Arkansas Democrat-Gazette

DIDN’T ADDRESS reports of Russian bounties in phone calls with Putin, Trump says.

Bounties on U.S. troops not brought up in call, Trump says

- JOHN WAGNER THE WASHINGTON POST Informatio­n for this article was contribute­d by Ellen Nakashima of The Washington Post.

WASHINGTON — President Donald Trump said in an interview broadcast Wednesday that he has not spoken to Russian President Vladimir Putin about U.S. intelligen­ce reports of Russian bounties given to Taliban-linked militants to kill U.S. and coalition forces in Afghanista­n.

“I have never discussed it with him, no,” Trump said during a taping of “Axios on HBO.” He said he did not bring up the issue during his most recent conversati­on with Putin in the past week, which Trump said was “a phone call to discuss other things.”

The Trump administra­tion in recent weeks has questioned the veracity of the intelligen­ce. But some of Trump’s own senior intelligen­ce officials viewed the informatio­n as credible enough to warn the Pentagon and allies so they could ensure they had measures in place to protect their forces in Afghanista­n and to begin developing options for responding to such a Russian operation, national security adviser Robert O’Brien said earlier in the month.

During the interview, Trump continued to cast doubt on the intelligen­ce, saying, “Frankly, that’s an issue that many people said was fake news.”

Pressed by Axios’s Jonathan Swan on whether he believes the intelligen­ce, Trump did not answer directly.

“You know, it’s interestin­g,” Trump said. “Nobody brings up China. They always bring Russia, Russia, Russia.”

When reports of the possible bounties emerged in June, Democrats seized on Trump’s reluctance to take action as another sign of an unwillingn­ess to challenge Putin.

Trump’s “continued infatuatio­n with Putin is a direct threat to U.S. national security — as evidenced by the fact that he did not raise an issue that has direct implicatio­ns for the lives of US servicemem­bers with the government accused of orchestrat­ing these killings,” Sen. Robert Casey, D-Pa., said in a tweet Wednesday.

Earlier, Andrew Bates, a spokesman for Democrat Joe Biden’s presidenti­al campaign, said that not confrontin­g Putin on the intelligen­ce was part of “an indefensib­le pattern of Donald Trump weakening the United States in the world in a manner that no American president ever has before, and it’s absolutely despicable.”

Speaking to reporters Wednesday as he left the White House on a trip to Texas, Trump said he would be “very angry” if Russia had ordered bounties. ”So I don’t know why they’d be doing it, but if you tell me they’re doing it, I will certainly take that under considerat­ion,” he said. “I would respond appropriat­ely.” Trump insisted that “nobody’s been tougher on Russia” than him.

During the Axios interview, Trump stressed that he was not orally briefed on the intelligen­ce about possible Russian bounties.

“It never reached my desk,” Trump said. “You know why? … Intelligen­ce didn’t think it was real. … If it reached my desk, I would have done something about it.”

Trump did not respond directly to a question about news reports that the intelligen­ce was included in a written briefing. In response to a question from Swan, Trump said he reads his written briefings.

“They like to say I don’t read. I read a lot,” Trump said.

He said that “a lot of people,” including some foreign policy officials from the administra­tion of former President George W. Bush, were convinced that the intelligen­ce was not real.

Trump also pressed his belief that there are opportunit­ies to improve U.S.-Russian relations.

“If we can do something with Russia, in terms of nuclear proliferat­ion, which is a very big problem — bigger problem than global warming, a much bigger problem than global warming in terms of the real world, that would be a great thing,” Trump said.

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