Daily Freeman (Kingston, NY)

Another view Why was Trump desperate to protect Flynn?

- Ruth Marcus is syndicated by The Washington Post Writers Group. Ruth Marcus Columnist

And so the special counsel’s probe inches ever closer to the White House, and President Trump.

It is not possible for those on the outside to know just how close. But the move by former National Security Adviser Michael Flynn to plead guilty to lying to the FBI is an ominous sign for Trump and his circle. We knew this day was coming, and yet the news that Flynn is cooperatin­g with Special Counsel Robert S. Mueller III feels earth-shaking, for good reason. It may be the moment that everything changed.

Do not believe White House spin to the contrary. A few weeks ago, after the indictment of Paul Manafort, Trump’s former campaign chairman, the White House had an easier time of it. “Sorry, but this is years ago, before Paul Manafort was part of the Trump campaign,” the president tweeted.

The guilty plea by former foreign policy adviser George Papadopoul­os posed a bit more of a challenge, what with the fact that he admitted lying to the FBI about his dealings with Russia during the campaign, and had informed campaign officials about some of those contacts. But still Trump could argue, with some basis, that “few people knew the young, low-level volunteer named George.”

Not so, with Flynn. The White House tried gamely to make it look as if there was nothing new to see here, and that Flynn had been charged only with doing what had already precipitat­ed his firing by the Trump White House.

“Nothing about the guilty plea or the charge implicates anyone other than Mr. Flynn,” White House lawyer Ty Cobb said. That is untrue. The plea documents make clear not only that Flynn lied, but that he lied with the full knowledge of senior Trump transition officials.

As much as the White House wants us to think of Flynn as a rogue freelancer, court papers indicate he was not acting alone in his dealings with Kislyak. To use the most loaded of words, he was colluding.

According to the documents, even as Flynn and Kislyak had each other on speed dial the day sanctions against Russia were announced, Flynn was phoning back and forth with the Trump transition team at Mar-a-Lago. Flynn asked an unnamed “senior official” what to tell Kislyak; reported back to the senior official after the phone call; and, several days later, when Kislyak informed Flynn that Russia would not retaliate, informed “senior members of the Presidenti­al Transition Team” about the conversati­on.

Even more tantalizin­g, as the United Nations prepared to vote on a Security Council resolution on Israeli settlement­s, “a very senior member of the Presidenti­al Transition Team” — all the other references in the document are to senior officials — “directed Flynn to contact officials from foreign government­s, including Russia” to press them to oppose the resolution. News organizati­ons are reporting this very senior official is Trump’s son-in-law Jared Kushner. If so, could this have happened without Trump’s knowing that his transition team was lobbying to undermine the position of the incumbent White House? Why did Flynn feel compelled to lie about this episode to the FBI?

And that gets to the biggest unanswered question about Flynn: Why has Trump, a man for whom loyalty is a distinctly one-way street, been so desperate to protect him? “I hope you can see your way clear to letting this go, to letting Flynn go,” Trump urged James Comey last February, a few months before firing the FBI director. “He is a good guy.”

A good guy — or, from Trump’s perspectiv­e, a very dangerous one. The latter seems far more likely.

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