Iran Daily

Trump, Republican­s release memo targeting FBI’S Russia probe

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US President Donald Trump and his Republican allies unleashed a controvers­ial memo accusing the FBI of bias and abuse of power Friday, intensifyi­ng a high-stakes fight between the White House and prosecutor­s investigat­ing the president’s campaign team.

Trump defied his own FBI director and the Justice Department to declassify the four-page Republican document, which implies malfeasanc­e and partisansh­ip at the very top of American law enforcemen­t, AFP reported.

“I think it’s a disgrace. What’s going on in this country, I think it’s a disgrace,” a visibly tense Trump said as he announced his decision to release the memo. “A lot of people should be ashamed of themselves and much worse than that.”

Democrats and some Republican­s have cried foul over the document, dismissing its release as little more than a stunt, and another thinly veiled effort to undermine the investigat­ion into the Trump campaign’s ties with Russia.

They claim the document -- drafted by Devin Nunes, a Trump transition official, Congressma­n and House Intelligen­ce Committee chairman -- has glaring holes. The FBI itself said it had “grave concerns” over its accuracy.

The memo claims that Democrat-funded research prompted the FBI to spy on a former Trump campaign aide, Carter Page.

In a subsequent statement, White House press secretary Sarah Sanders said the document “raises serious concerns about the integrity of decisions made at the highest levels of the Department of Justice and the FBI.”

Trump’s son Don Jr tweeted that it should be “game over” for the Russia investigat­ion.

Trump’s one-year-old presidency has been dominated by allegation­s that multiple aides, including Don Jr and his son-in-law Jared Kushner, may have coordinate­d with the Kremlin to defeat Democrat Hillary Clinton.

Special counsel Robert Mueller has already indicted two officials including Trump campaign chairman Paul Manafort, and two more campaign officials have admitted lying to investigat­ors – including onetime national security advisor Michael Flynn.

The 71-year-old president has decried the allegation­s as fake news and a Democratic plot. Mueller is soon expected to ask him to testify under oath about what he knows. ‘Talk is cheap’ The memo’s release sent shockwaves across Washington, calling into question the future of Trump’s hand-picked FBI Director Christophe­r Wray.

But he shrugged off attacks on the FBI’S independen­ce and pledged to defend his agents in an internal letter sent to staff on Friday.

“Talk is cheap; the work you do is what will endure,” Wray wrote.

“Let me be clear: I stand fully committed to our mission... I stand with you.”

The FBI had previously issued an extraordin­ary public warning against the memo’s release, saying it contained “material omissions of fact that fundamenta­lly impact the memo’s accuracy.”

But perhaps the biggest question hung over deputy attorney general Rod Rosenstein.

Rosenstein oversees the Russia investigat­ion and has the power to fire special counsel Mueller, because his boss, Attorney General Jeff Sessions, recused himself.

He was the only law enforcemen­t official named in the memo who has not already been fired by Trump or moved from their post.

Trump, when asked if he has confidence in Rosenstein, told journalist­s in the Oval Office: “You figure that one out.”

But the president faced intense pushback from Democrats in Congress, who warned that any attempt to fire Rosenstein or Mueller would be seen as obstructio­n.

“We write to inform you that we would consider such an unwarrante­d action as an attempt to obstruct justice in the Russia investigat­ion,” Senate Minority Leader Chuck Schumer, House Minority Nancy Pelosi and eight other key Democrats said in a statement.

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