[In the subject context, it won't perhaps be quite out of place to
recall a recent observation by this commentator:

In its very essence, the clash of the (two contrasting) personalities
[Bannon and Kushner]
represents the more fundamental battle between the 'two lines' - one
spearheaded by the nativist populist roaders [led by Bannon], who had
apparently propelled Trump to power, on the one side, ranged against
the more (conservative) pro-mainstream roaders [represented by
Kushner], ***being viewed as the steadily rising force, post the
seizure of power*** [emphasis added now].

(Source: 'The (Raging) Palace Intrigues and the Mystery of the "Real"
Trump' at 
<https://groups.google.com/forum/#!searchin/greenyouth/The$20(Raging)$20Palace$20Intrigues$20and$20the$20Mystery$20of$20the$20%22Real%22$20Trump$20$20%7Csort:relevance/greenyouth/G_-xWPZ7LYk/VxOQT7EOAAAJ>.)

It had been further added: "This is a major 'contradiction', and
remains to be resolved."

What is reported below, despite its somewhat speculative nature, is
definitely a straw in the wind.
It's about a move towards resolving this major 'contradiction', in
favour of "the steadily rising force" - "the more (conservative)
pro-mainstream roaders ", as opposed to the "nativist populist
roaders".
The fight, however, is still far from over.
But the writing on the wall is becoming clearer and clearer.

And, it cannot but leave its imprints on the various policy decisions,
including the ones on Syria and N. Korea, in the immediate future,
however confused these may be, at least right at this moment.]

http://www.vox.com/policy-and-politics/2017/4/12/15270756/steve-bannon-trump-new-york-post

Trump just threw Steve Bannon under the bus and backed it up over him
In just a brief statement, he managed to portray Bannon as
unimportant, ineffective, and on thin ice.
Updated by Andrew [email protected]  Apr 12, 2017, 10:30am EDT

A little less than a week ago, I wrote that the knives were out for
White House chief strategist Steve Bannon, who was said to be clashing
with other top administration officials, losing the president’s favor,
and potentially on his way out of the administration.

On Tuesday, those reports were confirmed by the highest-level source
possible — President Donald Trump himself.

In an interview, the New York Post’s Michael Goodwin asked Trump if he
still had confidence in Bannon, and, Goodwin writes, “I did not get a
definitive yes.”

Far from it. Instead, in just four remarkable and revealing sentences,
Trump managed to 1) minimize Bannon’s role in his campaign and
eventual victory, 2) seemingly betray some sensitivity about the
“President Bannon” narrative, 3) confirm the reports of administration
infighting, and 4) issue a public ultimatum.

1) Downplaying Bannon’s role: “I like Steve, but you have to remember
he was not involved in my campaign until very late,” Trump told
Goodwin. “I had already beaten all the senators and all the governors,
and I didn’t know Steve.” (The statement about when Bannon joined the
campaign is factually accurate; the statement that Trump “didn’t know”
him beforehand is not.)

2) Betraying some sensitivity about the “President Bannon” narrative:
“I’m my own strategist and it wasn’t like I was going to change
strategies because I was facing crooked Hillary,” Trump continued.
(This language is very similar to a tweet Trump sent in February, at
the height of the media’s portrayal of Bannon as the person really
calling the shots in the administration. “I call my own shots,” the
president tweeted one morning. “Some FAKE NEWS media, in order to
marginalize, lies!”)

3) Confirming the reports of administration infighting: A set of dishy
recent reports have described a burgeoning feud between Bannon and
White House senior adviser (and presidential son-in-law) Jared
Kushner, leading to an instruction from Trump that they had to work
things out. Earlier on Tuesday, White House press secretary Sean
Spicer called these reports “overblown” — which, while perhaps less
than honest, is the normal thing for an administration to do in
situations like this. Unfortunately, the president himself
contradicted Spicer’s denial and revealed the tensions were serious
enough that he had to step in. “Steve is a good guy, but I told them
to straighten it out or I will,” Trump told Goodwin.

4) Issuing Bannon a public ultimatum: Managers generally deal with
tense staffing problems in private — and again, in politics, it’s
common to publicly proclaim full confidence in a beleaguered adviser
right up until the moment he or she is fired — but here Trump is
telling the whole world that Bannon is on thin ice. Appropriately,
Bannon’s allies are responding by panicking — Axios’s Mike Allen calls
them “distraught.”

So things look grim for Bannon. Even if he hangs on, his authority has
been dramatically undercut — a White House staffer is only powerful if
others in the administration and outside it believe he is speaking for
the president. Now it’s clear that he doesn’t.

What’s really going on here: Trump’s administration is flailing, and
Bannon is naturally getting a good deal of the blame
But this isn’t really about petty personal feuds. The bigger picture
is that Trump’s first two and a half months in office have been
disastrous, with his popularity sinking and his agenda mired in
Congress and the courts. Naturally, his chief strategist is getting
lots of blame for that. It turns out the former Breitbart News chief,
a guy whose political experience is entirely based on outraging and
provoking people, is not exactly great at governing.

Bannon came in as an outsider who wanted to blow things up, and tried
to put that agenda into practice — most prominently with Trump’s
immigration and travel order. This turned out to be a disastrous
failure on every level — it was incompetently crafted, substantively
indefensible, and eventually blocked in court. Its only real success
was in terrifying and mobilizing liberals against what they saw as a
presidential abuse of power.

Then when the administration ran into trouble, Bannon’s big idea for
how to right the ship was to attack the media. So the president of the
United States increasingly denounced “fake news,” even when the
reports he was complaining about were clearly accurate. (“The leaks
are absolutely real, the news is fake,” he once bizarrely said.) This
violation of norms around freedom of the press only further alarmed
his critics. It did not turn around his dismal approval ratings.

More broadly, there seems to be a sense among some Trump advisers that
the advice Bannon gives is often not so great. Kushner “has said
privately that he fears that Mr. Bannon plays to the president’s worst
impulses,” the New York Times’s Peter Baker, Maggie Haberman, and
Glenn Thrush recently reported. Indeed, one way Trump can help improve
his popularity is to stop picking so many petty, pointless fights —
and one strategy for that is to get rid of Steve Bannon


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Peace Is Doable

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