Houston Chronicle Sunday

Impeachmen­t inquiry witness rips White House

- By Eric Schmitt

An Army officer who was a key witness during the impeachmen­t inquiry into President Donald Trump last year and later retired after what he called a campaign of bullying and intimidati­on by the president and his allies, criticized the administra­tion Saturday and said he would use his new civilian status to champion national security issues ahead of the elections in November.

Lt. Col. Alexander Vindman, a decorated Iraq War veteran who served on the staff of the White House’s National Security Council, accused the administra­tion in an op-ed in the Washington Post of using Soviet-style tactics to punish dissenters. “At no point in my career or life have I felt our nation’s values under greater threat and in more peril than at this moment,” he added.

In his role as a Ukraine expert on the National Security Council staff, Vindman was on the July 25, 2019, phone call Trump had with Ukraine’s president that became a central element of the impeachmen­t inquiry. Vindman testified in the House impeachmen­t hearings that it was “improper for the president” to coerce a foreign country to investigat­e a political opponent.

“Our citizens are being subjected to the same kinds of attacks tyrants launch against their critics and political opponents,” Vindman, whose retirement from the Army after more than 21 years of service took effect Saturday, said in his op-ed. “Those who choose loyalty to American values and allegiance to the Constituti­on over devotion to a mendacious president and his enablers are punished.”

Vindman was among scores of officers picked to be promoted to full colonel this year. Typically, such promotions are backed by Army and Pentagon officials before moving to the White House for final approval, and then to the Senate for a confirmati­on vote.

But the White House made clear to the Pentagon’s

office of personnel and readiness, which handles such matters, that Trump did not want to see Vindman promoted, officials said. Defense Secretary Mark Esper pushed back against the White House opposition and forwarded the promotion list, which included Vindman, to the White House. But Vindman told friends and family that he felt increasing­ly pessimisti­c that he had a meaningful future in the Army, and he chose to retire.

“The circumstan­ces of my departure might have been more public, yet they are little different from those of dozens of other lifelong public servants who have left this administra­tion with their integrity intact but their careers irreparabl­y harmed,” Vindman wrote Saturday.

Vindman said that despite his personal turmoil, he remained hopeful about the future of his family and the country. He said he has received messages of support from “tens of thousands of Americans.”

“Impeachmen­t exposed Trump’s corruption, but the confluence of a pandemic, a financial crisis and the stoking of societal divisions has roused the soul of the American people,” he said. “A groundswel­l is building that will issue a mandate to reject hate and bigotry and a return to the ideals that set the United States apart from the rest of the world.”

People familiar with Vindman’s plans said he was likely to focus on the U.S.’ socalled great power competitio­n with Russia and China but was still deciding on how and in what form to weigh in.

“I will demand accountabi­lity of our leadership and call for leaders of moral courage and public servants of integrity,” he said. “I will speak about the attacks on our national security. I will advocate for policies and strategies that will keep our nation safe and strong against internal and external threats.”

The National Security Council did not respond to a request for comment on Vindman’s remarks.

 ?? AFP via Getty Images file photo ?? Alexander Vindman is a decorated veteran who served on the staff of the National Security Council.
AFP via Getty Images file photo Alexander Vindman is a decorated veteran who served on the staff of the National Security Council.

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