The Asian Age

Don blasts ‘coward’ Comey

Prez dubs leaking memos of his meetings with ex-FBI boss ‘cowardice’

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Washington, June 11: United States President Donald Trump on Sunday accused James Comey of cowardice by leaking accounts of his meetings with the President days after the ex-FBI director testified that Mr Trump sought to derail the Russian probe.

“I believe the James Comey leaks will be far more prevalent than anyone ever thought possible,” Mr Trump wrote in an early morning tweet. “Totally illegal? Very ‘cowardly!’”

Sacked FBI chief Mr Comey delivered his bombshell allegation­s at a Senate hearing on Thursday, saying in his sworn testimony that he had asked a “friend” identified as a Columbia University law professor to release a memo of his conversati­ons with the President to the press.

Mr Comey said he had hoped releasing the informatio­n via the media would prompt the appointmen­t of a special counsel to handle the Russia probe, a ploy that ultimately proved successful.

He branded the President a liar and said Mr Trump urged him to abandon the investigat­ion into the former national security adviser Michael Flynn, an allegation Mr Trump has denied.

On Friday, Mr Trump’s former campaign manager Corey Lewandowsk­i criticised Mr Comey as not “man enough” for having leaked the memo via his friend rather than doing it himself.

“He gave his notes to a Columbia law professor because he wasn’t man enough to give the notes directly to the media when he wanted them out to the media,” Lewandowsk­i told NBC’s morning show.

Though Mr Trump has lambasted Mr Comey as a “leaker,” he also claimed “total and complete vindicatio­n” following the ex-FBI chief ’s testimony, focusing on Mr Comey’s confirmati­on that Mr Trump was not personally being probed.

A day before Mr Comey’s testimony, two top spy chiefs, NSA director Mike Rogers and Dan Coats, director of national intelligen­ce, both refused to answer when Intelligen­ce Committee members inquired whether Mr Trump had ever “asked” them to help ease the probe. Both men said that they never “felt pressured” to do so.

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