Lethbridge Herald

Flynn came with concerns

YATES: ALARM ABOUT RUSSIAN BLACKMAIL LED TO WARNING ON FLYNN

- Eric Tucker and Eileen Sullivan THE ASSOCIATED PRESS — WASHINGTON

Former acting Attorney General Sally Yates told Congress Monday she bluntly warned the Trump White House in January that new National Security Adviser Michael Flynn “essentiall­y could be blackmaile­d” by the Russians because he apparently had lied to his bosses about his contacts with Moscow’s ambassador in Washington.

The testimony from Yates, an Obama administra­tion holdover fired soon after for other reasons, marked her first public comments about the concerns she raised and filled in basic details about the chain of events that led to Flynn’s ouster in February.

Her testimony, coupled with the revelation hours earlier that President Barack Obama himself had warned Donald Trump against hiring Flynn shortly after the November election, made clear that alarms about Flynn had reached the highest levels of the U.S. government months before. Flynn had been an adviser to Trump and an outspoken supporter of his presidenti­al candidacy in the 2016 campaign.

Yates, appearing before a Senate panel investigat­ing Russian interferen­ce in the election, described discussion­s with Don McGahn, the Trump White House counsel, in which she warned that Flynn apparently had misled the administra­tion about his communicat­ions with Sergey Kislyak, the Russian ambassador.

White House officials, including Vice-President Mike Pence, had insisted that Flynn had not discussed U.S.-imposed sanctions with Kislyak during the presidenti­al transition period. But they asked Flynn to resign after news reports indicated he had lied about the nature of the calls.

“We felt like it was critical that we get this informatio­n to the White House, in part because the vicepresid­ent was unknowingl­y making false statements to the public and because we believed that Gen. Flynn was compromise­d with respect to the Russians,” Yates said.

“To state the obvious,” she added later, “you don’t want your national security adviser compromise­d with the Russians.”

She said she was briefing the Trump White House so that they could take “the action that they deemed appropriat­e” and that she believed the Russians already had the same informatio­n.

Yates’ questionin­g by a Senate panel investigat­ing Russian interferen­ce in the presidenti­al election was just one portion of a politicall­y charged day that began with combative tweets from Trump and continued with disclosure­s from Obama administra­tion officials about a private Oval Office conversati­on between Obama and his successor.

Republican senators in the hearing repeatedly pressed Yates on an unrelated matter — her refusal to defend the Trump administra­tion’s travel ban — and whether she was responsibl­e for leaking classified informatio­n. She said she was not.

Trump shouldered into the conversati­on in the morning, tweeting that it was the Obama administra­tion, not he, that had given Lt. Gen. Flynn “the highest security clearance” when he worked at the Pentagon. Trump made no mention of the fact that Flynn had been fired from his high position by the Obama administra­tion in 2014.

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