When Donald Trump Found Kruschev’s First Letter

Read Time:5 Minute, 34 Second

by Burr Deming
Originally published at FairandUnbalanced.com

Original Cinema Quad Poster – Movie Film Posters

In the crime drama film, Traffic, James Brolin, playing General Ralph Landry, tells a story:

You know, when Khrushchev was forced out, he sat down and he wrote two letters and gave them to his successor. He said – “When you get yourself into a situation you can’t get out of, open the first letter, and you’ll be safe. And when you get yourself into another situation you can’t get out of, open the second letter”.

Well, soon enough, this guy found himself in a tight place, so he opened the first letter, which said, “Blame everything on me.” So he blamed the old man, and it worked like a charm.

When he got himself into a second situation he couldn’t get out of, and he opened the second letter, it said – “Sit down, and write two letters.”

The story has been floating around for decades, in one form or another. Some versions had corporate executives writing to their successors, others involved dictatorial heads of state. Mark Shields poked fun at one variation a quarter century ago that had Joseph Stalin writing letters for Khrushchev.

It does seem fanciful, doesn’t it? Corporate leaders are unlikely to pass on advice to those who forced them into retirement. Khrushchev could not have had much love for Brezhnev, after Brezhnev helped engineer his ouster. Stalin passed the baton to Khrushchev by dying. Hard to pass on advice from a Soviet grave.

It seems obvious the tale is meant as a wry sort of satiric joke, one that carries a cynical lesson. It apparently has not been obvious to everyone. Enough people believed the story, in any of its myriad forms, to compel Snopes.com, the mythbusters of the internet, to assure readers that, no, the tale is not truth, except perhaps as allegory.

We have found many such true believers involving themselves in even the wildest of urban legends. There has always been a home among those on the fringe for the story too good to let mere truth interfere. In recent years, and most especially in the 2016 election, tall tales have found a firmer niche in the minds of the gullible. The yearning to believe what some folks wish to be true is now simply called fake news.

I was thinking of fake news after real, actual, horrible news of a botched military raid came to us from Yemen. A Navy Seal was killed, dozens of civilians were killed, a child was among the dead, and a multi-million dollar aircraft with highly developed vertical takeoff and landing capabilities was abandoned and had to be demolished.

The administration insisted that the operation was a success. By any measure it was not.

Video was released proving that, despite the high cost in blood and death, computers and records containing valuable information had been captured, providing details of planned terrorist attacks.

This is how Presidential Press Secretary Sean Spicer put it:

An unbelievable amount of intelligence that will prevent the potential death or attacks on American soil.

That story was false. The video was phony, borrowed from previous actions taken years ago.

Details quickly dribbled out.

U.S. military officials told Reuters that Trump approved his first covert counterterrorism operation without sufficient intelligence, ground support or adequate backup preparations.

As a result, three officials said, the attacking SEAL team found itself dropping onto a reinforced al Qaeda base defended by landmines, snipers, and a larger than expected contingent of heavily armed Islamist extremists.

Reuters News Service

President Trump notoriously does not pay attention to the President’s Daily Brief. He says he finds them repetitive. In this case, he got a brief refresher of the daily summary from his son-in-law while eating dinner. He authorized the raid based on what his son-in-law told him as he enjoyed his meal.

Administration sources later insisted that the operation had been previously authorized by President Obama, postponed only until the first moonless night, which happened to be after President Trump took over.

Presidential Press Secretary Sean Spicer:

The conclusion was at that time to hold for what they called a moonless night which, by calendar, wouldn’t occur until then President-elect Trump was President Trump.

That also turned out to be false. Military sources had requested an expansion in the US role. They wanted boots on the ground beyond the advisory role that had been authorized by the Obama administration. President Obama authorized the gathering of information into a presentation to be given to the next President.

The military raid was never presented to any member of President Obama’s cabinet, to any cabinet assistant, to anyone on the National Security Council, or to President Obama himself.

Every President develops his own style. President Obama expanded even on the exacting care exercised by his predecessors. He asked penetrating questions, demanded risk assessments, wanted to know the estimated chances of things going wrong, the chances of targets being where they were thought to be, the chances of American casualties, the likelihood of innocent bystanders being caught in the line of fire.

In some cases he went alone to consider the assessments, the information, the dangers, before returning to give his decision.

He was no stranger to the situation room. He and his staff monitored the progress of military raids by video as events unfolded.

President Trump has a different style.

Journalist Tommy Christopher looked through the public record and examined the timeline of the Yemen operation. As Navy Seals came under fire, as an American combat hero died, as a highly developed aircraft was lost, as bystanders and children were killed, Donald Trump was in the Presidential private residence.

He was tweeting on the internet, complaining about news stories, and criticizing Republican Senators who failed to support him on his immigration ban.

In this case, the fake news about great military success, valuable terrorist computer records, and previous authorization all came from the White House.

The President couldn’t be bothered with trivial details, he was too busy to see the results himself. He was engaged in more important duties:

He was hunched over his little cellphone, sending out into the ether his internet rage about disloyal reporters and Senators.

In the aftermath, as word of disaster came in, he was ready with a tall tale about President Obama authorizing a plan he had never seen.

When you get yourself into a situation you can’t get out of, open the first letter, and you’ll be safe.

About Post Author

Burr Deming

Burr is a husband, father, and computer programmer, who writes and records from St. Louis. On Sundays, he sings in a praise band at the local Methodist Church. On Saturdays, weather permitting, he mows the lawn under the supervision of his wife. He can be found at FairAndUNbalanced.com
Happy
Happy
0 %
Sad
Sad
0 %
Excited
Excited
0 %
Sleepy
Sleepy
0 %
Angry
Angry
0 %
Surprise
Surprise
0 %
0 0 votes
Article Rating
Subscribe
Notify of

6 Comments
Newest
Oldest Most Voted
Inline Feedbacks
View all comments
7 years ago

Nice. Learned a lot from this. Thanks so very much for an enjoyable, informative article

7 years ago

Brilliant bit of writing. Thanks.

7 years ago

This is pretty extraordinary man. First I’d heard of those letters. Now I’m going to watch the movie. Thanks.

Bill Formby
7 years ago

Great story Burr.

sceech
7 years ago

Excellent, Mike. Just excellent.

Reply to  sceech
7 years ago

Thanks! Burr is a talented writer and long-time contributor. We love his stuff.

Previous post Hey Mr Trump: Is Showing A Little Humility All That Hard?
Next post Pvt Email Servers, Fake Massacres, Felonious Flynn and Other White House Villainy
6
0
Would love your thoughts, please comment.x
()
x