The Phnom Penh Post

Trump’s ex-Russia adviser testifies at House impeachmen­t inquiry

-

US LAWMAKERS returning from a two-week break braced for an impeachmen­t brawl in Washington, as a former White House aide testified before Congress on Monday in the latest twist in the investigat­ion of US President Donald Trump.

US Republican­s, already at odds with Trump over his withdrawal of US troops from northern Syria, face questions about the embattled president’s efforts to pressure his Ukrainian counterpar­t to investigat­e his Democratic rivals.

Congress returns to work on Tuesday with what Republican Senator Chuck Grassley called an “impeachmen­t cloud” over Washington.

Trump has pushed back, with no fewer than 10 tweets on Monday against US Democrats and their investigat­ion.

In one he demanded that a whistleblo­wer whose warning about the US president’s ca ll wit h Ukraine triggered the impeachmen­t inquir y be identified and testif y before Congress.

As he menaced the person who exposed his possible wrongdoing, Trump faced a potential setback with his former top Russia adviser, Fiona Hill, sitting for an hours-long closeddoor deposition before US lawmakers.

Hill ser ved in t he National Securit y Council but lef t t he administra­tion short ly before Trump’s July 25 ca ll wit h Ukrainian President Volody myr Zelensk y.

Democrats expect her to share her concerns about Trump’s involvemen­t in the Ukraine scandal, including his ouster of the US ambassador to Kiev Marie Yovanovitc­h, who testified to Congress last week.

With the impeachmen­t inquiry charging ahead, Trump’s re-election team launched a fierce broadside at the investigat­ors.

“Democrats have crossed over the line of partisan politics and have undertaken a seditious conspiracy to overthrow the people’s president,” Trump’s 2020 campaign manager Brad Parscale said.

Trump himself lashed out at House Intelligen­ce Committee chairman Adam Schiff after the Democrat suggested the whistleblo­wer may not testify out of safety concerns.

Trump has repeatedly pushed for the unmasking of the author of a complaint that said the president may have abused his power on the call by urging Ukraine to dig up dirt on his political rival Joe Biden.

Whistleblo­wers are protected by US law, and revea ling t heir identit y is a crime.

“Adam Schiff now doesn’t seem to want the Whistleblo­wer to testify. NO! Must testify to explain why he got my Ukraine conversati­on sooo wrong,

“We must determine the Whistleblo­wer’s identity to determine WHY this was done to the USA,” Trump tweeted.

The White House’s ca ll memo shows Trump sought a “favour” f rom Zelensk y. Democrats say it was a demand to investigat­e Biden – the president’s potential main 2020 election rival – and a Ukrainian firm that hired Biden’s son Hunter.

Hill meanwhile appeared before congressio­na l investigat­ors despite the White House declaratio­n last week t hat it would not cooperate with the probe.

Her law yer Lee Wolosk y said Hill had “received a congressio­na l subpoena” to testif y, suggesting top Democrats had feared the White House might seek t he 11th-hour block to her testimony, as t hey did wit h prev ious witnesses.

House Democrat Jamie Raskin said he believes Hill could shed light on what he described as “a very powerful shadow foreign policy being operated out of Ukraine by the president’s lawyer Rudy Giuliani” that bypassed normal channels to apply coercive pressure on Kiev.

“I think that she would have a comprehens­ive overview of that whole situation,” Raskin told MSNBC.

Raskin said testimony from various witnesses also appears to confirm a “deliberate, premeditat­ed strateg y by the president” to condition some $ 390 million in militar y assistance to Ukraine on t hat countr y investigat­ing t he Bidens.

Testifying on Thursday will be US Ambassador to the EU Gordon Sondland, who shortly before Trump’s Ukraine call participat­ed in several text messages with other US diplomats who expressed concern that Trump was seeking a quid pro quo for the military aid.

According to the Washington Post, Sondland intends to tell Congress that his text to a fellow diplomat denying such a trade-off was relayed directly to him by Trump.

 ?? MARK WILSON/GETTY IMAGES/AFP ?? Fiona Hill (centre), former senior director for European and Russian affairs on the National Security Council, walks out of the Capitol Building after a closed door hearing in Washington, DC on Tuesday.
MARK WILSON/GETTY IMAGES/AFP Fiona Hill (centre), former senior director for European and Russian affairs on the National Security Council, walks out of the Capitol Building after a closed door hearing in Washington, DC on Tuesday.

Newspapers in English

Newspapers from Cambodia