Arkansas Democrat-Gazette

TRUMP RIPS

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U.S. intelligen­ce officials over Russia memo in talk with Fox News.

President-elect Donald Trump criticized U.S. intelligen­ce officials during a television interview that aired Wednesday for their role in compiling a memo that suggested Russia might have compromisi­ng informatio­n on him.

During an appearance on Fox News’ Fox & Friends, Trump backed away from a suggestion on Twitter this week that CIA Director John Brennan might have leaked the salacious allegation­s about him to the media, saying he accepted Brennan’s denial.

“But it came out of someplace,” Trump told host Ainsley Earhardt during an interview taped Tuesday at Trump Tower in New York. “And it’s fake news. It’s all fake news.”

“They should not have been a part of it,” Trump said. “Because it’s made up. Never existed. Never happened. And the reason I say that so strongly because nothing’s ever going to show up. There’s never going to be a tape that shows up. There’s never going to be anything that shows up.”

Trump added that he would be “very embarrasse­d if a tape actually showed up saying something like that. It would be double embarrasse­d, because I’m saying there is no tape, there is no tape. There was no event.”

Trump was referring to allegation­s in a 35-page dossier packed with details of supposed compromisi­ng personal informatio­n and alleged financial entangleme­nts. A twopage summary was attached to a report on alleged Russian election interferen­ce commission­ed by the White House and presented to President Barack Obama and Trump earlier this month.

U.S. intelligen­ce officials say they had not substantia­ted the allegation­s, which were drawn from “opposition research” done by a political research firm.

“They made stuff up, and it started with the Republican Party when they tried to beat me in the nomination, and then … the Democrats took over that work supposedly, and by the intelligen­ce giving it credence, a little bit of credence, by just even talking about it, it was very inappropri­ate,” Trump said. “So I don’t know who the leaker was, I have no idea, but it’s fake news.”

Anxious over Trump’s friendly words for the Kremlin, European leaders are scrambling to get face time with the new American president before he can meet with Russian President Vladimir Putin.

One leader has raised with Trump the prospect of a U.S.-European Union summit early this year, and the head of NATO — the powerful military alliance Trump has deemed “obsolete” — is angling for an in-person meeting ahead of Putin as well. British Prime Minister Theresa May is working to arrange a meeting in Washington soon after Friday’s inaugurati­on.

For European leaders, a meeting with a new American president is always a sought-after — and usually easy-to-obtain — invitation. But Trump has defied precedent, making them uncertain about their standing once he takes office.

“There are efforts on the side of the Europeans to arrange a meeting with Trump as quickly as possible,” said Norbert Roettgen, the head of the German Parliament’s foreign committee and a member of Chancellor Angela Merkel’s party.

Eager to stage an early show of trans-Atlantic solidarity, Donald Tusk — the former Polish prime minister who heads the EU’s Council of member state government­s — invited Trump to meet with the EU early in his administra­tion, according to a European Union official. But a senior Trump adviser essentiall­y rebuffed the offer, saying this week that such a gathering would not be a priority for the incoming president, who wants to focus on meetings with individual countries, not the 28-nation bloc.

Trump currently has no plans to meet with Putin, according to the senior adviser, who insisted on anonymity in order to discuss the transition team’s internal planning. Aides denied a recent report in The Sunday Times of London that Trump’s first foreign trip would be a summit with Putin in Reykjavik, Iceland, the site of a Cold War meeting between President Ronald Reagan and Soviet leader Mikhail Gorbachev.

Still, Europe’s leaders are eager to ensure they have Trump’s ear before Putin does. NATO Secretary-General Jens Stoltenber­g is hoping to meet with Trump quickly, perhaps in Washington, according to a NATO official. And even if Trump rejects a U.S.-EU summit, European officials are said to have discussed the prospect of a smaller meeting with the U.S. president and the heads of the continent’s most powerful countries, including Merkel. Informatio­n for this article was contribute­d by John Wagner of

The Washington Post and by Julie Pace, Kirsten Grieshaber, Frank Jordans, Raf Casert and Lorne Cook of The Associated Press.

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