Updated at 8:08 p.m. ET
President Trump has chosen John Bolton, a hawk on North Korea and Iran, to be his next national security adviser.
The appointment comes just as those two foreign policy challenges come to a head.
Bolton replaces H.R. McMaster,
who Trump said Thursday via Twitter
In an interview on Fox News, where he had been a contributor, shortly after the news broke, Bolton called his appointment a "great honor" but seemed surprised that the Trump administration had announced the appointment so soon. Bolton was spotted earlier Thursday at the White House.
"It's always an honor to serve our country, and I think, particularly, in these times, internationally, it's a particular honor," Bolton said.
But when pressed by host Martha MacCallum about his foreign policy views on a variety of pressing topics, from the Iran nuclear deal to North Korea, Bolton repeatedly deflected.
Bolton did say he was "outraged" by a leak earlier this week that apparently came from someone at the National Security Council. According to the
Washington Post
Bolton also argued that Trump's decision to congratulate Putin "wasn't a significant point one way or the other."
"I've said 'congratulations' to a lot of people — foreign diplomats and officials. It's a matter of being polite," Bolton said.
Trump has accepted an invitation to meet North Korean leader Kim Jong Un as early as May. He also has to weigh in on the Iran nuclear deal again that month. Bolton has been an advocate for regime change in both countries and, as a senior fellow at the conservative American Enterprise Institute, he wrote that President Trump should "abrogate the Iran nuclear deal in his first days in office."
Instead, Trump has kept up the U.S. side of the bargain,
continuing sanctions relief
"No fix will remedy the diplomatic Waterloo Mr. Obama negotiated," Bolton
wrote in the Wall Street Journal
When it comes to his hawkish views on Iran, Bolton is more in line with the newly nominated secretary of state, Mike Pompeo, who still has to be confirmed for the job. The national security adviser doesn't need to go through that confirmation process, which may have been difficult for Bolton. He is the third man to hold the job for the Trump administration, following McMaster and before that Michael Flynn.
Also on Fox News Thursday, Bolton described the job he was about to undertake as having two primary facets. The first, he said, was that of being an "honest broker" to the president — "making sure that the president has the full range of options presented to him to make the decision that only the president can make," which is "presented in a way that gives the president a chance to weigh the pluses and minuses."
The second part of that job, Bolton said, was to be a conduit between the White House and other agencies and offices tasked with implementing the president's decisions, "making sure that the bureaucracies out there get the decision and implement it."
Bolton said that hasn't always been a smooth process, but that "the rest of the bureaucracy needs to understand as well that when the guy that got elected makes a decision, that's what the Constitution provides."
The new national security adviser-designate also said he believed there should be a "free interchange of ideas among the president's advisers," otherwise "the president is not well-served."
Bolton served as undersecretary of state for arms control and United Nations ambassador during the George W. Bush administration and was an advocate for the Iraq War. He
stepped down as ambassador in 2006
He advocates a sort of "drain the swamp" agenda when it comes to international organizations, calling, for instance, to move from "assessed funding" to "voluntary funding" at the United Nations. He once famously said that if the U.N. Secretariat building lost 10 stories, "it wouldn't make a bit of difference."
Bolton rose to prominence as a lawyer for the Bush administration during the Florida recount and was well-known at the State Department's headquarters at Foggy Bottom for his lawyerly arguments and hard-line approach.
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