US President Donald Trump has strongly attacked his former National Security Adviser John Bolton, who has expressed his willingness to testify at the trial aimed at deciding to dismiss the president, accusing him of denying Gemayel and asserting that he "pleaded with him" to give him work.

"A man who rejected the position of ambassador to the United Nations years ago, and has not accepted any other work since then, a man" begged me "to give him a job that does not need the approval of the Senate, and I gave him the job, although many told me not to do That sir. "

"And he got the job, then he spoke wrongly about the Libyan model on TV, and he committed many other lapses, then he was expelled because he had listened explicitly if we listened to him but we are now in the sixth world war, then he goes on to write a false and evil book. All information is related to national security. Who does that? ".


Bolton, a member of the neo-conservative movement known for his aggressive stances, was sacked last September by the Trump administration over a dispute with the Republican president over a number of sensitive foreign policy files from Afghanistan to North Korea.

Since leaving the White House, Bolton has spoken publicly of his differences with Trump, and as the latter's trial began, Bolton has expressed his willingness to testify in the Senate, which the White House totally rejects.

Bolton is preparing to publish a book in which he says Donald Trump told him of his intention to book military aid to Ukraine if it did not open an investigation into the presidential presidential candidate Joe Biden and his son Hunter. Trump denied this, accusing Bolton of all he was seeking "to sell his book."

Trump is facing a trial to rule on his removal in the Senate, which was launched by the Democratic opposition on the background of the Ukraine case.

Democrats want Bolton to testify in the Senate trial, amid growing signs that a large number of Republican members of the House can support the request.