American Resistance
The Inside Story of How the Deep State Saved the Nation
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- ¥2,600
発行者による作品情報
It could have been so much worse: a deeply reported, insider story of how a handful of Washington officials staged a daring resistance to an unprecedented presidency and prevented chaos overwhelming the government and the nation.
Each federal employee takes an oath to “support and defend the Constitution of the United States against all enemies foreign and domestic,” but none had imagined that enemy might be the Commander-in-Chief. With the presidency of Donald Trump, a fault line between the president and vital forces within his government was established. Those who honored their oath of office, their obligation to the Constitution, were wary of the president and they in turn were not trusted and occasionally fired and replaced with loyalists.
American Resistance is the first book to chronicle the unprecedented role so many in the government were forced to play and the consequences of their actions during the Trump administration. From Lt. Col. Alexander Vindman and his brother Yevgeny, to Ambassador Marie Yovanovitch, to Bill Taylor, Fiona Hill, and the official who first called himself “Anonymous”—Miles Taylor, among others, Rothkopf examines the resistance movement that slowly built in Washington. Drawing from first hand testimonies, deep background and research, American Resistance shows how when the President threatened to run amok, a few key figures rose in defiance. It reveals the conflict within the Department of Justice over actively seeking instances of election fraud and abuse to help the president illegally retain power, and multiple battles within the White House over the influence of Jared and Ivanka, and in particular the extraordinary efforts to get them security clearances even after they were denied to them.
David Rothkopf chronicles how each person came to realize that they were working for an administration that threatened to wreak havoc – one Defense Secretary was told by his mother to resign before it was too late – in an intense drama in which a few good men and women stood up to the tyrant in their midst.
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White House officials' struggle to restrain President Trump is saluted in this insightful study from podcast host Rothkopf (Traitor). Among numerous battles to "keep a dangerous, unhinged, ill-prepared president and his closest allies from doing irreparable damage," Rothkopf documents Department of Homeland Security officials' efforts to defang Trump's ban on travel from Muslim-majority countries; Defense Secretary James Mattis's success in talking Trump down during late-night phone calls in which he threatened such "wildly irresponsible actions" as an attack on North Korea; and Vice President Mike Pence's certification of Joe Biden's Electoral College victory. This is a saga of bureaucratic strategizing at its most byzantine, filled with evocative vignettes: " didn't know enough to know what to do to keep us from protecting the elections," recalls a member of an informal election-security group. "It was just another thing he was pissed about, because it had some connection to Russia." Rothkopf's anti-Trump animus is not always fair, as when he blames Trump for right-wing vaccine skepticism, and his laudatory portrayal of Deep Staters doesn't fully consider the role self-interest played in some of their actions. Still, this is one of the most revealing and disturbing accounts of Trump's presidency yet published.