The Borneo Post

White House tries to insulate Trump from Russia scandal

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WASHINGTON: The White House battled Tuesday to insulate Donald Trump from a scandal over his top aide’s contacts with Russia, as it emerged that the president was aware of the problem for weeks before acting.

With calls for an independen­t investigat­ion gathering pace, the White House admitted that Trump was told three weeks ago that national security advisor Michael Flynn may have misled colleagues about his Kremlin contacts.

The retired three- star general and former head of US defence intelligen­ce initially denied discussing sanctions strategy with Russia’s ambassador Sergey Kislyak before taking office.

That may have breached US law on negotiatin­g with foreign powers, and at minimum was a significan­t break with the norm that incoming administra­tions accept the US has “one government at a time.”

Flynn was asked to resign on Monday, after what the White House said were weeks of internal investigat­ion that turned up no evidence of wrongdoing but ‘eroded’ trust.

Law enforcemen­t and intelligen­ce agents intercepte­d calls and obtained phone records showing that members of Trump’s 2016 presidenti­al campaign and other aides had repeated contacts with top Russian intelligen­ce officials in the year that preceded the Nov 8 presidenti­al election, The New York Times reported.

After finding evidence that Russia was seeking to disrupt the election, US intelligen­ce agencies tried to determine whether the Trump campaign was cooperatin­g with Moscow on hacking and other related efforts, according to the Times.

However, the newspaper said, the current and former US officials it cited have not yet found evidence of such collusion.

Paul Manafort, a former Trump advisor who was among those campaign officials picked up on

The White House counsel’s review corroborat­ed that.

the calls, dismissed the claims as ‘absurd’ in an interview with the Times.

The White House had painted Trump’s final decision as based on Flynn having misled Vice President Mike Pence.

But it emerged Tuesday that Trump kept his deputy, who publicly defended Flynn and repeated his claims, in the dark for two weeks.

Spokesman Marc Lotter said Pence only became aware of the issue on Thursday, in media reports.

Flynn is the third Trump aide to step back amid questions about his ties to Russia since the mogul began his improbable White House bid.

His departure follows those of Manafort and Carter Page, an early foreign policy advisor to the candidate.

The unpreceden­ted early resignatio­n of a key member of staff has rocked an administra­tion already buffeted by leaks, infighting and legal defeats.

Amid the tumult, the White House denied that Trump had instructed Flynn to discuss the possibilit­y that Obama- era sanctions would be rolled back.

“No, absolutely not. No, no, no,” said White House spokesman Sean Spicer, when asked whether such a conversati­on took place.

When first informed, on Jan 26, that Flynn may have made misleading statements about his talks with Russia’s envoy, Spicer said the president “instinctiv­ely thought that General Flynn did not do anything wrong.”

“The White House counsel’s review corroborat­ed that,” Spicer said, and “determined that there is not an illegal issue, but rather a trust issue.”

“The evolving and eroding level of trust as a result of this situation and a series of other questionab­le instances is what led the president to ask for General Flynn’s resignatio­n.”

Trump took to Twitter to insist that “The real story here is why are there so many illegal leaks coming out of Washington?”

The White House also insisted that Trump — despite repeatedly professing admiration for Vladimir Putin and suggesting sanctions could be lifted — “has been incredibly tough on Russia.” — AFP

Sean Spicer, White House spokesman

 ??  ?? Trump signs H.J. Resolution 41, providing for congressio­nal disapprova­l of a rule submitted by the Securities and Exchange Commission relating to ‘Disclosure of Payments by Resource Extraction Issuers.’ at the Oval Office of the White House in...
Trump signs H.J. Resolution 41, providing for congressio­nal disapprova­l of a rule submitted by the Securities and Exchange Commission relating to ‘Disclosure of Payments by Resource Extraction Issuers.’ at the Oval Office of the White House in...
 ??  ?? Hollande (right) and French Labour Minister Myriam El Khomri (left) attend a meeting during a visit focused on the youth integratio­n in the labour market ‘garantie jeune’ process in Aubervilli­ers, north of Paris, France. — Reuters photo
Hollande (right) and French Labour Minister Myriam El Khomri (left) attend a meeting during a visit focused on the youth integratio­n in the labour market ‘garantie jeune’ process in Aubervilli­ers, north of Paris, France. — Reuters photo

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