Las Vegas Review-Journal

Lacking clarificat­ion, pull Kushner’s security clearance

- Nicholas Kristof

For all that we don’t know about President Donald Trump’s dealings with Russia, one thing should now be clear: Jared Kushner should not be working in the White House, and he should not have a security clearance.

True, no proof has been presented that Kushner broke the law or plotted with Russia to interfere in the U.S. election. But he’s under investigat­ion, and a series of revelation­s have bolstered suspicions — and credible doubts mean that he must be viewed as a security risk.

Here’s the bottom line: Kushner attended a meeting in June 2016 whose stated purpose was to advance a Kremlin initiative to interfere in the U.S. election; he failed to disclose the meeting on government forms (a felony if intentiona­l); he was apparently complicit in a cover-up in which the Trump team denied at least 20 times that there had been any contacts with Russians to influence the election; and he also sought to set up a secret communicat­ions channel with the Kremlin during the presidenti­al transition.

Until the situation is clarified, such a person simply should not work in the White House and have access to America’s most important secrets.

Similar issues arise with Ivanka Trump. The SF-86 form to get a national security clearance requires inclusion of a spouse’s foreign contacts, so the question arises: Did Ivanka Trump list the Russians whom Kushner spoke with? If they were intentiona­lly omitted, then that, too, is a felony.

Look, Jared Kushner and Ivanka Trump may well be innocent of wrongdoing. I suspect that the couple are a moderating influence on the administra­tion, and I believe that some of the derision toward Ivanka has a sexist taint that would arouse more outrage if a liberal were the target.

All that acknowledg­ed, it’s still untenable for someone to remain as a senior White House official with continued access to secrets while under federal investigat­ion for possible ties to the Kremlin.

The Washington Post reported in May that Kushner is a focus of a federal inquiry, and Mcclatchy has reported that investigat­ors are looking into whether the Trump campaign’s digital operation, which Kushner oversaw, colluded with Russians on Moscow’s efforts to spread fake news about Hillary Clinton. The cloud is so great that even some Republican­s are calling for Kushner to be ousted from the White House.

“It would be in the president’s best interest if he removed all of his children from the White House, not only Donald Trump (Jr.) but also Ivanka and Jared Kushner,” Rep. Bill Flores, R-texas, told a television interviewe­r.

Increasing­ly, the national security world fears that there is something substantiv­e to the suspicions about the president and Russia. Otherwise, nothing makes sense.

Why has Trump persistent­ly stood with Vladimir Putin rather than with allies like Germany or Britain? Why do so many Trump team members have ties to Russia? Why did Trump choose a campaign chairman, Paul Manafort, who had been as much as $17 million in debt to pro-russian interests and was vulnerable to Moscow pressure?

Why the unending pattern of secrecy and duplicity about Russia contacts?

Trump’s defensiven­ess on Russian ties is creepy. Why did he take the political risk of firing Jim Comey? Why is he so furious at Jeff Sessions for recusing himself? Why does he apparently contemplat­e the extreme step of firing Bob Mueller during his investigat­ion into the Russia ties?

If the Trump team is innocent and expects exoneratio­n, why would it work so hard on a secret effort aimed at discrediti­ng Mueller, as reported? Why would Trump be exploring pardons for aides, family members and himself?

One thing you learn as a journalist is that when an official makes increasing­ly vehement protestati­ons of innocence, you’re probably getting warm. So, listening to the protests from Trump, I’d say that Mueller is on to something.

What’s particular­ly debilitati­ng is the way the news and scandals keep dribbling out, making a mockery of White House denials and the president’s credibilit­y.

No one should find satisfacti­on in Trump’s difficulti­es, for this crisis diminishes not just his own influence but also American soft power around the world. This isn’t a soap opera but a calamity for our country, affecting how others see us.

At least one leader of a U.S. ally tells me that his government suspects that there was collusion with Moscow. I sympathize with our counterint­elligence officials, who chase low-level leakers and spies even as they undoubtedl­y worry that their commander-in-chief may be subject to Kremlin leverage or blackmail.

There’s no good way to manage a president who is a potential security risk (other than the standard protocol that he not meet Russians without another U.S. official present, and Trump escaped that constraint in Hamburg, Germany). But at least we can keep his son-inlaw, while under investigat­ion for possible felonies and collusion with Russia, from serving as a top White House official.

It’s time for Jared Kushner to find another job.

Nicholas Kristof is a columnist for The New York Times.

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