While Trump weighs Iran’s bombing, Steve Bannon has his ear
Steve Bannon is a speaker. All you have to do is the issue of what he wants to discuss, and the former chief strategic for President Donald Trump will speak about your ear. Mr. Bannon-Maga and PodCaster influenced was great-a distinctive guest in this week’s screen breakfast, and he did not disappoint.
Mr. Bannon stood on Israel’s struggle over the last nuclear program, and his opinion that the United States should not interfere directly. He complained about the “Media Authority of the old Republican Party, National Review, Fox News” and “Types of War forever”. He said that the Third World War here, he said, and the division of Trump’s base. But if the United States attacks Iranian nuclear facilities, Mr. Bannon expected that most of Trump’s supporters will gather behind him.
The discussion was preparing, and was widely covered through the main media. Cameron Joseph wrote from the screen his story on the table while we talked. Our YouTube video can be found here.
Our breakfast value also indicated the opportunity to interact in person with the newspaper maker. Mr. Bannon is famous for his uncomplicated appearance, but on Wednesday morning in Saint Reges Washington, he was shaving clean and wore a jacket, and his long hair was combed. He had a pile of newspapers printed under his arm, which fell on the table, in the Malays Times at the top.
It was also my pleasure to provide Maga Firebrand to some liberal colleagues, including Bill Press, the former host of CNN “Crossfire” and now Podxceter and a column writer. “Dad, you make me wrong,” he wrote, a tongue in the cheek, in Suspension. “I took breakfast with Steve Bannon.”
And here, Mr. Press found a joint land with Mr. Bannon, including his conclusion that Israel should “end what started” without the help of us, and that Israeli Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu was trying to direct the United States to join his war.
Another friend on the table, George Condon from the National Journal, says he got a kick from my watching in an attempt to boycott Mr. Bannon. In fact, with 30 correspondents in the room, I wanted to press the largest possible number of questions. But he was completely skilled in talking in non -breathing paragraphs. Mr. Bannon said that he needed to leave 10 minutes before to make an appointment, but when it is time, he called an aid all over the room, “I tell them I will be late.”
Mr. Banoun also cleaned the questions he did not want to discuss – such as when he last spoke with the president. But on Thursday morning, after being monitored as he was entering the western wing, he assured me that there were three hours and had lunch with Potus.
“He wanted to top the breakfast with the Christian flag’s march,” Mr. Banoun told me about the text.
On Thursday afternoon, Mr. Trump announced that he would decide his course of work on Iran in the next two weeks.
In fact, breakfast timing has proven that it is lucky, given the urgency of the news. Mr. Bannon noticed when we sat. He said: “I think in some respects, it is one of the divine elements that we are here.”