The Niagara Falls Review

The man at heart of scandals

Russian Ambassador met with U.S. attorney general, Trump adviser who was fired

- VIVIAN SALAMA and VLADIMIR ISACHENKOV The Washington Post.

THE ASSOCIATED PRESS

WASHINGTON — The Trump administra­tion’s back-to-back controvers­ies over its Russian ties have at least one thing in common: Ambassador Sergey Kislyak.

Moscow’s top diplomat is a Washington fixture with a sprawling network, and he has emerged as the central figure in the investigat­ions into U.S. President Donald Trump’s advisers’ connection­s with Russia.

In a matter of weeks, contact with Kislyak led to the firing of a top adviser to the president and, on Thursday, prompted calls for the Attorney General Jeff Sessions to resign.

Separately, a White House official confirmed that Trump’s sonin-law Jared Kushner and ousted national security adviser Michael Flynn met with Kislyak at Trump Tower in December for what the official called a brief courtesy meeting. Flynn was pushed out of the White House last month after officials said he misled Vice-President Mike Pence about whether he and the ambassador had discussed U.S. sanctions against Russia in a phone call.

At issue Thursday were two meetings between Sessions and Kislyak — one in July and another in September, at the height of concern over Russia’s involvemen­t in the hacking of Democratic officials’ e-mails accounts. Intelligen­ce officials have since concluded that Moscow ordered the hacks to tilt the election toward Trump. During his confirmati­on hearing, the Alabama Republican denied having contact with any Russian officials, neglecting to mention the meetings with Kislyak, which were first reported by

Although the White House dismissed the revelation as part of a political witch hunt, Sessions’ former colleagues took the omission seriously. At the urging of some in his own party, Sessions recused himself from the Department of Justice’s investigat­ion. Democrats called on him to step down.

Observers note Kislyak is a somewhat unlikely figure to cause controvers­y. Over the course of a long diplomatic career, he has led the life of a fairly typical global envoy, making himself a reliable presence on the circuit of receptions, teas and forums that make up the calendar of any ambassador.

Kislyak, who was appointed to his post in 2008, is regularly spotted walking around town, heading to and from meetings. Early in his tenure, he often opened the doors of the Russian Embassy, hosting dinners for foreign policy profession­als, Pentagon officials, journalist­s and Capitol Hill staffers.

Those who have attended the events describe him as a gracious and amiable diplomat, although perhaps not as polished — or as confrontat­ional — as his more famous boss, Foreign Minister Sergey Lavrov.

In 2015, when Kislyak invited a group of Washington-based journalist­s, including one from The Associated Press, to the Russian Embassy for tea, he used the meeting to push for warmer relations between the two nations, despite the conflict over Russia’s seizure of Crimea and the crisis in Ukraine.

Kislyak framed U.S.-Russian relations as salvageabl­e and said he hoped specifical­ly to combat what he considered cartoonish, anti-Russian depictions of his government in the American news media.

Sessions, at a news conference where he recused himself from the investigat­ion into the Trump campaign’s ties with Russia, said he discussed a number of things with Kislyak, including counterter­rorism. He said the meeting became confrontat­ional when the talk turned to Ukraine.

Kislyak, 66, has bounced between the U.S. and Russia for most of his long career.

His first foreign posting was to New York where he worked at the Soviet delegation at the UN in the early 1980s.

He spent the following years as the first secretary and then councillor at the Soviet Embassy in Washington before returning to Moscow in 1989, where he took a succession of senior jobs at the Foreign Ministry.

He did a stint as Russian ambassador to Belgium and simultaneo­usly served as Moscow’s envoy at NATO.

He then returned to Moscow to serve as a deputy foreign minister, overseeing relations with the U.S. and arms control issues before being sent to Washington.

Kislyak’s contacts have sparked questions about his role or involvemen­t in the hacking, questions that are difficult to answer.

The U.S. and Russia, along with many other countries, have made it a practice to separate their top diplomats from espionage activities, although it is not uncommon for an intelligen­ce agent to operate under the cover of a senior-level diplomat job.

Russian Foreign Ministry spokeswoma­n Maria Zakharova on Thursday ridiculed the claims of Kislyak’s involvemen­t in espionage as “total disinforma­tion” and part of efforts to sway public opinion.

“I’ll open a military secret for you: It’s the diplomats’ jobs to have contacts in the country they are posted to,” she said sarcastica­lly. “It’s their obligation to meet with officials and members of the political establishm­ent.”

 ?? THE ASSOCIATED PRESS FILES ?? Sergey Kislyak, Russia’s ambassador to the U.S., above, met with members of U.S. President Donald Trump’s team during the campaign, which led to national security adviser Michael Flynn’s ouster and Attoney General Jeff Sessions to having to recuse...
THE ASSOCIATED PRESS FILES Sergey Kislyak, Russia’s ambassador to the U.S., above, met with members of U.S. President Donald Trump’s team during the campaign, which led to national security adviser Michael Flynn’s ouster and Attoney General Jeff Sessions to having to recuse...

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