The Borneo Post

Trump denies pre-election contact with Russia

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WASHINGTON: President Donald Trump insisted Thursday that neither he nor his campaign team had contacts with Russian officials in the run-up to last year’s US election, contradict­ing an explosive report which he blasted as “fake news.”

Trump also defended Michael Flynn, the national security advisor whose resignatio­n he demanded and received this week, saying Flynn “wasn’t wrong” for holding pre-inaugurati­on phone calls with the Russian ambassador about US sanctions policy.

Instead, Trump accused members of US intelligen­ce agencies of breaking the law by leaking informatio­n about the calls.

The new president, in the midst of a turbulent week of back- andforth accusation­s about contacts with Russia and his battle with the intelligen­ce community, addressed the concerns during an extraordin­ary White House press conference.

Asked whether he or anyone on his staff had engaged in contacts with Russia prior to the election, Trump proclaimed: “No, nobody that I know of.”

“I have nothing to do with Russia,” Trump said. “The whole Russia thing is a ruse.”

It was a full- throated denunciati­on of a bombshell report by the New York Times which said intercepte­d calls and phone records show Trump aides were in repeated contact with Russian intelligen­ce officials well before the US elections.

“It’s all fake news,” Trump said, unleashing verbal assaults on the media.

Trump stressed that the Times story centered instead on inappropri­ate action by US intelligen­ce agencies, as he stepped up earlier Thursday attacks in which he vowed to catch ‘low-life

I have nothing to do with Russia.

leakers’ of potentiall­y classified informatio­n that led to the ouster of his national security advisor.

“Those are criminal leaks” by people angry about Democrat Hillary Clinton’s loss, he told reporters, as he revealed he has asked the Justice Department to investigat­e the disclosure­s.

“The people that gave out the informatio­n to the press should be ashamed of themselves.”

The Washington Post meanwhile reported that current and former US officials said Flynn denied to FBI agents that he had discussed US sanctions on Russia with Moscow’s ambassador.

Should it turn out that he discussed the sanctions, as Trump appears to believe he did, Flynn could be in legal jeopardy because lying to the FBI is a felony.

“What he did wasn’t wrong,” Trump stressed.

“I didn’t direct him” to discuss sanctions with Russia’s envoy, Trump added. “But I would have directed him because that’s his job” to talk with foreign contacts.

Late Thursday Flynn’s replacemen­t was still undetermin­ed after former navy admiral Robert Harward, who Trump had reportedly tapped for the job, declined it, US media said.

In his wide-ranging presser Trump defended his political agenda, and said that next week he will introduce an amended version of the much- criticised travel ban now caught up in court.

He also pledged that new trade deals were coming that would stop countries from “taking advantage of us,” and said he would ‘show great heart’ in dealing with undocument­ed immigrants who arrived as children and are protected from deportatio­n.

But the crux of his remarks centered on Russia connection­s.

“I would love to be able to get along with Russia,” he insisted. “It would be much easier for me to be tough on Russia, but then we’re not going to make a deal.”

The latest salvoes came amid reports that Trump plans to name New York billionair­e Stephen Feinberg — who has no national security experience — to lead a sweeping review of US intelligen­ce agencies, raising fears of a bid to curtail their independen­ce. — AFP

Donald Trump, US president

 ??  ?? Trump holds a news conference at the White House in Washington, US. — Reuters photo
Trump holds a news conference at the White House in Washington, US. — Reuters photo

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