The National - News

Putin offer intensifie­s spotlight on Trump

Russian president’s overture on diplomat notes does little to help US leader locked in row over classified material

- Rob Crilly Foreign Correspond­ent foreign.desk@thenationa­l.ae

NEW YORK // Russian president Vladimir Putin has offered to release notes of Donald Trump’s discussion­s with Russian diplomats last week, during which the US president is accused of revealing classified informatio­n.

The interventi­on by Mr Putin is the latest escalation in the controvers­y over intelligen­ce disclosure­s and comes as Washington reels over more claims that Mr Trump tried to halt an FBI investigat­ion into his former national security adviser.

The two scandals have forced the White House into damage control mode as congressio­nal Republican­s demand further investigat­ions.

Officials have played down the significan­ce of the informatio­n revealed by Mr Trump to the Russian diplomats – which was reportedly supplied to the United States by Israel on the condition that it was passed no further – as demands for a special prosecutor or impeachmen­t grow louder. Mr Trump met Russian foreign minister Sergey Lavrov, and the Russian ambassador to the US, Sergey Kislyak, at the White House on Wednesday last week. During a discussion about tackling ISIL, US media reported that the American president disclosed classified intelligen­ce that might compromise an Israeli agent inside a militant stronghold in Syria.

At a time when relations with Russia are under intense scrutiny, Mr Putin said he was prepared to help.

“If the US administra­tion finds it possible, we are ready to provide a recording of the conversati­on between Lavrov and Trump to the US congress and senate,” he said, although aides explained that Mr Putin meant to offer notes rather than a tape.

Israel has tried to limit the damage by talking up its close partnershi­p with Washington. Defence minister Avigdor Lieberman tweeted: “This relationsh­ip with the US is unpreceden­ted in its contributi­on to our strength. This is how it has been and how it will continue to be.”

The developmen­ts are a reminder of how links between Mr Trump’s team and Russian officials have cast a shadow over his administra­tion.

Michael Flynn was fired as security adviser in February after it emerged that he misled the vice-president about meetings with the Russian ambassador during the election campaign.

With an FBI investigat­ion gath- ering pace its director, James Comey, was sacked last week. On Tuesday, The New York Times obtained details of a memo written by Mr Comey in which he suggested that Mr Trump had asked him to end his investigat­ion into Mr Flynn.

“I hope you can see your way clear to letting this go, to letting Flynn go,” is how Mr Trump allegedly put it during a one-onone meeting. “He is a good guy. I hope you can let this go.” The White House has denied any improper conduct. An official pointed out that the acting FBI director last week testified that there had been no effort to impede the investigat­ion. But members of congress have demanded access to all of Mr Comey’s memos relating to dealings with the president as part of their investigat­ions.

Critics said the president was guilty of obstructio­n of justice. John McCain, a senior Republican senator, compared the crisis with the scandal that brought down Richard Nixon.

“We’ve seen this movie before. It’s reaching Watergate size and scale,” he said. “This is not good for the country.” Democrats in congress are demanding an independen­t commission to investigat­e Mr Trump’s ties to Russia and yesterday the first Republican in congress raised the idea of impeachmen­t.

When asked about the issue, representa­tive Justin Amash, of Michigan, said interferin­g in an FBI investigat­ion into Mr Flynn could be the basis of such a case “if the allegation­s are true”.

Jeanne Zaino, professor of political science at Iona College in New York, said it was too soon to talk about impeachmen­t or Mr Trump’s removal from office.

But she said the two scandals stemmed from the same problem – Mr Trump’s lack of political experience.

“It may work in a business context. Using language like, ‘can you give the guy a break?’ might work in business but it doesn’t work in the White House and it doesn’t work with the FBI director,” she said. Mr Trump is scheduled to leave tomorrow for his first foreign trip – beginning in Saudi Arabia – in what officials had hoped would be a chance to refocus his presidency. Although Mr Trump may welcome a break from the Washington maelstrom, that task looks even harder now.

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