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特朗普承认淡化疫情严重性:我不想让大家恐慌丨Trump said to admit downplaying virus

CD君 CHINADAILY 2020-10-03

US President Donald Trump admitted to journalist Bob Woodward in March that he publicly downplayed the dangers of the novel coronavirus as it spread around the world, hoping to avoid a panic even as he recognized how "deadly" the virus could be.



"I wanted to always play it down," Trump told Woodward on March 19, CNN and The Washington Post reported Wednesday. "I still like playing it down, because I don't want to create a panic."


Trump had acknowledged to Woodward more than a month before that interview that he recognized COVID-19 was "deadly stuff", according to CNN, in contrast with the president's public assertions the virus would "work out fine" and was "very much under control".


Woodward interviewed and taped the president for a total of nine hours for his book, Rage, which will be released on Sept 15. Audio clips of the recorded interviews were published by CNN and the Post. Woodward is an associate editor at the newspaper. Some of the interviews were conducted at the White House; Woodward said others were done when Trump called his cellphone.



Trump on Wednesday didn't deny what he told Woodward and defended his rosy public assessments on the virus as part of a possible effort not to "create panic". But he called the book "just another hatchet job".


White House press secretary Kayleigh McEnany insisted at a briefing Wednesday that the president "never lied to the American public on COVID" but rather "was expressing calm". She said that Trump "never downplayed the virus" despite Trump's remarks to Woodward.



The following summaries from the book are based on news reports by CNN and The Post.


Woodward writes that National Security Adviser Robert O'Brien warned Trump in a briefing on Jan 28 that the virus was the "biggest national security threat you face in your presidency".


Trump later told Woodward that he didn't remember O'Brien's comment. "I'm sure if he said it — you know, I'm sure he said it. Nice guy," Trump told Woodward in a May 6 interview.


On March 25, about a week after admitting in the interview to downplaying the virus threat, Trump told reporters at the White House that no one could have foreseen the pandemic, which had by that time led to much of the US economy being shut down.



"Nobody would ever believe a thing like that's possible," he said at a White House briefing. "Nobody could have ever seen something like this coming, but now we know, and we know it can happen and happen again."


Elsewhere in the book, according to CNN and the Post, Woodward quotes former Cabinet officials and documents about their frustrations with Trump's leadership.


The book also contains details that Trump gave Woodward from more than two dozen letters between himself and the Democratic People's Republic of Korea's leader Kim Jong-un.


Trump told Woodward that the US military was "suckers" for paying extensive costs to protect the Republic of Korea. "We're defending you; we're allowing you to exist," Trump said of ROK.


Woodward writes that in a conversation with Trump on June 19, when he pointed out that both he and Trump were "white, privileged" and asked if Trump could see that they both have to "work our way out of it to understand the anger and the pain, particularly, black people feel in this country," Trump replied, "No," and added, "You really drank the Kool-Aid, didn't you? Just listen to you. Wow. No, I don't feel that at all."


Reporter: Ai Heping

Click here for audio and translation of the story


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