Trump was fixated on the Navy's new supercarrier and ranted to military leaders that the ship 'just doesn't look right': book
- A new book says Donald Trump was obsessed with the USS Gerald R. Ford during his presidency.
- He was said to be fixated on the ship's appearance, reportedly saying, "It just doesn't look right."
- "I know aesthetics," he said, per the book, before rubbing his hair and adding, "Can't you tell?"
A new book says former President Donald Trump was obsessed with the way a new US aircraft carrier looked and routinely complained to military officials that he did not like it.
Insider obtained an early copy of the book, "Peril," by the Washington Post reporters Bob Woodward and Robert Costa, which is set to be released next week.
The book said Trump was fixated on the first-in-class aircraft carrier Gerald R. Ford and regularly expressed dissatisfaction with the ship's high cost of more than $13 billion, the weapons elevators, the catapults, and the placement of the flight command center, known as the ship's "island," on the flight deck.
"The generals and admirals were horrible businessmen, Trump complained repeatedly, and particularly terrible at acquisition and deal making on ships, ensuring the military was always being ripped off," the book said.
In one meeting with military leaders, Trump was said to have reminded them that he had been in the construction business. "I know about elevators," he told them, the book said. "If water gets on them," elevators on the ship could malfunction, he said.
The advanced weapons elevators on the Ford, which move weapons and ammunition on the ship and are part of a suite of new technologies, have long been trouble spots for the new supercarrier, though problems have been more with integration rather than the presence of water.
Throughout his presidency, Trump also complained, sometimes in public, about the catapult system.
Among the new technologies on the Ford is the electromagnetic aircraft launch system, which relies on electrical currents to catapult aircraft off the flight deck. The older Nimitz-class aircraft carriers use steam for that task.
Trump complained that the new system - which has experienced problems during development but is designed to be more effective and efficient than the older steam catapults - was too complex, so much so that "you have to go to MIT to figure out how this damn thing works."
In another instance, he said "you have to be Albert Einstein to really work it properly."
Woodward and Costa reported, however, that he was particularly upset about the placement of the ship's island. "It doesn't look right. I have an eye for aesthetics," the president was said to have told Gen. Mark Milley, the chairman of the Joint Chiefs of Staff, at a dinner.
The book said Trump then rubbed his own hair and said, "Can't you tell?"
Per the book, naval officers tried to explain to Trump why the island was positioned the way it was and how its placement to the rear made it easier for pilots to land aircraft by giving them more runway space. Also, moving the island so late in the building process would cost a significant sum.
"It just doesn't look right," Trump insisted, according to the book.
The book said that Trump complained about the Ford often and that Milley sat and listened. "What was there to say," the book said. "The president did not like a ship's look" and Milley "had to endure it, just let him vent."