Will Byrnes's Reviews > Peril

Peril by Bob Woodward
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Milley believed January 6 was a planned, coordinated, synchronized attack on the very heart of American democracy, designed to overthrow the government to prevent the constitutional certification of a legitimate election won by Joe Biden.
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Milley summarized and scribbled. “Big Threat: domestic terrorism.”
Some were the new Brown Shirts, a U.S. version, Milley concluded, of the paramilitary wing of the Nazi Party that supported Hitler. It was a planned revolution. Steve Bannon’s vision coming to life. Bring it all down, blow it up, burn it, and emerge with power.
The title, Peril, is drawn from President Joe Biden’s inaugural address, in which he says “We have much to do in this winter of peril…” It is the epigraph for the book. Winter is not coming. It is bloody well here, and has been here a lot longer than most folks realize. Woodward and his much younger partner, Bob Costa, national political reporter for the Washington Post, look over some of what we have endured, consider the peril we face today, and give us plenty to think about concerning what lies ahead. Biden’s speech addresses not only the threat to our democracy, but the threat to our safety from COVID variants, the cry for racial justice, and the threat to our planet from global warming. This book focuses on the threat to American democracy.

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Bob Woodward and Robert Costa - image from CNN

It rolls along on two parallel tracks. One is Trump’s attempt to illegally overturn the 2020 presidential election. The other is Joe Biden’s determination to preserve the soul of our nation, focusing on his campaign, and the first few months of his administration. The chapters alternate, more or less between Trump and Biden.

“Was that from this book?” One peril to be faced in reading this book is that of fixing what one read, when, where, and by whom, given the firehose flood of books on the Trump era. I addressed that in my review of I Alone Can Fix It. If this is of interest you can click here for a look.

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Trump’s mob assaults the Capitol on January 6, 2021 - image from Business Insider

January 6, 2021 is a date which will live in infamy. That was the day on which American democracy was nearly bombed into surrender by a sneak attack on the citadel of our national values. That was the day on which a failed Trump-led coup could easily have made moot the election he had just lost, and rendered American elections, certainly presidential elections, meaningless. It was the coming out party for an American brand of fascism that has long been an undercurrent, and sometimes much more, in our political life as a nation, a dark but always-present element in our population that Trump had recruited and encouraged for years, even before he ran for office.

It is clear that, to the extent that we will ever know all the details of the coup plot, it is likely to come from the Congressional January 6 Committee’s final report, in combination with unredacted testimony given to that committee, testimony given at what we hope will be very public trials of those in charge of the effort, and intrepid reporters. The authors count among that final group. While offering far from a complete portrait of the plot, they have given us an insider’s look at what people in the administration and the government beyond that faced on 1/6 (which I personally think should be called Desecration Day.) And what they had to deal with in the months leading up to it.

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Milley speaking with Trump - image from DNYUZ

It was Chairman of the Joint Chiefs of Staff Mark Milley whose intercession with his Chinese counterpart talked the Chinese military down from a concern that Trump might launch an attack on China in order to remain in office, not once but twice. As the Chinese were again concerned what our imbalanced president might do after his coup attempt failed. There was also concern that Trump would attack Iran in an attempt to secure his own position. I doubt Israel would have appreciated the incomings such an action would have surely generated. He also floated the idea of evacuating troops from Afghanistan in January, 2021, with minimal planning. Thankfully he was dissuaded from that impulse as well.

Milley is the official most in the limelight here. He was appointed to that post by Donald Trump. In Phil Rucker and Carol Leonnig’s book I Alone Can Fix It, Milley told them of his concerns about the dangers of a right-wing coup. There is plenty more of that in this book as well. We hear a lot from Trump-whisperer Lindsey Graham about his conversations with Trump, who appears to have actually convinced himself of the truth of his own lies. He is a fine representative of those who, while remaining loyal to Trump, try to counsel him to sane courses of action.

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Donald Trump pretends to check his watch as Senator Lindsey Graham speaks at the White - image and text from The Guardian

We get a look at the conversations among the cabinet level officials, unwilling to allow him to use the US military as his private army. We learn what analyses they shared about the dangers facing the nation, what agreements they came to among themselves, what steps they took, and what mistakes they made. We get a look at how these and other level-headed adults in the administration did whatever they could to keep Trump from causing irreparable harm to the nation with his impulsive-driven, self-serving, poorly-informed decision-making. Part of all this included making certain that proper chains of command would be followed should Trump decide to start a war as a Wag the Dog self-preservation move, or command the military to take actions that were illegal.

Days after the election, Trump fired Secretary of Defense, Mark Esper, in large part for his public opposition to the use of the military to suppress BLM protests. It was certainly clear to those tracking Trump’s actions that Trump wanted the US military to be his personal security force, and Esper was an impediment. In fact, it was appropriate for the military to be brought to bear to battle an insurrection, and the delays in the military’s response can be traced to the Department of Defense, by then Esper-free, sitting on its hands for far too long.

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Defense Secretary Mark Esper – fired after the election - image from Reuters via BBC

One item that becomes clear from the telling here is that Mike Pence did his best to find a way to Yes for Trump, but was unable. It is also clear that Trump pushed Pence a step too far when he issued a press release claiming that the Vice President agreed with Trump’s lie that the VP had the legal right to refuse to accept the electoral votes of any state. It was the only thing, apparently, in four years in office, that generated a spine in the relentlessly invertebrate Pence, driving him into bunker mode. It is unfortunate that Pence will likely be remembered more for this single act than for his years of pathetic subservience to and enabling of an American Mussolini. It is chilling to consider that had there been alternate slates of electors ready to bring to bear, Pence might have actually done the deed. Chuck Schumer and Nancy Pelosi called him repeatedly after the insurrection, wanting him to invoke the 25th amendment. He refused to take their calls, calling a quick halt to his vertebrate moment.

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Mike Pence flees the mob on 1/6 - image from The Guardian

The book will (it certainly should) make your blood boil. The Founders put together a guiding document and a set of rules that presumed they would be carried out by honorable officials. They did not count on the possibility of a sociopath being elected president. Someone with not only no respect, but outright contempt, for the rule of law. He really claimed, and maybe even believed in his diseased mind, like Louis XIV, who famously said “L’etat est moi,” that he, personally, was the state.

Bottom line is that when you see Woodward and Costa being interviewed about this book, or talking about the events they covered, their hair is on fire. They understand what it was that happened, namely that not only did the nation narrowly avoid a fascist coup that would have made the USA a dictatorship, but that the party of the guy who ordered it is all lined up and ready to goose-step their way to another try. We may have survived Trump’s 2021 coup attempt, but it is clear that he will try again, and there are far too many who are more than willing to go along, whether actively or passively.

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Trump with Steve Bannon - image from CNN

Now, as for the other part of this book. It should come as a salve for the angst generated by the reporting on Trump. They follow Biden’s decision to run, following the Charlottesville “good people on both sides” outrage, convinced that the very soul of the nation was imperiled, and that he could offer a way out of this very dark cloud, more so than other extant or potential candidates. We get to see a very human Biden, sincere, knowledgeable, willing to listen to well-informed and well-meant advice, willing to make needed adjustments, willing to talk to anyone, anywhere, and unwilling to be baited by Trumpian taunts and lies. We are let in to some of the family troubles the Bidens have endured, that they continue to endure. Biden is shown as the anti-Trump, an incredibly decent person, gifted at making personal contact with people, caring about people, remembering them, willing to spend unheard of amounts of time with people who could offer him nothing but their shared pain. It shows candidate Biden behaving in a presidential manner when the actual president would not. It is a warm portrait of a man the authors have certainly seen enough of to know. They also show him getting tough in legislative negotiations, and showing his exasperation when sanity, and decency, seem insufficient to accomplish a goal. The book continues into March 2021, so shows Biden as president as well as merely a candidate.

But, of course, being Washington reporters, they feel it necessary to take a swing or two. In one instance they report on Biden snapping at a reporter who was being particularly dickish as if there was something wrong with that. That Biden later apologized was the real fault here. The reporter merited being smacked down. Their portrayal was that this was a kind of gaffe. Take a moment to roll your eyes here. The Beltway media have particular story lines that they adhere to, regardless of the facts. Reporting Biden as particularly gaffe-ridden is among them. He is no more so than most other people. We all misstate things at times. But they seem eager, drooling even for a chance to catch another one and reinforce the image. Their treatment of Biden’s entirely appropriate reaction to a hostile reporter is of a cloth with that mindlessness.

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Presidential candidate and former Vice President Joe Biden takes a picture with the Downs family after campaigning in Rehoboth Beach. - image and text from the Cape Gazette

Gripes (in addition to the one above)
As happens far too often in books of this sort, namely political history books put together largely through personal interviews, the authors sometimes slip into stenography mode. They report, presumably straight-faced, about Senate Majority, now Minority Leader Mitch McConnell trotting out his spin about tax cuts for the rich being “tax reform” and crediting Trump for an economy that had been humming along quite nicely when he took office. I call BS. They continue in this mode about McConnell working with cabinet members trying to push Trump to some semblance of normal. Take nothing McConnell reports himself saying at face value. Second-party confirmation is always needed there. Ditto for Lindsey Graham.
Former Republican and Lincoln Project co-founder Steve Schmidt issued a statement about Graham…saying that many people have tried to understand Graham over the years. He encouraged people not to look at it "through the prism of the manifest inconsistencies that exist between things he used to believe and what he's doing now."
Instead, Schmidt said, "The way to understand him is to look at what's consistent. And essentially what he is in American politics is what, in the aquatic world, would be a pilot fish: a smaller fish that hovers around a larger predator, like a shark, living off of its detritus. That's Lindsey. And when he swam around the McCain shark, broadly viewed as a virtuous and good shark, Lindsey took on the patina of virtue. But wherever the apex shark is, you find the Lindsey fish hovering about, and Trump is the newest shark in the sea. Lindsey has a real draw to power — but he's found it unattainable on his own merits."
- from Salon article
Graham is quoted at length here, and it is all self-serving. Douse that with salt before consuming.

Gripes, notwithstanding, Peril is an important book, another in a large library of reporting on the workings of the Trump administration, and particularly at how close Trump’s attempted coup came to succeeding.

There are many lessons to be learned here. One is that the January 6th Committee should interview, whether via subpoena or not, all the players involved in orchestrating the insurrection, including Trump, and that they need to complete their report and make all necessary criminal referrals to the Department of Justice before Republicans have a chance to regain control of the House and shut them down. We learn that the norms and rules of American government are fatally flawed, allowing the dark-hearted to game the system for their political and personal advantage. We learn that even in dark times there are officials willing to put their careers, and even their lives on the line to stand up for the ideals and institutions, that Americans claim to admire and respect. We learn that there need to be fixes made to the Electoral Count Act of 1887 to make sure that each state’s electors truthfully represent the decision of the voters.

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Attorney John Eastman, left, speaks next to Rudy Giuliani at Donald Trump’s rally on 6 January - Image and text from Reuters, by way of The Guardian – photo by Jim, Bourg

The book’s epigraph cut short Biden’s inaugural statement. The full sentence reads We will press forward with speed and urgency, for we have much to do in this winter of peril and possibility. Despite the subsequent COVID variants that have killed or damaged so many in our nation, and the world, a major relief bill made it through a very marginally Democratic Congress. Other measures are needed, but hope that more can be done remains alive, despite Joe Manchin. There are hopeful signs in many parts of the nation that democracy is on the rise…

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Hmmm, reviewus interruptus. Looks like we have run out of space here on Goodreads. Despair not, the full review, including EXTRA STUFF, is on my site, Coot’s Reviews. See you there.

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Reading Progress

October 5, 2021 – Started Reading
December 27, 2021 – Shelved
December 27, 2021 – Shelved as: afghanistan
December 27, 2021 – Shelved as: american-history
December 27, 2021 – Shelved as: covid
December 27, 2021 – Shelved as: history
December 27, 2021 – Shelved as: politics
December 27, 2021 – Shelved as: public-policy
December 27, 2021 – Shelved as: public-health
December 27, 2021 – Shelved as: trump
December 27, 2021 – Finished Reading
December 28, 2021 – Shelved as: nonfiction
December 28, 2021 – Shelved as: biography
December 28, 2021 – Shelved as: journalism
January 1, 2022 – Shelved as: 2021-nonfiction-reader-challenge

Comments Showing 1-41 of 41 (41 new)

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message 1: by Clif (last edited Jan 26, 2022 11:35AM) (new)

Clif Hostetler Thanks for a thorough review of the book. One of the reasons I've been spared the need to read the recent crop of anti-Trump books is that I could count on reviewers like you to provide a complete taste of its contents. It has allowed me to concentrate on lesser known books with my reviews and still remained informed.


Will Byrnes Happy to help


message 3: by Melike (new) - added it

Melike Thank you for this detailed review, Will!


Will Byrnes Thank you, Melike


SOPHIA GRACE FOWLER does the book have bad language ?


Will Byrnes Not nearly as much as it should have


message 7: by Jodi (new)

Jodi I'm certain your review is terrific, Will, but I apologize for being unable to read it. I can no longer read or hear anything about a particular person without feeling quite angry😡 and physically ill.🤢 I'd rather not devote any time to him. But on a happier note, I wish you health and happiness in 2022. Happy New Year, Will!🥳


message 8: by Will (last edited Jan 01, 2022 10:08AM) (new) - rated it 5 stars

Will Byrnes Bonne Année back at ya. Here's hoping '22 is better than '21.

As for the book, yes, it is indeed quite alarming, and Trump has turned more than his share of stomachs, but it is also heartening that even in his administration, there were people willing to stand up for the rule of law, and sanity.


message 9: by Jodi (new)

Jodi Will wrote: "Bonne Année back at ya. Here's hoping '22 is better than '21.

As for the book, yes, it is indeed quite alarming, and Trump has turned more than his share of stomachs, but it is also heartening tha..."


That IS heartening! Thank goodness for those people; I don't know how they'd have lived with their conscience if they hadn't!✌


message 10: by Will (new) - rated it 5 stars

Will Byrnes There are plenty in Trump’s circle who appear quite comfy without a conscience of any sort. Thankfully, a few of the more usual humans managed to slip through.


Colleen Browne Another excellent review, Will. I particularly appreciate you calling the authors out on being soft on McConnell and Graham. McConnell bears more responsibility for the mess in the country than any other individual, with the possible exception of Trump. I have not wanted to read any of the books on Trump yet, but I will put this on my list.


message 12: by Will (new) - rated it 5 stars

Will Byrnes Thanks, Colleen. When you are ready to take on the Trump genre, this is one that should be on that stack.


message 13: by Will (new) - rated it 5 stars

Will Byrnes Tammy W Fowler wrote: "is there bad language"
Not really, Tammy. Maybe a stray word here or there. But you should know that sometimes bad language is entirely appropriate in books intended for adult readers.


message 14: by Will (last edited Jan 01, 2022 04:04AM) (new) - rated it 5 stars

Will Byrnes There is such outrageous behavior being depicted here that it would have been entirely appropriate for there to have been scenes of people screaming profanities for extreme durations. The sort of language one might use when dealing with Nazis or serial killers, who seem able to get away with their crimes unpunished. High levels of profanity that reflect the frustration of human beings confronted with raw criminality, impervious narcissism and downright evil.


message 15: by Will (new) - rated it 5 stars

Will Byrnes Depends of course, on the maturity of the reader. But coarse language should not be an impediment here.


H (no longer expecting notifications) Balikov What a choice to end 2021, Will! I hope that means that we have better things to celebrate in 2022. I wish you joy in the new year.


message 17: by H (no longer expecting notifications) Balikov (last edited Jan 01, 2022 10:58PM) (new)

H (no longer expecting notifications) Balikov PS - I'm heading to Coot's Reviews


message 18: by Will (new) - rated it 5 stars

Will Byrnes HBalikov wrote: "What a choice to end 2021, Will! I hope that means that we have better things to celebrate in 2022. I wish you joy in the new year."

Got to be better than 2021, finger are crossed.

Hope you and the clan have a better year than merely better-than-'21.


message 19: by Lois (new)

Lois Will- To protect myself from additional trauma I will not read "Peril". I appreciate your review so, so much as we enter another perilous year.


message 20: by Will (new) - rated it 5 stars

Will Byrnes Understood


message 21: by Elly (new) - added it

Elly Thank you for this review Will


message 22: by Will (new) - rated it 5 stars

Will Byrnes Thank you, Elly


message 23: by Sue (new)

Sue Excellent review, Will. Thank you for reading this book and analyzing it for me. I’ve found I have to decrease my input of this and other political input since January 6th. I stick a toe in gingerly from time to time but have to be careful of an onslaught of anxiety, Mr T’s further lingering gift from that day. I’m hoping this will ease before election season.


message 24: by Will (new) - rated it 5 stars

Will Byrnes Thanks, Sue.

If anything, 1/6 should have offered a reason why it is important for people to stay tuned in to political doings. Republicans are counting on people being disgusted with it all, while their lunatic base ramps up to win seats in November.

Sadly, the anxiety will only ramp up and become an even greater national peril as Election Day approaches, particularly if the voter suppression n the GOP has enacted in many states is allowed to stand.


message 25: by Karen (new)

Karen Amazing review Will, thank you… sadly, none of this stuff fazes Trump supporters. That’s what is so infuriating.
I for one, since Biden has been in office.. can finally sleep more peacefully and not check CNN on the hour anymore, worried about what Trump will do next.
He was subpoenaed today for a lawsuit .. doesn’t matter, he gets away with everything.. I just can’t, with him 🤦‍♀️


message 26: by Will (new) - rated it 5 stars

Will Byrnes I would hold out at least some hope that there will be some accountability. There are many opportunities for states, cities and Main Justice to have a go at Trump and his fellow gangsters. Do not be disheartened by the pace of the 1/6committee, and the DoJ. Things are definitely happening, even if not with the daily public announcements that characterized the Trump years. The Watergate investigation took two years. And I expect that Garland is making absolutely certain that any charges that will be brought are air tight, not only regarding conviction, but regarding appeals.


message 28: by Will (new) - rated it 5 stars

Will Byrnes Forget a few letters, Timothy?


message 29: by Lilo (new) - added it

Lilo How could I have missed this review?!? How could I have missed this book. I'm off to put this book in my Amazon shopping bag.

And now, someone please tell me how I can change the day to 72 hours! When will I find the time to read all the must-read books I have already purchased?


message 30: by Will (new) - rated it 5 stars

Will Byrnes TBR mountain grows ever higher for all of us


message 31: by Lilo (new) - added it

Lilo Will wrote: "TBR mountain grows ever higher for all of us"

And what's worse! I recently read the very well researched book "Why We Sleep", by Matthew Walker, which convinced me that 7-9 hours sleep daily, while not a cure-all, is almost a miracle drug to prevent and also to treat just about all infectious deceases and even most cancers. The problem: Since I have trouble falling asleep, there go my morning hours, leaving my days short several hours. Sigh!


message 32: by Will (new) - rated it 5 stars

Will Byrnes I am a believer that getting regular, sufficient sleep, whatever number applies to an individual, is good for one's overall health. I try my very best to get 7+ every day, but am successful far less often than I would like, for diverse reasons. Bummer that you have getting-to-sleep misery.


message 33: by Lilo (last edited Mar 11, 2022 08:27AM) (new) - added it

Lilo Will wrote: "I am a believer that getting regular, sufficient sleep, whatever number applies to an individual, is good for one's overall health. I try my very best to get 7+ every day, but am successful far les..."

Will, I urge you to read this "Why We Sleep" book. It tells that most people insist that they get by with much less sleep, but they are utterly mistaken. The author of this book provides ample of proof. He says that lack of sufficient sleep is a national emergency here in the U.S., and it not only costs billions of dollars but also many lives from accidents, infectious disease, AND even cancer. It also causes dementia and Alzheimer's.


message 34: by Will (last edited Mar 11, 2022 11:21AM) (new) - rated it 5 stars

Will Byrnes Definitely sounds worthwhile. On my TBR.


message 35: by Lilo (new) - added it

Lilo Will wrote: "Definitely sounds worthwhile. On my TBR."

It's one of the 3 most rewarding books I read during the past 12 months.


message 36: by Mary (new)

Mary In early March 2022, Mark Meadows is under investigation for voter fraud. I seriously don’t understand how other henchmen are walking around. But every day, I thank our lucky stars that the current administration is reassembling the departments that are needed to carry out policies and laws


message 37: by Will (new) - rated it 5 stars

Will Byrnes So many of these SOBs should be in jail. We can only hope that those in charge of the wheels of justice make sure that they turn.


Christina Christina I was struck by how reasonable I found characters like Mitch McConnell, of whom I’m not a fan, compared to Trump and his closest advisors.

It was a chilling reminder that things can get worse. Much worse.


message 39: by Will (last edited Feb 26, 2024 10:25AM) (new) - rated it 5 stars

Will Byrnes If Trump is elected they will get much, much worse. McConnell has his moments, yet somehow always ends up doing the wrong thing for the nation.


message 40: by TXGAL1 (new) - added it

TXGAL1 Phenomenal review, Will!🤩


message 41: by Will (last edited Mar 18, 2024 07:41AM) (new) - rated it 5 stars

Will Byrnes Thanks, Tex


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