What comes after Bolton

This decision could be among the most momentous of the Trump administration

John Bolton.
(Image credit: Illustrated | Leon Neal/Getty Images, sanchesnet1/iStock, Benjamin_Lion/iStock)

Covering Washington during the Trump administration is a gloomy business. But Tuesday was a rare day for good cheer. Tuesday was the day that John Bolton stepped down as President Trump's national security adviser.

All Americans, and many millions of people around the world, should consider themselves fortunate that in the 17 months he served as Donald Trump's NSA, Bolton failed to realize what is always his foremost wish: to start a war. It wasn't for lack of trying — in Venezuela, in Iran, in North Korea. But for whatever reason, the effort did not succeed, and now this man most famous for one-dimensional thinking about international affairs — for whom diplomacy is for suckers and the threat of military force is the only tool rattling around in an otherwise empty toolbox — has left the White House. Let's hope he spends the rest of his days doing nothing worse than drawing a handsome paycheck from the Mujahedeen Khalq (MEK), the fringe group of Iranian dissidents and terrorists that lobbies hard in Washington for American military might to overthrow the government in Tehran and put the group in charge in its place.

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Damon Linker

Damon Linker is a senior correspondent at TheWeek.com. He is also a former contributing editor at The New Republic and the author of The Theocons and The Religious Test.