Daily Times (Primos, PA)

‘A campaign of slander’: Takeaways from impeachmen­t witness

- By Aamer Madhani

WASHINGTON >> A senior State Department official offered some of the most pointed testimony to date in the ongoing impeachmen­t inquiry, alleging that President Donald Trump’s personal attorney Rudy Giuliani led a “campaign of slander” against the U.S. ambassador to Ukraine, according to an interview transcript released by House investigat­ors Thursday.

George Kent, the deputy assistant secretary for European and Euroasian affairs, said he was largely sidelined on Ukraine policy by Trump’s inner circle as Giuliani spearheade­d a campaign to pressure Ukraine President Volodymyr Zelenskiy to investigat­e former Vice President Joe Biden and his son Hunter Biden’s dealings in the Eastern European nation.

Kent, a 27-year veteran of the foreign service, detailed his concerns to the House panel about how he felt Giuliani usurped the State Department on Ukraine policy and turned to a questionab­le former Ukraine politician to make the case for an investigat­ion of the Bidens.

Here are a few of the key takeaways from his testimony:

TRUMP WANTED CLEAR CALL FOR INVESTIGAT­IONS

Kent said that he was told by William Taylor, the top official in Ukraine, that he had been told that Trump “wanted nothing less than President Zelenskiy to go to (the) microphone and say investigat­ions, Biden, and Clinton.”

He said Taylor had been told that by White House aide Tim Morrison, who had talked to Gordon Sondland, Trump’s European Union ambassador. Sondland had a direct line to Trump.

Kent said that “Clinton” was a shorthand for investigat­ing the 2016 election.

CAMPAIGN OF LIES

By mid-March of 2019, Kent told investigat­ors Giuliani had become “almost unmissable” as he began a concerted push on Twitter and in media interviews to undermine the U.S. Ambassador to Ukraine Marie Yovanovitc­h.

In a May interview, Giuliani had said that the ambassador was recalled because she wasn’t sufficient­ly loyal to the president.

Kent told House investigat­ors that Giuliani “had been carrying on a campaign for several months full of lies and incorrect informatio­n about Ambassador Yovanovitc­h, so this was a continuati­on of his campaign of lies.”

“I believe that Mr. Giuliani, as a U.S. citizen, has First Amendment rights to say whatever he wants, but he’s a private citizen,” Kent said. “His assertions and allegation­s against former Ambassador Yovanovitc­h were without basis, untrue, period.”

At one point, Kent recalled that Sondland suggested that Yovanovitc­h do a video or tweet expressing support for the president’s foreign policy, “essentiall­y asking her to defend herself as opposed to having the State Department defend her.”

Yovanovitc­h told impeachmen­t investigat­ors that Trump had ordered her removal. She is set to testify publicly next week.

CONCERNS ABOUT HUNTER BIDEN

Kent said he had voiced concerns to Biden’s office about Hunter Biden being on the board of Burisma Holdings, a Ukraine energy firm, after learning of his role in February 2015. The vice president’s son was paid $50,000 per month to serve on the board.

“The message that I recall hearing back (then) was that the Vice President’s son Beau was dying of cancer and that there was no further bandwidth to deal with family related issues at that time,” Kent said.

He said there were other priorities for the embassy, such as Russia’s invasion of Ukraine and the burgeoning numbers of U.S. personnel, that took priority. Asked whether there had been any discussion of getting Hunter Biden off the board, or removing Ukraine from the vice president’s portfolio, Kent said there wasn’t.

Trump has claimed without evidence that Biden as vice president pushed Ukraine’s president at the time, Petro Poroshenko, to fire the nation’s chief prosecutor Viktor Shokin, because he was investigat­ing Burisma. Biden and other other European allies pressed for Shokin’s firing because he was not doing enough to battle endemic corruption in Ukraine.

Kent testified that there was “a broad-based consensus” at the time that Shokin was wasting U. S. taxpayer dollars and preventing reform.

GIULIANI’S PUSH FOR A SHOKIN VISA

Kent said that in January, Giuliani had pressed the State Department to help Shokin obtain a visa, so he could travel to the U.S. “to share informatio­n suggesting that there was corruption at the U.S. embassy.”

“Knowing Mr. Shokin, I had full faith that it was bunch of hooey, and he was looking to basically engage in a con game out of revenge because he’d lost his job,” Kent testified.

When the State Department was unwilling to help, Giuliani reached out the White House. Trump’s Deputy Chief of Staff Rob Blair called to inquire about the visa situation.

 ?? ANDREW HARNIK — AP FILE ?? In this file photo, Deputy Assistant Secretary of State George Kent arrives on Capitol Hill in Washington. House impeachmen­t investigat­ors released a transcript from Kent, a career official at the State Department on Nov. 7. He testified that he was told to “lay low” on Ukraine policy as the Trump administra­tion, and the president’s personal attorney Rudy Giuliani, were interactin­g with Ukraine outside of traditiona­l foreign policy channels.
ANDREW HARNIK — AP FILE In this file photo, Deputy Assistant Secretary of State George Kent arrives on Capitol Hill in Washington. House impeachmen­t investigat­ors released a transcript from Kent, a career official at the State Department on Nov. 7. He testified that he was told to “lay low” on Ukraine policy as the Trump administra­tion, and the president’s personal attorney Rudy Giuliani, were interactin­g with Ukraine outside of traditiona­l foreign policy channels.

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