WASHINGTON — It’s an uncomfortable time to be Paul Wolfowitz. For more than four decades, the former World Bank president and U.S. deputy secretary of defense bent the ears of the most powerful people in Washington with his assertive advice.
But these days, like many Republican foreign policy experts and former military officials, Wolfowitz finds himself with what must surely feel like a disagreeable choice. Come November, he will have to choose between Donald Trump, the Republican presidential candidate whose unlikely rise is in no small part a repudiation of Wolfowitz’s neoconservative approach to foreign policy, and Hillary Clinton, a Democrat …read more
Source: European Voice