The Atlantic

Sebastian Gorka Isn't Wrong About Everything

The White House counterterrorism adviser is so misguided in so many ways that some are reluctant to acknowledge when he has a point.
Source: Alex Wong / Getty

Since the inauguration of Donald Trump, the counterterrorism community has united in a cathartic, hundred-day communal hatefest against his chief counterterrorism adviser, Sebastian L. Gorka, Ph.D. It felt good. Gorka, a former Breitbart national security editor, is a remarkably friendless man among experts on terrorism and jihadism. I know no one in the field who considers him an authority on anything whatsoever, and until his appointment in January, most paid him the ultimate disrespect by not even bothering to ridicule his appearances on Fox News.

On Sunday the Washington Examiner reported that Gorka would soon leave the White House, where in the absence of a security clearance “Gorka’s only known duties,” as described by a White House source, “included speaking on television about counterterrorism, as well as ‘giving White House tours and peeling out in his Mustang.’”

One does not relinquish such a job lightly. ( reported that Gorka’s departure is “likely” in the coming weeks, citing two senior administration officials, though after Smith tweeted about him. His credentials tended to look less, not more impressive under examination. He speaks no Arabic. He stresses his military service, which lasted just a few years as a reservist, in an army intelligence in the United Kingdom with little or no connection to terrorism. He to have occupied the “Major General Matthew C. Horner Distinguished Chair of Military Theory at Marine Corps University,” when in fact he worked for the Marine Corps University , a private entity that sends lecturers to the Marine Corps University nearby. Scholars that his Ph.D., granted by Corvinus University in his ancestral nation of Hungary, didn’t meet basic standards of rigor.

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