that could be the way in which he breaks the
back of this thing.
It's like a sort of Damocles that's hanging over us, right?
We just don't know exactly how he's going to handle all that.
I think that there's a lot of people that are discussing this that I see in the democracy
space that are acting as if there's going
to be this one big showdown, right?
That the Supreme Court says no and that, as JD Vance says, that he does the apocryphal
Andrew Jackson quote and is like, John Roberts, send your army after me.
And it's like, that isn't probably how it's going to go, right?
It's going to be slow.
And they'll pick a few examples where maybe
a district court judge gets way out over their skis and they just don't really follow it
and they don't, you know, and they're like, wait as it goes through the courts, but they
still, you know, prevent people from coming to the office or whatever the firing is, prevent
people from access to certain, you know, government, you know, to their emails or to, you know,
whatever their government business is.
And then, who knows, maybe back down with that.
There's a lot of ways this can go where they can sort of slowly undermine the judicial
process and try to break everything before you get to kind of a big stand down.
And I think that is something that kind of concerns me that I'm not sure the people have really wrapped their head around.
I agree that that's consistent with Trump's approach always, which is the blizzard of legal approaches. And then they'll just make an argument, even if it's completely spurious. So there was no lawyer who thought that you could turn January 6th from a ceremonial,
ministerial, essentially rubber stamping of the electoral certificates the states had
already approved, that you could turn that into an event with consequences.
And yet, they find one lawyer to make a kind of crazy argument.
That was John Eastman.
So that's the approach that I have thought they would take to undermining
the sanctity of some of these judicial rulings. They'll just say, yeah, exactly. Well, when
the judge said we weren't allowed to spend the money, he didn't mean this money, blah,
blah, blah, and then it'll spawn its own series of lawsuits. And again, we only have one four-year
term. Look at how successfully Trump tied up all of the lawsuits and criminal cases against
him even when he was out of office.
So I would see it as more of a sort of a rolling ball of legal uncertainty that has the effect
of undermining any of the checks and balances and accountability that the court rulings
are supposed to impose upon a rogue executive.
So I think that scenario that you float
is one that I've been bracing for as well.
One other specific example in the news,
CBS News confirmed that Michelle King,
the top Social Security Administration official,
was acting commissioner, was replaced in her role.
King then chose to resign according to the White House.
This is part of the fight over Elon Musk and Doge getting access to people's social security
data.
Musk was tweeting insanely as always about all of the fraudulent social security actions,
why he needs this data because there's a lot of old people, people that are over a hundred
years old that are still getting Social Security.
Experts who've actually looked at this, because people have looked at this before, have said
that there is some example of Social Security numbers being abused, but it's usually the
opposite of what Musk is saying.
It's illegal immigrants that are using dead people's Social Security numbers and then
paying payroll tax, right?
You're using the security number to get a job.
They're actually paying into social security.
So it's probably on net gaining us money rather than costing us money, but that's neither
here nor there.
I want to play for you the press secretary, Carolyn, and her comments last night on Hannity
about this.
I've been fighting fake news reporters all day long here in the Washington DC swamp, who
are trying to fear monger the American people into believing that this administration is
going after their hard-earned tax dollars and their hard-earned Social Security checks.
So I want to set the record straight on your show tonight, Sean, and I'm very grateful
for the opportunity to do so.
President Trump has directed Elon Musk and the Doge team to identify fraud at the Social Security Administration.
They haven't dug into the books yet, but they suspect that there are tens of millions of deceased people who are receiving fraudulent Social Security payments.
First time I was at Real Life, that just feels like it's from a movie. Tens of millions of people.
Deceased people. Deceased people.
Deceased people.
There are only 70 million people on social security.
They think that one in three of them are actually deceased and it's part of a fraud.
And the whole thing is just, it's farcical.
But anyway, I wonder your thoughts on that and the E-Line kind of activities more broadly.
If you haven't. online kind of activities more broadly.
If you haven't. We're in the laugh or cry stage of the podcast.
Yes, we are.
We are in the laugh or cry.
I mean, it would be laughable if it weren't so serious to have vested so much power in
people who could say absurd things like this.
people who could say absurd things like this. You know, it's, Hannity is state media,
and, you know, this press secretary,
that's frankly an Orwellian misnomer
for someone whose job seems to be to undermine
and dismantle the free press.
And, you know, until she brings the Associated Press
back into the press pool,
I don't want to talk about Caroline Levitt.
I want to talk about how she's dismantling freedom of speech and the First Amendment in this country, period.
What do you think about this question about whether other media outlets should be standing
in solidarity? I think it's so tough because in the Obama administration, you'll remember
there was this kerfuffle over Fox. The Obama, they didn't want to include them, I think,
in a pool or something. I can't remember the exact specifics. And the other, the mainstream outlets, ABC, CBS, etc., said, we're going to boycott if Fox
isn't included, right? Like everyone should have access. The problem with that is that
doesn't really work this time. Like my guess is if ABC, NBC, CBS said that they were going
to boycott over AP, Carolyn Levin would be like, peace out, you know? So I don't exactly
know what they're supposed to do. Do you have any thoughts about that?
I think they should go to court, number one, and I think they should all sign on to the
lawsuit.
And I imagine they will go to court, but I also imagine that they won't all sign on to
the lawsuit.
And I get it because it seems pretty clear that the goal is to have an actual, what I'm
calling a Kremlin press pool, as opposed to
a real press pool by the end of the year, if not much, much sooner in the Trump White House.
I think that is a part of their agenda that I definitely anticipate.
Offering Americans the facsimile and the appearance of Trump being surrounded by reporters when,
in fact, they're not truly independent reporters
but handpicked for their loyalty to the regime, certainly it would be very consistent with
the playbook of authoritarianism that he's following in every other respect.
So to me, this looks like an early testing, probing fight.
And by the way, when somebody who's seeking to undermine democracy in our constitutional
principles goes after such a straightforward one, where is the uproar?
I can't say tactically speaking what's the right course, but I can tell you that for
me personally, this is a line that is crossed that is serious.
I would say to all your listeners, it's no joke when the president of the United States is trying to, you know, put his emperor hat on and tell the Associated Press, the
backbone of independent neutral news in this country that goes out to all of the, you know,
papers in all of middle America, when he attacks the backbone of our free press and says,
backbone of our free press and says, I am so all-powerful that if you don't adopt my language and call the Gulf of Mexico the Gulf of America, then I will ban you.
That is literally what our first amendment was designed for.
And yes, if you allow it to pass without complaining, then you are part of the problem.
And I hope that the bulwark will stand up for the associated press.
And I hope that all of the people listening will too,
because yes, it matters, absolutely.
Totally agree.
I'm glad that it wasn't on my list.
So this is why I needed your passion on this one.
Because there is this parade of wars.
I said this at the beginning of the year.
I was like, one thing that I want to do on the podcast
is just focus on things
that I feel genuinely passionate about and that I want people to know about and have guests on that
do the same, right? Because there is so much, we could just, I guess, run a 24-hour running podcast
to just live post the Parade of Horribles. Maybe we could do that. But you know what, it's hard to sort of determine what is important. And I think that your perspective, having
been there in the press corps, is important on this. Because I could understand why people
might look at this and be like, okay, well, whatever. I mean, NBC is still in there. So
that's fine. But it is a very dangerous place that we're going if you're starting to ban
people over not using the correct truth speak, the patriot place that we're going if you're starting to ban people over not
using the correct truth speak, the patriot speak that they're demanding.
Yeah, no, that's right, Tim.
And look, the goal here is to overwhelm us with outrages such that we're kind of soporific
and unable to respond effectively to any one of them.
But I hated the post-election, you know, kind of
democratic chest beating and media chest beating over woe is us. Like, you know, we can't have a
resistance this time because it wasn't effective. Like, I will tell you, I saw this happen in Russia.
I've seen it happen in other countries that have lost their democracies as fragile and imperfect
as they were. You know, you have to object when lines are crossed because
you have at a minimum the ability to slow it down, to obstruct, to gain allies.
And Donald Trump and Elon Musk, they're not going to stop because you give them just this
one little thing.
They're going to keep going and take something else.
You are playing a game against the clock here.
And absolutely, you know, it's not our job to predict the future or what's effective
or what's not.
We're not partisans.
You know, the Democratic Party, they screwed things up.
They're going to have to have their own reckoning.
But as we're civil society, that's what it means. And we have to be able to call it out in a clear, grounded, and unequivocal way.
Right, man. All right. Last thing in the laugh or cry portion, as you alluded to earlier.
You're maybe partially at fault for the purchase of Greenland. I don't know. But the idea of buying
Greenland initially came to Trump from Ron Lauder. That was first reported. so I guess it's Ron Lauder, but that was first reported in your
book that we mentioned earlier, The Divider.
And so you're doing this Donald Trump historian stuff where all these crazy examples, like
the thing you mentioned with Tillerson earlier, it's sort of hard to know what then blossoms
and becomes something bigger in the future.
That's why it's important to document all this stuff.
So I'm just curious if you had any other color from those early conversations with our cosmetic
oligarch that has decided that he wants to purchase another country because he's pals with Trump. I'm glad you brought it up because when Peter and I were reporting the divider after Trump
left office the first term, we weren't really focused on, well, we should do some reporting
about the whole Greenland incident.
Like many people, it was treated as a laugh line when he brought it up first in August
of 2019 and it became public.
It was really kind of treated like a laugh line, Trump and his grandiose ways, and obviously that's not going to happen. Ha ha ha. He's really kind of crazy.
That was the summer of 2019. Well, then we started doing the reporting after Trump left office and a
number of his former White House officials, including a very senior economic official,
actually, not national security official, mentioned to us, hey, you know, he was really serious about
that Greenland
thing and actually it wasn't a laugh line and he had brought it up a lot and I had even
had a decision memo that was circulating in the White House.
And we were really intrigued by that.
So then when we were doing the reporting for the book, we started asking, you know, everyone
we could think of, hey, wait, you know, is it true, like, that he was really interested
in this Greenland thing?
And we eventually, you know, pulled on the thread and discovered that, in fact, it never became
public.
But Trump was obsessed for years in his first term with purchasing Greenland.
Privately, he was bringing it up at cabinet meetings.
We talked to one of his former cabinet secretaries who said they literally were like, oh my God,
this is crazy.
What is he talking about?
And this was years before it became public.
Then when John Bolton,
his third national security advisor comes in,
in March of 2018, so again, really a long time before
we ever heard about it,
at one of his first private meetings
with Donald Trump in the Oval Office,
Trump tells him, hey, there's this really interesting idea
That's come up, you know from a friend of mine that we should purchase Greenland
And you know, you'll be hearing from him and you you need to get on this and sure enough
The phone rings and it's this cosmetics
Gazillionaire Ron Lauder who's been a friend of Trump's for decades
In fact, they went to the University of Pennsylvania together
I kid you not.
And he calls up the national security advisor and he says, yeah, I would like to volunteer
myself as a secret private envoy to Denmark and negotiate the purchase of Greenland.
Well, Bolton demurs on having Ron Lauder as our secret envoy to Denmark, but he has to sort of placate Trump
and he orders some of his national security aides
to begin working up various options for Greenland.
And by the way, Bolton is one of a number
of national security types who believes
that Greenland is a very important strategic place,
not so much because of the minerals
which initially attracted Donald Trump, but because of its strategic location, the competition with Russia
and China over the North and the like.
He recognized that publicly talking about purchasing Greenland would be very antithetical
to the goal of achieving more cooperation with Greenland because it would mean exactly
what we've seen,
which is that Denmark gets its back up,
which is that everybody is polarized
and divided by Donald Trump.
At any rate, so that's the backstory.
And so I wasn't surprised at all
when Greenland came right back up after Trump won reelection,
even though I think for most people,
they were like, what the hell is this all about?
Great example, like there's nothing new with hell is this all about? Great example.
There's nothing new with Donald Trump.
He thinks what he thinks.
Well, some tragically relevant reporting from you, but thank you.
Do we know, is Ron Lauder doing the Trump makeup too?
Is he a key player in the different tone?
Because he's been darkening his makeup lately.
I'm not even clear on what terms those two are actually on these days. He was supporting
Trump, then he was falling out like a lot of these gazillionaires, and then many of them,
of course, went back to sucking up to Trump. But I haven't heard much about him lately. And Trump
obviously has his own very strong views on the makeup front.
He does. All right. Well, one more note on this from producer Katie. She wants me to know that there's a new detail here. In June, United will be running direct flights from
Newark to Nuke, Greenland, home to a new international airport. So, I don't know, maybe United and
Ron Lauder, maybe everybody's in on it. Who knows what could be happening in Nuke. We'll
have to keep our eye on it. Susan Glasser, I appreciate you very much. Thanks for coming
back on the pod.
Tim, thank you.
I'm hoping that you don't move into 24-hour a day broadcasting mode.
I might have to.
What else am I going to do?
All right.
Thanks to Susan Glasser, everybody else.
We will be back, not for 24 hours, but in 24 hours tomorrow for another edition of The
Bullock Podcast.
We'll see you all then.
Peace. I'm a man, I'm a man, I'm a man, I'm a man, I'm a man, I'm a man, I'm a man, I'm a man, I'm a man, I'm a man, I'm a man, I'm a man, I'm a man, I'm a man, I'm a man, I'm a man, I'm a man, I'm a man, I'm a man, I'm a man, I'm a man, I'm a man, I'm a man, I'm a man, I'm a man, I'm a man, I'm a man, I'm a man, I'm a man, I'm a man, I'm a man, I'm a man, I'm a man, I'm a man, I'm a man, I'm a man, I'm a man, I'm a man, I'm a man, I'm a man, I'm a man, I'm a man, I'm a man, I'm a man, I'm a man, I'm a man, I'm a man, I'm a man, I'm a man, I'm a man, I'm a man, I'm a man, I'm a man, I'm a man, I'm a man, I'm a man, I'm a man, I'm a man, I'm a man, I'm a man, I'm a man, I'm a man, I'm a man, I'm a man, I'm a man, I'm a man, I'm a man, I'm a man, I'm a man, I'm a man, I'm a man, I'm a man, I'm a man, I'm a man, I'm a man, I'm a man, I'm a man, I'm a man, I'm a man, I'm a man, I'm a man, I'm a man, I'm a man, I'm a man, I'm a man, I'm a man, I'm a man, I'm a man, I'm a man I still remember I still remember
You
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Brown.