
US President Donald Trump said he was standing by his White House chief of staff, Susie Wiles, after Vanity Fair magazine published interviews in which Wiles revealed internal tensions in Trumpâs administration and painted an unflattering picture of the roles played by some of the presidentâs inner circle.
Trump, who regularly describes Wiles as the âmost powerful woman in the worldâ, told the New York Post on Tuesday that he has full confidence in his chief of staff and that she had âdone a fantastic jobâ.
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Vanity Fair published two articles based on the interviews, giving insights into what Wiles thinks about other key figures in Trumpâs second presidency.
Speaking about Trump, Wiles described the teetotaling president as having âan alcoholicâs personalityâ and an eye for vengeance against perceived enemies.
âHe has an alcoholicâs personality,â Wiles said of Trump, explaining that her upbringing with an alcoholic father prepared her for managing âbig personalitiesâ.
Trump does not drink, she noted, but operates with âa view that thereâs nothing he canât do. Nothing, zero, nothingâ.
In his defence of Wiles, Trump said she was right to describe him personally as having an âalcoholicâs personalityâ, even though he does not drink alcohol.
âIâve often said that if I did, Iâd have a very good chance of being an alcoholic,â Trump said. âI have said that many times about myself, I do. Itâs a very possessive personality,â he said.

Speaking on the Trump administrationâs failure to quickly deliver its promise to share information related to convicted sex offender Jeffrey Epstein, Wiles suggested that Trumpâs attorney general, Pam Bondi, had failed to clearly read the situation with the public.
âFirst, she gave them binders full of nothingness,â Wiles said of Bondi, noting that Vice President JD Vance had more fully grasped how important the issue was to some people, since he is himself âa conspiracy theoristâ.
Of Trumpâs inclusion in the Epstein files, Wiles said, âWe know heâs in the fileâ, but claimed the file did not show him doing âanything awfulâ.
Referring to other members of the Trump administration, Wiles called Russ Vought, the chief of the White House Office of Management and Budget, a âright-wing absolute zealotâ and branded tech tycoon Elon Musk an âodd, odd duckâ, Vanity Fair said.
On Ukraine, Wiles said that Trump believes Russian President Vladimir Putin âwants the whole countryâ, despite Washingtonâs push for a peace deal.
Wiles also affirmed that Trump wants to keep bombing alleged drug boats in the waters off the coast of Venezuela until that countryâs leader, Nicolas Maduro, âcries uncleâ.
In a post on X, Wiles called the Vanity Fair story âa disingenuously framed hit piece on me and the finest President, White House staff, and Cabinet in historyâ, saying it omitted important context and selectively quoted her to create a negative narrative.
Other members of Trumpâs inner circle also defended Wiles after the articles were published.
Vance said in a speech in Pennsylvania that he and Wiles had âjoked in private and in publicâ about him believing conspiracy theories.
âWe have our disagreements, we agree on much more than we disagree, but Iâve never seen her be disloyal to the president of the United States,â Vance said.
White House press secretary Karoline Leavitt told reporters outside the West Wing that Wiles was âincredibleâ and accused Vanity Fair of the âbias of omissionâ, while Secretary of Defense Pete Hegseth said on X that there was âabsolutely nobody better!â than Wiles.







