Dayton Daily News

Unlikely source propelled Russian inquiry

Young foreign policy adviser reportedly leaked email info.

- Sharon Lafraniere, Mark Mazzetti and Matt Apuzzo

WASHINGTON — During a night of heavy drinking at an upscale London bar in May 2016, George Papadopoul­os, a young foreign policy adviser to the Trump campaign, made a startling revelation to Australia’s top diplomat in Britain: Russia had political dirt on Hillary Clinton.

About three weeks earlier, Papadopoul­os had been told that Moscow had thousands of emails that would embarrass Clinton, apparently stolen in an effort to try to damage her campaign.

Exactly how much Papadopoul­os said that night at the Kensington Wine Rooms with the Australian, Alexander Downer, is unclear. But two months later, when leaked Democratic emails began appearing online, Australian officials passed the informatio­n about Papadopoul­os to their U.S. counterpar­ts, according to four current and former U.S. and foreign officials with direct knowledge of the Australian­s’ role.

The hacking and the revelation that a member of the Trump campaign may have had inside informatio­n about it were driving factors that led the FBI to open an investigat­ion in July 2016 into Russia’s attempts to disrupt the election and whether any of President Donald Trump’s associates conspired.

If Papadopoul­os, who pleaded guilty to lying to the FBI and is now a cooperatin­g witness, was the improbable match that set off a blaze that has consumed the first year of the Trump administra­tion, his saga is also a tale of the Trump campaign in miniature. He was brash, boastful and underquali­fied, yet he exceeded expectatio­ns. And, like the campaign itself, he proved to be a tantalizin­g target for a Russian influence operation.

While some of Trump’s advisers have derided him as an insignific­ant campaign volunteer or a “coffee boy,” interviews and new documents show that he stayed influentia­l throughout the campaign. Two months before the election, for instance, he helped arrange a New York meeting between Trump and President Abdel-Fattah el-Sissi of Egypt.

The informatio­n that Papadopoul­os gave to the Australian­s answers one of the lingering mysteries of the past year: What so alarmed U.S. officials to provoke the FBI to open a counterint­elligence investigat­ion into the Trump campaign months before the presidenti­al election?

It was not, as Trump and other politician­s have alleged, a dossier compiled by a former British spy hired by a rival campaign. Instead, it was firsthand informatio­n from one of the United States’ closest intelligen­ce allies.

Interviews and previously undisclose­d documents show that Papadopoul­os played a critical role in this drama and reveal a Russian operation that was more aggressive and widespread than previously known. They add to an emerging portrait, gradually filled in over the past year in revelation­s by federal investigat­ors, journalist­s and lawmakers, of Russians with government contacts trying to establish secret channels at various levels of the Trump campaign.

The FBI investigat­ion, which was taken over seven months ago by special counsel Robert Mueller, has cast a shadow over Trump’s first year in office — even as he and his aides repeatedly played down the Russian efforts and falsely denied campaign contacts with Russians.

They have also insisted that Papadopoul­os was a low-level figure. But spies frequently target peripheral players as a way to gain insight and leverage.

FBI officials disagreed in 2016 about how aggressive­ly and publicly to pursue the Russia inquiry before the election. But there was little debate about what seemed to be afoot. John O. Brennan, who retired this year after four years as CIA director, told Congress in May that he had been concerned about multiple contacts between Russian officials and Trump advisers.

Russia, he said, had tried to “suborn” members of the Trump campaign.

‘The signal to meet’

Papadopoul­os, then an ambitious 28-year-old from Chicago, was working as an energy consultant in London when the Trump campaign, desperate to create a foreign policy team, named him as an adviser in early March 2016. His political experience was limited to two months on Ben Carson’s presidenti­al campaign before it collapsed.

Papadopoul­os had no experience on Russia issues. But during his job interview with Sam Clovis, a top early campaign aide, he saw an opening. He was told that improving relations with Russia was one of Trump’s top foreign policy goals, according to court papers, an account Clovis has denied.

Traveling in Italy that March, Papadopoul­os met Joseph Mifsud, a Maltese professor at a now-defunct London academy who had valuable contacts with the Russian Ministry of Foreign Affairs. Mifsud showed little interest in Papadopoul­os at first.

But when he found out he was a Trump campaign adviser, he latched onto him, according to court records and emails obtained by The New York Times. Their joint goal was to arrange a meeting between Trump and President Vladimir Putin of Russia in Moscow, or between their respective aides.

In response to questions, Papadopoul­os’ lawyers declined to provide a statement.

Before the end of the month, Mifsud had arranged a meeting at a London cafe between Papadopoul­os and Olga Polonskaya, a young woman from St. Petersburg whom he falsely described as Putin’s niece. Although Polonskaya told The Times in a text message that her English skills are poor, her emails to Papadopoul­os were largely fluent. “We are all very excited by the possibilit­y of a good relationsh­ip with Mr. Trump,” Polonskaya wrote in one message.

More important, Mifsud connected Papadopoul­os to Ivan Timofeev, a program director for the prestigiou­s Valdai Discussion Club, a gathering of academics that meets annually with Putin. The two men correspond­ed for months about how to connect the Russian government and the campaign. Records suggest that Timofeev, who has been described by Mueller’s team as an intermedia­ry for the Russian Foreign Ministry, discussed the matter with the ministry’s former leader, Igor Ivanov, who is widely viewed in the United States as one of Russia’s elder statesmen.

When Trump’s foreign policy team gathered for the first time at the end of March in Washington, Papadopoul­os said he had the contacts to set up a meeting between Trump and Putin. Trump listened intently but apparently deferred to Jeff Sessions, then a senator from Alabama and head of the campaign’s foreign policy team, according to participan­ts in the meeting.

Sessions, now attorney general, initially did not reveal that discussion to Congress, because, he has said, he did not recall it. More recently, he said he pushed back against Papadopoul­os’ proposal, at least partly because he did not want someone so unqualifie­d to represent the campaign on such a sensitive matter.

If the campaign wanted Papadopoul­os to stand down, previously undisclose­d emails obtained by The Times show that he either did not get the message or failed to heed it. He continued for months to try to arrange some kind of meeting with Russian representa­tives, keeping senior campaign advisers abreast of his efforts. Clovis ultimately encouraged him and another foreign policy adviser to travel to Moscow, but neither went because the campaign would not cover the cost.

Papadopoul­os was trusted enough to edit the outline of Trump’s first major foreign policy speech on April 27, an address in which the candidate said it was possible to improve relations with Russia. Papadopoul­os flagged the speech to his newfound Russia contacts, telling Timofeev that it should be taken as “the signal to meet.”

“That is a statesman speech,” Mifsud agreed. Polonskaya wrote that she was pleased that Trump’s “position toward Russia is much softer” than that of other candidates.

Stephen Miller, then a senior policy adviser to the campaign and now a top White House aide, was eager for Papadopoul­os to serve as a surrogate, someone who could publicize Trump’s foreign policy views without officially speaking for the campaign. But Papadopoul­os’ first public attempt to do so was a disaster.

In late April, at a London hotel, Mifsud told Papadopoul­os he had just learned from high-level Russian officials that the Russians had “dirt” on Clinton in the form of “thousands of emails,” according to court documents. Although Russian hackers had been mining data from the Democratic National Committee’s computers for months, that informatio­n was not yet public. Even the committee itself did not know. Whether Papadopoul­os shared that informatio­n with anyone else in the campaign is one of many unanswered questions. He was mostly in contact with the campaign over emails. The day after Mifsud’s revelation about the hacked emails, he told Miller in an email only that he had “interestin­g messages coming in from Moscow” about a possible trip. The emails obtained by The Times show no evidence that Papadopoul­os discussed the stolen messages with the campaign.

Not long after, however, he opened up to Downer, the Australian diplomat, about his contacts with the Russians. It is unclear whether Downer was fishing for that informatio­n that night in May 2016. The meeting at the bar came about because of a series of connection­s, beginning with an Israeli Embassy official who introduced Papadopoul­os to another Australian diplomat in London.

It is also not clear why the Australian government waited two months to pass it to the FBI. The Australian Embassy in Washington declined to provide details about the meeting or confirm that it occurred. “As a matter of principle and practice, the Australian government does not comment on matters relevant to active investigat­ions,” the statement said. The FBI declined to comment.

Secretive investigat­ion

Once the informatio­n Papadopoul­os had disclosed to the Australian diplomat reached the FBI, the bureau opened an investigat­ion that became one of its most closely guarded secrets. Senior agents did not discuss it at the daily morning briefing, a classified setting where officials normally speak freely about highly sensitive operations.Ultimately, the FBI and Justice Department decided to keep the investigat­ion quiet, a decision that Democrats in particular have criticized. And agents did not interview Papadopoul­os until late January.

 ?? J. SCOTT APPLEWHITE / ASSOCIATED PRESS ?? The FBI investigat­ion in Russian election meddling, which was taken over seven months ago by special counsel Robert Mueller, has cast a shadow over Trump’s first year in office.
J. SCOTT APPLEWHITE / ASSOCIATED PRESS The FBI investigat­ion in Russian election meddling, which was taken over seven months ago by special counsel Robert Mueller, has cast a shadow over Trump’s first year in office.

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