Trump accuses Obama of tapping phones
Ex-president’s camp rejects surveillance claim: ‘simply false.’
The president cited no evidence to support his allegation in a series of four tweets sent Saturday morning.
President Donald Trump on Saturday angrily accused former President Barack Obama of orchestrating a “Nixon/Watergate” plot to tap the phones at his Trump Tower headquarters in the run-up to last fall’s election, providing no evidence to support his explosive claim and drawing a flat denial from Obama’s office.
Leveling the extraordinary allegation about his predecessor in a series of four early morning tweets, Trump said Obama had been “wire tapping” his New York offices and suggested he had meddled with the “very sacred election process.” Obama’s supposed actions, Trump said, amounted to McCarthyism.
“Bad (or sick) guy!” the 45th president tweeted about the 44th, insisting that the surveillance efforts resulted in “nothing found.”
Senior U.S. officials with knowledge of a wide-ranging federal investigation into Russian interference in the election, which was begun during last year’s campaign, said Saturday that there had been no wiretap of Trump.
Kevin Lewis, a spokesman for Obama, said in a statement: “A cardinal rule of the Obama Administration was that no White House official ever interfered with any independent investigation led by the Department of Justice. As part of that practice, neither President Obama nor any White House official ever ordered surveillance on any U.S. citizen. Any suggestion otherwise is simply false.”
Officials at the FBI and the Justice Department declined to comment.
According to senior administration officials, White House Counsel Donald McGahn and his office are inquiring about possible surveillance of then-candidate Trump while being sensitive to legal and national security considerations.
It could not be immediately determined whether there had been wiretaps of anyone in Trump’s orbit who might be a subject of the Russia probe. Sen. Christopher Coons, D-Del., told MSNBC on Friday that he believes “transcripts” exist that would show whether Russian officials colluded with Trump’s campaign.
Wiretaps in a foreign intelligence probe cannot legally be directed at a U.S. facility without probable cause — reviewed by a federal judge — to believe that the phone lines or internet addresses there were being used by agents of a foreign power or by someone spying for or acting on behalf of a foreign government.
Ben Rhodes, a national security adviser to Obama, tweeted at Trump: “No President can order a wiretap. Those restrictions were put in place to protect citizens from people like you.”
Neither Trump nor his aides offered any citation to back up his accusation about Obama. The president may have been prompted by a story on the conservative website Breitbart and commentary from talk radio host Mark Levin suggesting that the Obama administration used “police state” tactics to monitor the Trump team.
The Breitbart story circulated among Trump’s senior aides Friday and early Saturday, and Trump may have simply been reacting to it.
Trump’s tweets punctuated a general feeling shared by the president, his advisers and allies that Obama and the “Deep State” of critics within the intelligence community who they think are fueling stories on Trump and Russia have been conspiring to derail his presidency. At the heart of each of the president’s tweets is Trump’s belief that Obama himself — as opposed to members of his administration — had been personally overseeing surveillance of Trump Tower.
Separately, the president is furious that a slow churn of revelations about communications between Attorney General Jeff Sessions, ousted national security adviser Michael Flynn and other Trump associates and Russian officials has overshadowed the early weeks of his administration.
“He’s angry, and he thinks that the leaks — even forgetting the rhetoric on politics — are a significant problem that hurts the security of the country,” said Thomas Barrack Jr., a close friend who chaired Trump’s inauguration. “He feels if he can’t rely on his team, if he were negotiating with North Korea on something sensitive and death by a thousand leaks continued, he views that as really being disruptive to the security of America.”
Trump has directed his aides to investigate employees across the federal government, with a particular focus on holdovers from the Obama administration and career intelligence officers.
White House chief strategist Stephen Bannon has been in close touch with the president about what he has called the Deep State. Bannon’s remarks in a recent speech about the “deconstruction of the administrative state” were designed in part to raise alarm among activists on the right about entrenched bureaucrats in the intelligence and defense agencies, according to White House officials.
Trump was also incensed over Sessions’ decision to recuse himself from the Russia probe in the wake of reports that he had met twice with the Russian ambassador, which he did not disclose during his Senate confirmation hearing.
In the Oval Office on Friday morning, Trump fumed at his senior staff about the Sessions situation and told them that he disagreed with the attorney general’s move, according to senior White House officials who were not authorized to speak publicly.
Trump told aides that he thought the White House and Justice Department should have done more to counter the argument that Sessions needed to step away. He said he wanted to see his staff fight back against what he saw as a widespread effort to destabilize his presidency, the officials said.
Trump then departed for Palm Beach, Florida — in what one associate described as “a (expletive) bad mood” — to spend the weekend at his private Mar-a-Lago Club, where he fired off Saturday morning’s wiretapping tweets.
Trump amended his public schedule Saturday to add an early evening meeting with Sessions and Homeland Security Secretary John Kelly, as well as dinner with both men and other advisers, including Bannon.
If the Foreign Intelligence Surveillance Court approved a wiretapping order on one of Trump’s associates, that would mean the federal judge involved had decided there was probably cause that the person was colluding with a foreign government.
Most Republican leaders were quiet on the issue Saturday, but Sen. Lindsey Graham, R-S.C., vowed at a town hall meeting with constituents to “get to the bottom of this.” He said it would be “the biggest scandal since Watergate” if either Obama illegally spied on Trump or a judge approved a warrant to monitor Trump’s campaign for possible communications with Russia.