News analysis
Indictment presents evidence Trump’s actions were more blatant than known
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The indictment revealed a shocking example of former US president Donald Trump’s indifferent attitude towards some of the country’s most sensitive secrets.
PHOTO: AFP
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WASHINGTON - If one theme emerged from the account presented by prosecutors in the indictment of former US president Donald Trump that was unsealed on Friday,
On nearly every one of its 49 pages, the indictment revealed a shocking example of Trump’s indifferent attitude towards some of the country’s most sensitive secrets – and of his persistent wilfulness in having his aides and lawyers do his bidding in stymieing attempts by the government to get the records back.
Trump will have an opportunity in court to rebut the account presented by special counsel Jack Smith.
But in the evidence cited in the indictment, there were references to government records being casually kept in a bathroom and on a ballroom stage
There was also a description of a knocked-over stack of boxes lying in a storage room in the basement of the compound, their contents – including a secret intelligence document – spilled on the floor.
At one point, the indictment included an almost cartoonish image.
Quoting notes from one of Trump’s own lawyers, it relates how the former president made a “plucking motion” as if to suggest that the lawyer should go through a folder full of classified materials and “if there’s anything really bad in there, like, you know, pluck it out”.
A classic example of what is known as a “speaking indictment”, the charging document, which was filed on Thursday in US District Court in Miami, did far more than merely lay out the seven crimes that Trump has been accused of – among them, obstruction of justice and the wilful retention of national defence records.
The indictment also showcased the bedrock elements of the former president’s personality: his sense of bombast and vengeance, his belief that everything he touches belongs to him, and his admiration of people for their underhanded craftiness and gamesmanship with the authorities.
It recounts, for instance, how Trump had only praise for an unnamed aide to former secretary of state Hillary Clinton who – at least in his narration of the story – helped Mrs Clinton destroy tens of thousands of e-mails from a private server.
“He did a great job,” the indictment quotes Trump as telling one of his lawyers.
Why? Because, in Trump’s account, the aide ensured that Mrs Clinton “didn’t get in any trouble”.
As a baseline matter, the indictment gave the clearest picture yet of the highly sensitive records that Trump took with him when he left the White House, a startling collection of covert material that included documents about US domestic nuclear programmes,
In the bluntest language possible, it explained just how dangerous this was.
“The unauthorised disclosure of these classified documents could put at risk the national security of the United States, foreign relations, the safety of the United States military, and human sources and the continued viability of sensitive intelligence collections methods,” the indictment said.
The indictment did not merely accuse Trump of holding on to all these files. It also noted that on at least two occasions, he showed – or came close to showing – classified material to others who lacked the proper security clearances to view them.
One of those episodes took place in August or September 2021, when Trump showed a representative of his political action committee the map of a certain country, commenting that a military operation there “was not going well”, the indictment said.
It went on to describe how Trump quickly realised that he should not have been displaying the map and told the representative to “not get too close”.
The indictment also related an account of a meeting in July 2021 when Trump – in a fit of pique at General Mark Milley, the chair of his Joint Chiefs of Staff – brandished a “plan of attack” against Iran to visitors at his golf club in Bedminster, New Jersey.
To the horror of his aides – one of whom declared, “Now we have a problem” – Trump admitted that he could have declassified the “highly confidential” document when he was president, but now it was too late because he was out of office.
And yet, as the indictment described in painful detail, he almost seemed unable to control himself.
“This is secret information,” it quoted him as saying. “Look, look at this.” NYTIMES

