By Brian Flood | Fox News
‘Historians are going to be writing about the whole lost month of February for tens of years,’ he said.
Veteran journalist Bob Woodward maintained Monday that he didnât do anything wrong by sitting on remarks President Trump made about the coronavirus in the early months of the outbreak because, at the time, the author thought Trump was referring to COVID-19’s impact on China.
In February, Woodward conducted the first of a series of on-the-record interviews with the president for his upcoming book, âRage,â and Trump described the novel coronavirus as âdeadly stuff,â even as he publicly compared it to a seasonal flu.
WOODWARD DISMISSES CLAIMS HE COULD HAVE SAVED LIVES BY PUBLISHING TRUMP COMMENTS SOONER
A month later, Trump admitted to Woodward: âI still like playing it [the virus] down, because I donât want to create a panic.â
Critics condemned Trump when audio of the recording was released last month, but the president has dismissed the controversy. The president and others have pondered why the veteran journalist didn’t report his comments about the novel coronavirus sooner if he thought they were âso bad or dangerous,â while claiming he was trying to keep Americans âcalm.â
âBob Woodward had my quotes for many months,â Trump tweeted last week. âIf he thought they were so bad or dangerous, why didnât he immediately report them in an effort to save lives? Didnât he have an obligation to do so? No, because he knew they were good and proper answers. Calm, no panic!”
During a Monday appearance on NBCâs âToday,â co-anchor Savannah Guthrie asked Woodward about criticism heâs received for sitting on the quotes.
MCENANY DEFENDS TRUMP AFTER WOODWARD BOOK CLAIMS HE SAID CORONAVIRUS ‘DEADLY,’ DESPITE PUBLICLY DOWNPLAYING IT
âIn February I thought it was all about China because the president had told me about a discussion with Chinese President Xi, and if you look at what was known in February, the virus was not on anyoneâs mind. No one was suggesting changing behavior, then when it exploded in March, as you know, there were 30,000 new cases a day,â Woodward said. âPublishing something at that point would not have been telling people anything they didnât know.â
Guthrie pointed out that Trump told Woodward on Feb. 7 that coronavirus was âdeadly,â “airborne,â and worse than the flu, which contradicted what the president was saying publicly.
âIf there was any suggestion I had that that was about the United States, I would have, of course, published I think I have a public health, public safety responsibility. But there was no indication in February, in March everyone knew what Trump had told me, that it applied to the United Sates.â Woodward said.
âThe key here, Savannah, is that in May, three months later, I learned the key piece of evidence: that on January 28, 10 [days] before that February call, the president was warned by his national security adviser, in a top secret meeting, that the virus is going to be the gravest national security threat to your presidency.â
Woodward continued: âThatâs why I begin the book with that January 28 meeting, because thatâs what the president is telling me about on February 7, but I think he was talking to me about China.â
WHY DID THE WASHINGTON POST SIT ON BOB WOODWARD’S TRUMP RECORDINGS?
The âRageâ author then reiterated that he didnât realize Trumpâs February comments were harmful until months later.
âIt is one of those shocks for me, having written about nine presidents, that the president of the United States possessed the specific knowledge that could have saved lives. Historians are going to be writing about the whole lost month of February for tens of years,â Woodward said.
Woodward said Trump spoke to him 18 times for âRageâ and the two spent a lot of time âexploring the inner Donald Trumpâ simply because the president regretted not speaking to the author for his previous book. Woodward said he will release all relevant audio as people ask for it.
Fox Newsâ Brooke Singman contributed to this report.





