Arkansas Democrat-Gazette

GOP-run inquiry finds no collusion

House panel’s Democrats rebut

- COMPILED BY DEMOCRAT-GAZETTE STAFF FROM WIRE REPORTS

WASHINGTON — The Republican-led House Intelligen­ce Committee on Friday released a redacted version of its final report from a yearlong probe of Russia’s “multifacet­ed” influence operation.

The assessment generally cleared President Donald

Trump and his associates of wrongdoing while accusing the intelligen­ce community and the FBI of failures in how they assessed and responded to the Kremlin’s interferen­ce in the 2016 election.

The report accuses the intelligen­ce community of “significan­t intelligen­ce tradecraft failings,” suggesting that Russia’s main goal was to sow discord in the United States and not to help Trump win the election. It says investigat­ors found “no evidence that the Trump campaign colluded, coordi

or conspired with the Russian government,” even as it details contacts between campaign officials and Russians or Russian intermedia­ries.

But the committee’s Republican­s didn’t let the Trump campaign completely off the hook. They specifical­ly cited the Trump campaign for “poor judgment” in taking a June 2016 meeting in Trump Tower that was described in emails to Trump’s eldest son, Donald Trump Jr., as part of a Russian government effort to aid his father’s presidenti­al bid. The report also dubbed the campaign’s praise of WikiLeaks “objectiona­ble.”

“While the committee found no evidence that the Trump campaign colluded, coordinate­d, or conspired with the Russian government, the investigat­ion did find poor judgment and ill-considered actions by the Trump and [Hillary] Clinton campaigns,” the report said.

Though the report — and a rebuttal from Democrats — offers little in the way of new informatio­n, the dueling documents give each side of the aisle ammunition to support its long-held arguments about how and why Russia interfered in the 2016 election. They come at a time when the investigat­ion led by special counsel Robert Mueller has largely overtaken the probes in Congress. The Senate Intelligen­ce Committee is also pursuing its own investigat­ion.

Trump seized on the House report to call for an end to the probe by Mueller, who is seeking an interview with the president.

“Just Out: House Intelligen­ce Committee Report released. ‘No evidence’ that the Trump Campaign ‘colluded, coordinate­d or conspired with Russia,’ ” the president wrote on Twitter. “Clinton Campaign paid for Opposition Research obtained from Russia- Wow! A total Witch Hunt! MUST END NOW!”

Committee Democrats quickly claimed Friday that their Republican colleagues had rushed to end their work prematurel­y in a “a systematic effort to muddy the waters and to deflect attention away from the President.”

Though Republican­s said they believed that the public would now have access to the informatio­n that led them to conclude there was no evidence of Trump-Kremlin coordinati­on, they also said they were prevented from revealing everything they wanted to because of intelligen­ce community redactions.

Rep. Mike Conaway, R-Texas, called on intelligen­ce officials to clear the committee to release more informatio­n from the report that was deemed classified. The 253-page document is packed with details and assessment­s, but is also spackled with redacted names and blacked-out passages. For instance, several pages are redacted in the section on Russian cyberattac­ks. One page is blacked out entirely except for a line reading, “Attributio­n is a Bear.”

“When we started this investigat­ion, we set out to give the American people

the answers to the questions they’ve been asking and we promised to be as transparen­t as possible in our final report,”Conaway said in a statement. “I don’t believe the informatio­n we’re releasing today meets that standard, which is why my team and

I will continue to challenge the [intelligen­ce community]’s many unnecessar­y redactions with the hopes of releasing more of the report in the coming months.”

Trump’s opponents, meanwhile, warned he should not conclude that he and his campaign are out of the woods until Mueller finishes his work.

“A highly partisan, incomplete, and deeply flawed report by a broken House Committee means nothing,” former CIA director John Brennan wrote on Twitter. “The Special Counsel’s work is being carried out by profession­al investigat­ors-not political staffers. SC’s findings will be comprehens­ive & authoritat­ive. Stay tuned, Mr. Trump….”

The Democrats released nearly 100 pages of their own findings, asserting that Russian intelligen­ce “used intermedia­ries and cutouts to probe, establish contact, and possibly glean valuable informatio­n from a diverse set of actors associated with President Trump and his campaign,” though more work needed to be done to determine whether and to what extent Trump staff members were aware of or helped that effort.

They often cited the same facts as their Republican colleagues — though they drew opposite conclusion­s.

“One year into the Russia investigat­ion, the Minority has obtained a body of classified and unclassifi­ed evidence pointing to an unpreceden­ted effort by the Russian government — consistent with Russian intelligen­ce tradecraft — to gain entree to and influence with individual­s associated with the Trump campaign, including the candidate himself,” the Democrats wrote.

The Republican report makes an extensive case that allegation­s of collusion between the Trump campaign and the Kremlin are unfounded. It devotes an entire chapter to the campaign’s alleged links with Russia, and attempts to knock down many of the most damaging claims against the campaign.

For instance, the report says the meeting that Donald Trump Jr. organized with a Russian lawyer and other key campaign advisers in June 2016 showed that he was “open to discussing derogatory informatio­n” about Democrat Hillary Clinton, including material potentiall­y provided by the Russian government.

But the report concludes that there is no evidence any such material was provided and that a music promoter testified that he made up the claim about having damaging Clinton informatio­n to get the meeting.

Trump has always said that at the time, he was not aware of the June 2016 meeting. In their report, the Democrats reveal that Aras Agalarov, the Moscow developer who helped organize the meeting, sent Trump an “expensive painting” as a birthday gift on June 10, the day after the meeting. Trump’s birthday is June 14.

The Republican report faults intelligen­ce officials during former President Barack Obama’s administra­tion for not telling the Trump campaign that some of its members were “potential counterint­elligence concerns.” It specifical­ly cites former Trump national security adviser Michael Flynn, former Trump campaign aides George Papadopoul­os and Carter Page, and former Trump campaign chairman Paul Manafort.

The report adds that the Russians found “willing interlocut­ors” in Page and Papadopoul­os. But the report asserts that the two were “peripheral figures” and neither was “in a position to influence Trump or his campaign.”

The report also says there is no evidence that Trump confidant Roger Stone or others who publicly suggested advance knowledge of WikiLeaks’ release of hacked emails before the election actually had such knowledge.

However, the Republican­s released a previously undisclose­d email sent by Flynn on July 15, 2016, in which he wrote, “There are a number of things happening (and will happen) this election via cyber operations (by both hacktivist­s, nation states and the DNC).”

The email came after news reports that the Democratic National Committee had been hacked but before WikiLeaks released those emails publicly, on July 22. Committee Republican­s concluded that the email did “not necessaril­y indicate non-public knowledge.” They acknowledg­ed that Trump associates “went beyond mere praise and establishe­d communicat­ion with WikiLeaks” during the campaign.

The report says there is no evidence that Trump’s pre-campaign business dealings paved the way for election help from Russia, even though Trump’s financial dealings appear to be under investigat­ion by the special counsel. It also asserts that apparent efforts by the campaign and Russia to set up a “back channel” after the election were evidence that there was not earlier collusion.

The report disparages the infamous “dossier” compiled by a former British spy as full of “second and third-hand” informatio­n and claims the file was used to justify putting Trump campaign associates under surveillan­ce — an assertion vehemently disputed by the FBI. And it suggests that intelligen­ce officials deliberate­ly leaked damaging informatio­n about Trump to the media before and after the election. It also accuses then-Director of National Intelligen­ce James Clapper Jr. of providing inconsiste­nt testinated, mony to the committee about his contacts with the media.

Much of the report’s section on intelligen­ce leaks is redacted, so it is unclear exactly how Republican­s reached those conclusion­s, but the committee does single out reports by The Washington Post, The New York Times, NBC and CNN as among those that raised concerns.

“Continued leaks of classified informatio­n have damaged national security and potentiall­y endangered lives,” the report says, followed by several redacted paragraphs.

The Republican report also urges Congress to consider rescinding the Logan Act, the law that prohibits American citizens from undercutti­ng the U.S. government by engaging in unauthoriz­ed negotiatio­ns with foreign leaders. It is the law that Flynn was suspected of possibly violating in his interactio­ns with the Russian ambassador before Trump took office. Flynn has pleaded guilty to lying to the FBI about his contacts with the ambassador, though the report asserts that agents “did not detect any deception during Flynn’s interview.”

The Democrats’ rebuttal, meanwhile, excoriates “a majority” of the GOP report’s conclusion­s as “misleading and unsupporte­d by the facts and the investigat­ive record.”

The GOP’s findings, Democrats charge, “have been crafted to advance a political narrative that exonerates the President, downplays Russia’s preference and support for then-candidate Trump, explains away repeated contacts by Trump associates with Russia-aligned actors, and seeks to shift suspicion towards President Trump’s political opponents and the prior administra­tion.”

Rep. Adam Schiff, Calif., the top Democrat on the House Intelligen­ce Committee, said in a statement that the GOP document demonstrat­es “the Majority’s fundamenta­lly flawed approach to the investigat­ion and the superficia­l and political nature of its conclusion­s.” He said Democrats are still receiving documents from people who said they were “waiting to be asked” for the materials, and said he hoped that what they could not get, Mueller would ultimately subpoena.

Committee Democrats said they intended to continue their own work, exploring, among other things, financial dealings and efforts by Trump to interfere with the special counsel investigat­ion.

“Congress has an obligation to find out the truth and inform the American people,” the Democrats said in their report. “To the best of our ability, we will continue to do so, until such time as the full Congress once again lives up to its oversight responsibi­lities.”

Informatio­n for this article was contribute­d by Matt Zapotosky, Karoun Demirjian and Greg Miller of The Washington Post and by Tom LoBianco, Chad Day and Mary Clare Jalonick of The Associated Press.

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