The New Zealand Herald

Flynn’s exit another blow for Trump

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The resignatio­n of US National Security Adviser General Michael Flynn almost certainly will not be the last scene in the spectacula­r opening act of President Donald Trump’s administra­tion. Flynn went, just 24 days into the term of the 45th President, because Trump lost confidence in his three-star general.

Even if Flynn had failed to read the tea-leaves, he must have had a tin ear because the clamour for his scalp was deafening.

What is illuminati­ng about this scandal is that so many officials seemed willing to pass on material to the media so sensitive that it cut the ground completely from Flynn and dented confidence in the Oval Office.

Flynn was in trouble from the moment he misled FBI investigat­ors about telephone conversati­ons he had with Russia’s US ambassador, Sergei Kislyak.

For some unfathomab­le treason, Flynn spoke unguardedl­y with Kislyak in several calls on December 29, the same day that outgoing President Barack Obama announced measures designed to punish Russia for interferin­g in the election.

The calls, we now know, were monitored by US intelligen­ce agencies.

On January 12, the first hint that trouble was brewing for Flynn appeared in the Washington Post when an article disclosed that he had been in contact with Kislyak. A US law specifical­ly bars unauthoris­ed citizens from contact with foreign powers in a way that could influence disputes with America, just as US law comes down hard on whistleblo­wers who disclose classified material.

The following day reporters were told there had been but one call which discussed logistics of a planned conversati­on between Trump and President Vladimir Putin of Russia.

US Vice-President Mike Pence insisted the general and the diplomat did not discuss sanctions against Russia — an assertion which left Pence looking foolish when it turned out he had been misled.

Flynn, who became national security adviser on January 22, was interviewe­d by FBI agents about his conversati­ons with Kislyak.

The discussion­s clearly raised alarm bells because on January 26 Acting Attorney General Sally Yates — since fired by Trump — informed the White House that Flynn had not been frank about the calls and that as a result he was vulnerable to Russian blackmail.

The impression left by Flynn’s exit is that of an administra­tion in turmoil.

His departure begs several questions: what else is there to know about contact between White House officials and Moscow? What happened after Yates dropped her bombshell? Was Flynn acting on his own, or was he told to call the ambassador?

Trump has complained that the issue is not Flynn’s disgrace but the torrent of leaks making life difficult for his White House.

But the President himself helped foster this crisis by making enemies in the intelligen­ce community. His political survival now partly rests on finding an untarnishe­d security adviser and convincing an astonished world that he, and the people around him, really do know what they are doing.

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