WaPo | At
his resort in Florida, the president was told that Soleimani was going
to be coming to Baghdad; senior officials felt he was taunting the
United States by showing up in the Iraqi capital, implying that he could
move around with impunity.
Calls
among the national security principals were convened by the vice
president throughout the week after initial discussions on Sunday to
kill Soleimani, a senior administration official said.
Officials
reminded Trump that after the Iranians mined ships, downed the U.S.
drone and allegedly attacked a Saudi oil facility, he had not responded.
Acting now, they said, would send a message: “The argument is, if you
don’t ever respond to them, they think they can get by with anything,”
one White House official said.
Trump
was also motivated to act by what he felt was negative coverage after
his 2019 decision to call off the airstrike after Iran downed the U.S.
surveillance drone, officials said. Trump was also frustrated that the
details of his internal deliberations had leaked out and felt he looked
weak, the officials said.
The
United States tracked Soleimani’s movements for several days, keeping
Trump apprised, and decided that their best opportunity to kill him
would be near the Baghdad airport, the senior administration official
said.
He
ultimately gave final approval just before the strike, a senior
administration official said, making the call from his golf resort.
Trump
also had history on his mind. The president has long fixated on 2012
attacks on U.S. compounds in Benghazi, Libya, and the Obama
administration’s response to them, said lawmakers and aides who have
spoken to him, and he felt the response to this week’s attack on the
embassy and the killing of an American contractor would make him look
stronger compared with his predecessor.
“Benghazi
has loomed large in his mind,” said Sen. Lindsey O. Graham (R-S.C.) in
an interview, explaining the response this week.
Graham
was at Mar-a-Lago on Monday and said the president told him he was
concerned they “were going to hit us again” and that he was considering
hitting the Iranians.
No specific plan was ready to kill Soleimani, but it was on Trump’s mind, Graham said.
“He
was more thinking out loud, but he was determined to do something to
protect Americans. Killing the contractor really changed the equation,”
Graham said.
“He was saying, ‘This guy is a bad guy, he’s up to no good, we have to do something,’ ” Graham said.
0 comments:
Post a Comment