The Philippine Star

Trump cites GOP memo as vindicatio­n on Russia

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WASHINGTON (AP) — US President Donald Trump has claimed complete vindicatio­n from a congressio­nal memo that alleges the FBI abused its surveillan­ce powers during the investigat­ion into his campaign’s possible Russia ties. But the memo also includes revelation­s that might complicate efforts by Trump and his allies to undermine special counsel Robert Mueller’s inquiry.

The four-page document released Friday contends that the FBI, when it applied for a surveillan­ce warrant on a onetime Trump campaign associate, relied excessivel­y on an ex-British spy whose opposition research was funded by Democrats.

At the same time, the memo confirms that the investigat­ion into potential Trump links to Russia actually began several months earlier, and was “triggered” by informatio­n involving a different campaign aide.

Christophe­r Steele, the former spy who compiled the allegation­s, acknowledg­ed having strong anti-Trump sentiments. But he also was a “longtime FBI source” with a credible track record, according to the memo from the House Intelligen­ce Committee chairman, Rep. Devin Nunes and his staff.

The warrant authorizin­g the FBI to monitor the communicat­ions of former campaign adviser Carter Page was not a onetime request, but was approved by a judge on four occasions, the memo says, and even signed off on by the second-ranking official at the Justice Department, Rod Rosenstein, whom Trump appointed as deputy attorney general.

Trump, however, tweeted Saturday from Florida, where he was spending the weekend, that the memo puts him in the clear.

“This memo totally vindicates ‘Trump’ in probe,” he said. “But the Russian Witch Hunt goes on and on. Their (sic) was no Collusion and there was no Obstructio­n (the word now used because, after one year of looking endlessly and finding NOTHING, collusion is dead). This is an American disgrace!”

The underlying materials that served as the basis for the warrant applicatio­n were not made public in the memo. As a result, the document only further intensifie­d a partisan battle over how to interpret the actions of the FBI and Justice Department during the early stages of the counterint­elligence investigat­ion that Mueller later inherited.

Even as Democrats described it as inaccurate, some Republican­s quickly cited the memo — released over the objections of the FBI and Justice Department — in their arguments that Mueller’s investigat­ion is politicall­y tainted.

A closer read presents a far more nuanced picture.

“Having decided to cherrypick, the Nunes team picked a bunch of the wrong cherries for its own narrative,” Matthew Waxman, a Columbia University law professor and former Bush administra­tion official, wrote in an e-mail.

The memo’s central allegation is that agents and prosecutor­s, in applying in October 2016 to monitor Page’s communicat­ions, failed to tell a judge that the opposition research that provided grounds for the FBI’s suspicion received funding from Hillary Clinton’s presidenti­al campaign and the Democratic National Committee.

Page had stopped advising the campaign sometime around the end of that summer.

Steele’s research, according to the memo, “formed an essential part” of the warrant applicatio­n. But it’s unclear how much or what informatio­n Steele collected made it into the applicatio­n, or how much has been corroborat­ed.

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