Susie Wiles, White House chief of staff, criticizes Bondi and opines on Trump in Vanity Fair

WASHINGTON — In a series of candid interviews with Vanity Fair published Tuesday, White House Chief of Staff Susie Wiles offered unprecedented insights into the inner workings of President Donald Trump’s second administration while leveling sharp criticism against Attorney General Pam Bondi’s management of the Jeffrey Epstein case.

The influential yet typically reserved aide acknowledged underestimating the magnitude of the Epstein scandal involving the disgraced financier but delivered pointed remarks about Bondi’s approach to the sensitive matter. “I think she completely whiffed on appreciating that that was the very targeted group that cared about this,” Wiles stated, referencing Bondi’s distribution of binders containing no new information to social media influencers.

Despite her extensive on-the-record conversations with the magazine, Wiles subsequently dismissed the published piece as a “disingenuously framed hit piece” that omitted significant context to portray the administration negatively. She did not, however, deny the accuracy of the attributed comments.

The interviews revealed several provocative administration positions, including Trump’s desire to continue military strikes against suspected drug vessels off Venezuela’s coast until leader Nicolas Maduro “cries uncle”—a statement seemingly at odds with the official position that operations focus solely on narcotics interception.

Wiles provided rare personal assessment of the president, comparing his personality traits to those of “high-functioning alcoholics” despite his teetotalism, noting his unwavering belief that “there’s nothing he can’t do.” She described her role as channeling Trump’s energy and policy objectives while occasionally tempering his impulses.

Regarding the administration’s much-discussed retribution campaign, Wiles acknowledged a “loose agreement” that score-settling would conclude within the first 90 days, though operations continued beyond that timeframe. She alternatively framed these actions as removing individuals who “have done bad things” from government rather than pure vengeance, though conceded the prosecution of New York Attorney General Letitia James for mortgage fraud might qualify as retribution.

The Justice Department faces impending deadlines to release Epstein-related documents following Trump’s signing of legislation mandating disclosure, despite initial objections from the administration.