WASHINGTON ā The White House has told former national security adviser John Bolton that the manuscript of his forthcoming memoir still contains classified material and could present a national security threat. But Boltonās lawyer said Wednesday that publication will go ahead as planned on June 23 and he accused the White House of unfairly trying to keep it on ice.
John Eisenberg, a deputy White House counsel, wrote Bolton attorney Charles Cooper this week raising concerns that the manuscript for āThe Room Where It Happenedā still ācontains classified information.ā
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āAs we advised your client when he signed the nondisclosure agreements, and as he should be well as aware as Assistant to the President for the National Security Affairs in this administration, the unauthorized disclosure of classified information could be exploited by a foreign power, thereby causing significant harm to the national security of the United States,ā Eisenberg wrote in a letter obtained by The Associated Press.
Eisenberg added that Bolton would be provided with necessary redactions from the White House no later than June 19.
Cooper, writing in The Wall Street Journal, said White House lawyers have slow-walked the process because āPresident Trump simply doesnāt want John Bolton to publish his book.ā
āThis is a transparent attempt to use national security as a pretext to censor Mr. Bolton, in violation of his constitutional right to speak on matters of the utmost public import,ā Cooper wrote. āThis attempt will not succeed, and Mr. Boltonās book will be published June 23.ā
Leaked passages from the manuscript roiled Washington in the midst of Trumpās impeachment trial. Included was the revelation that Bolton said Trump told him he was conditioning the release of military aid to Ukraine on whether Ukraine's government would help investigate former Vice President Joe Biden and his son Hunter. The younger Biden was paid by a gas company in Ukraine to serve as a board member.
Bolton initially submitted the transcript as required to Ellen Knight, the National Security Councilās senior director for prepublication review of materials written by NSC personnel, on Dec. 30, according to Cooper.
āWhat followed was perhaps the most extensive and intensive prepublication review in NSC history,ā Cooper wrote. āMr. Bolton and Ms. Knight spent almost four months going through the nearly 500-page manuscript four times, often line by line.ā
Cooper said that at the end of the ordeal, Knight told Bolton on April 27 āthatās the last edit I really have to provide for you.ā
āYet when Mr. Bolton asked when he would receive the letter confirming the book was cleared, Ms. Knight cryptically replied that her āinteractionā with unnamed others in the White House about the book had ābeen very delicateā and that there were āsome internal process considerations to work through,āāā Cooper wrote.
Then Bolton received the letter on Monday that White House concerns about classified material in the book remain.
The White House declined comment Wednesday.