Arkansas Democrat-Gazette

Pompeo top aides subpoenaed as House probes watchdog firing

- MARY CLARE JALONICK Informatio­n for this article was contribute­d by Matthew Lee of The Associated Press.

WASHINGTON — House Democrats have subpoenaed four top aides to Secretary of State Mike Pompeo, saying the Trump administra­tion is stonewalli­ng their investigat­ion into the firing of the State Department’s top independen­t watchdog earlier this year.

Former State Department Inspector General Steve Linick appeared for a closed interview in the probe in June and told investigat­ors that top department officials tried to bully him and dissuade his office from conducting a review of a multibilli­on-dollar arms sale to Saudi Arabia before he was fired.

Linick also said he was looking into previously reported allegation­s that Secretary of State Mike Pompeo and his wife may have misused government staff to run personal errands and several other matters. Trump abruptly fired him May 15 with what Linick said was no warning or cited cause.

Democrats announced Monday that they had subpoenaed the officials because they were “refusing to negotiate in good faith” and talk to the committee.

“That stonewalli­ng has made today’s subpoenas necessary, and the committees will continue to pursue this investigat­ion to uncover the truth that the American people deserve,” said House Foreign Affairs Committee Chairman Eliot Engel, D-N.Y., House Oversight and Reform Committee Chairwoman Carolyn Maloney, D-N.Y., and the top Democrat on the Senate Foreign Relations Committee, Sen. Robert Menendez, D-N.J.

The subpoenas for closed deposition­s are for Under Secretary of State for Management Brian Bulatao, Acting State Department Legal Adviser Marik String, Deputy Assistant Secretary of State for Political-Military Affairs Michael Miller and Senior Adviser Toni Porter. The State Department had no immediate comment on the subpoenas.

Pompeo has rejected allegation­s that Linick was fired for investigat­ing alleged impropriet­y and denied he was aware of any such probe into his or his wife’s affairs. He has said Linick was removed for not doing his job.

Linick, who had been inspector general since 2013, said he was in a “state of shock” when he was fired. He told the committees that he had opened a review of last year’s $8 billion arms sale to Saudi Arabia at the request of lawmakers who claimed Pompeo had inappropri­ately circumvent­ed Congress to approve the deal. He said Bulatao and String then tried to stop him.

The Democrats said they had also interviewe­d another State Department official, Charles Faulkner, and that interview “raises additional questions” about the Saudi arms sale.

Pompeo, Bulatao and others have said Linick was dismissed in part because of the alleged leak of one of his office’s reports into accusation­s of political reprisals by Trump appointees against career State Department officials. Linick denied his office was responsibl­e for the leak and said an investigat­ion by the Defense Department inspector general cleared him and his office.

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