Gulf Times

Bolton ‘being probed after explosive book on Trump’

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Former White House national security adviser John Bolton is under investigat­ion by the justice department after publishing an explosive book that angered President Donald Trump, the New York Times reported yesterday.

The Times said the department had convened a grand jury to examine whether Bolton illegally published classified informatio­n in his book released in June.

It said publisher Simon & Schuster had been subpoenaed for communicat­ions relating to the book, The Room Where it Happened, which depicted Bolton’s former boss as reckless and corrupt, and supported the charges on which Trump was impeached in December.

After the White House failed to block the book’s publicatio­n, Trump demanded Bolton, a hawkish veteran diplomat, be investigat­ed.

“Bolton broke the law and has been called out and rebuked for so doing, with a really big price to pay,” Trump tweeted on June 20.

“Washed up Creepster John Bolton is a lowlife who should be in jail, money seized, for disseminat­ing, for profit, highly classified informatio­n,” he wrote three days later.

The justice department and Simon & Schuster declined to comment. Bolton’s attorney Charles Cooper said they were aware of the subpoena reports.

“Ambassador Bolton emphatical­ly rejects any claim that he acted improperly, let alone criminally, in connection with the publicatio­n of his book,” Cooper said in a statement.

NPR public radio also reported the investigat­ion, adding that Bolton’s literary agent had also been subpoenaed.

A case against Bolton would focus on his claim that his manuscript had passed through a prepublica­tion national security review and claims by critics that it did not complete that review.

Cooper said before publicatio­n that it had undergone a line-byline review and was cleared by a senior White House national security official.

The judge that rejected the White House push to block the book — partly on grounds that copies were already widely distribute­d — warned that Bolton had “gambled with the national security” of the country and exposed himself to civil and criminal liability.

Around the same time Paul Nakasone, the director of the National Security Agency, said he had “identified classified informatio­n” in the manuscript in a pre-publicatio­n review.

“Compromise of this informatio­n could result in the permanent loss of a valuable SIGINT (signals intelligen­ce) source and cause irreparabl­e damage” to US intelligen­ce, Nakasone said, without specifying which informatio­n.

Director of National Intelligen­ce, John Ratcliffe, also suggested in June that the book contained secrets.

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