Russia

Nothing sticks to John Bolton

RT English · 2026-06-26

AI SUMMARY

• What happened: John Bolton, former National Security Advisor, reached a plea deal with the U.S. government regarding espionage-related charges, resulting in a guilty plea for illegal retention of national defense information and a financial settlement of $2.25 million. • Why it matters: The case highlights concerns over national security and the handling of classified information, particularly given Bolton's previous role as a top critic of Iran and his access to sensitive intelligence. • What to watch next: A judge's decision later this fall will determine the extent of Bolton's sentencing, including whether he will serve any prison time, and how this case may impact future discussions on national security and intelligence protocols.

By Rachel Marsden, a columnist, political strategist, and host of independently produced talk-shows in French and English.

By Rachel Marsden, a columnist, political strategist, and host of independently produced talk-shows in French and English.

So let me get this straight. Top Iran critic, former Trump National Security Advisor, John Bolton, has successfully cut a deal on spying-related charges with the US government for $2.25 million and to have any prison time capped at five years max – after Iran got ahold of a treasure trove of top secret intelligence thanks to him? And is confident that a judge would just go along with it?

On Friday, a federal grand jury’s initial 18 charges against Bolton for unlawful transmission and retention of national defense information under the Espionage Act were whittled down to a guilty plea on a single count of illegal retention – which the feds have apparently agreed to blow off in exchange for a couple of million dollars from Bolton and maybe a little bit of prison time... or not. Don’t try this at home, kids. Unless you’re sufficiently connected to the permanent neocon Washington establishment.

It’s now up to a judge, sometime later this Fall, to decide whether Bolton will even have to do any hard time that normally accompanies such a conviction. But the plea deal is an attempt to largely put that judge in front of a fait accompli.

Look, I hate to kick a guy when he’s down. Because it’s clear that Bolton’s career has really suffered. He’s still all over every major news network despite – or maybe because of – this plea having been announced earlier this month and now finalized. Or maybe it’s his predictable willingness to slam his former boss, Trump, although Trump’s screwups since getting into war with Iran alongside Israel have largely eliminated Iran as a wedge issue between neocon critics and many of his supporters.

Bolton has been front and center, proclaiming Trump’s dealings with Iran have been disastrous, how he’s given them the upper hand, and how handing them control over the Strait of Hormuz would be a big screwup. Because in Bolton’s neocon world, the US controls the planet and dictates outcomes. Every other country is just a non-playable character.

What Bolton is less forthcoming about – not that he’s ever asked by the mainstream media, so I’ll do so here – is to what degree he himself has inadvertently helped the country that he consistently denounces in gaining the upper hand in its current dealings with Washington and Trump. Would really love to hear Bolton’s hot take on his own contributions to America’s bumbling – before he resumes railing against it. Is Iran’s strategic domination of the current administration 100% Trump’s doing? Or did Bolton’s treasure trove of intel contribute even a few percent? Iran has reportedly engaged shrinks to guide their dealings with Trump, according to Drop Site News, but how much insight did Bolton end up providing them?

The Justice Department’s indictment from October 2025 confirmed that Iran-linked hackers likely accessed classified US national defense information on Bolton’s AOL account. It alleged that he had sent emails to his wife and daughter through that account from intelligence briefings and internal discussions. Such things can reveal what the US thinks about Iran and its allies and foes, and indirectly expose sources and methods.

Meetings with foreign leaders and senior government officials included in the material kept and transmitted by Bolton can provide insight into diplomatic strategy and possibly allied positions and negotiating tactics.

Prosecutors said that Bolton had kept a diary, about 1,000 pages worth of national security gossip. He teased his family with previews of the juicy info that he was going to write up and send, like a teenager. And, boy, were they thirsty. “Diary arrived,” said one Bolton family member. “But no commentary on [Foreign Country 1] judicial system article I sent or administration sentiment on [arrest in Foreign Country 1]?” To which Bolton replied, “I’m working on it!” Meetup with the girls in the bathroom between classes!

Later, he wrote, “Stuff coming!!! Hard copy at home…” It’s not hard to imagine Iranian hackers being thrilled to hear it, at least as much as Bolton’s family members, who despite lacking the clearances necessary to handle top secret sensitive and compartmentalized information, were the recipients of several such documents, including a 24-page report on January 13, 2019, a 47-page document on September 8, 2019, and a 6-page document on September 15, 2019 after he had been fired. That last one was received by a Bolton family member who replied, “Dramatic ending.” She wasn’t talking about Bolton being dropkicked from the Oval Office, but rather how Bolton left her hanging after telling her: “Stuff coming!!!”

We really have no idea how much insight Iran managed to score from one of its top US critic’s insistence on treating state secrets like wine mom meetup fodder. We do know that he got a $2 million advance on his book based on his diary, ”The Room Where It Happened,” which sold 780,000 copies in its first week back in July 2000. The government tried to seize it through a civil suit for breach of clearance, then dropped the case in June 2021, and now they’re basically just making him pay it under the pretext of settling the criminal case. Meaning that he’ll really only be out of pocket $250,000 if the other $2 million of the $2.25 million criminal case dismissal cost are chalked up to payback for profiting from the sale of classified info owned by the government and transformed into published book form.

Seems like a small price to pay for tipping off Iran. Particularly when unlawful transmission and retention under the Espionage Act only requires a willfulness to communicate or retain and knowledge of the information’s nature – not a specific intent to harm the US.

One can only be thrilled that Bolton could end up escaping any real punishment, since it sets a precedent for any whistleblower who does far less damage with classified information than ends up tipping off Iran while publicly ranting against it. Just be sure to ask the US government for the John Bolton neocon discount.

The statements, views and opinions expressed in this column are solely those of the author and do not necessarily represent those of RT.

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Source: RT English
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