The Daily Telegraph

EX-MI6 boss says Russia file ‘has credibilit­y’

- By Rozina Sabur in Washington

A DOSSIER of embarrassi­ng allegation­s about Donald Trump produced by a one-time British spy “probably” has “some credibilit­y”, the former head of MI6 has said.

EX-MI6 agent Christophe­r Steele compiled the dossier, in which he claimed Russia held compromisi­ng informatio­n on the US president which left him vulnerable to blackmail.

Mr Trump denounced the document as “fake news”, and its veracity has widely been questioned. But Sir Richard Dearlove, who ran MI6 from 1999 until 2004, told the BBC’S Newsnight: “I think that there is probably some credibilit­y to the content. I wouldn’t put it any more forcefully than that.”

Among the more lurid allegation­s was a claim that the Russians held evidence that, during a visit to Moscow, Mr Trump hired prostitute­s to urinate on a hotel bed which he believed Barack and Michelle Obama had previously slept in.

The file also claimed that the Trump campaign team had multiple contacts with Russian officials during the presidenti­al election race.

The President has repeatedly denied any collusion with Russia. His former national security adviser, Michael Flynn, has since pleaded guilty to lying to investigat­ors during an FBI probe into potential links with Moscow. The investigat­ion was criticised by Republican figures, including Mr Trump, who described it as a “witch hunt”.

Yesterday, leaked text messages revealed that FBI staff working on the agency’s investigat­ion called the president a “loathsome human” and an “idiot” during the election race.

Peter Strzok was removed from the investigat­ion after messages between himself and Lisa Page, an FBI lawyer, were discovered. In one exchange in March 2016, Ms Page refers to Mr Trump as a “loathsome human” with Mr Strzok responding, “Yet he may win”, later saying: “America will get what the voting public deserves.”

In another exchange, in October 2016, Mr Strzok writes to Ms Page: “I am riled up. Trump is an [expletive] idiot, is unable to provide a coherent answer .... What the f*** happened to our country?”

Newspapers in English

Newspapers from United Kingdom