New York: Former US Defence Secretary James Mattis said he was honoured to be the ‘world’s most overrated general’ in a swipe at his former boss Donald Trump who insulted him earlier this week. At a gala charity dinner here Thursday evening, Mattis told diners he had now ‘achieved greatness’.
“I’m not just an overrated general. I am the greatest, the world’s most overrated,” James Mattis said. “I’m honored to be considered that by Donald Trump because he also called Meryl Streep an overrated actress. So I guess I’m the Meryl Streep of generals, and frankly that sounds pretty good to me,” he to laughter and applause at the annual ‘Alfred E Smith Memorial Foundation’ dinner. “And you do have to admit that between me and Meryl, at least we’ve had some victories.”
Donald Trump called Mattis ‘the world’s most overrated general’ during an acrimonious White House meeting Wednesday with top Democrats over Syria policy.
The retired Marine general said he wasn’t bothered by Trump’s comments. “Of course not, I earned my spurs on the battlefield… and Donald Trump earned his spurs in a letter from a doctor,” Mattis stated, in a jab at the medical condition which allowed Trump to avoid the Vietnam draft. “And I think the only person in the military that Mr Trump doesn’t think is overrated is Colonel Sanders,” added the former army man.
The softly spoken but battle-hardened former Marine left the administration last year, saying in his resignation letter that Trump’s worldview was irreconcilable with his own.
“I commanded forces in Iraq and Syria and Afghanistan. I tried to bring some peace and order to places with no organised government, chaotic and warring factions, irrational fears and toxic hatred,” Mattis told diners. “It was hard work but it wasn’t until I started working in Washington DC that I realised how easy I had it overseas in a combat zone.”
A year on from leaving the administration, Mattis joked: “The recovery process is going well, the counselor says I’ll graduate soon. A year, according to White House time, is about 9,000 hours of executive time or 1,800 holes of golf,” he said in another jab at the president.
AFP