Los Angeles Times

Back home, Trump finds bigger crisis

President’s Europe trip prompts Germany to rethink alliance, and he returns to queries about his son-in-law.

- By Laura King

WASHINGTON — Whatever respite President Trump may have received from his nine-day overseas trip came to an abrupt end Sunday as administra­tion allies sought to beat back allegation­s about his son-inlaw, Jared Kushner, while the leader of Europe’s most powerful nation suggested the U.S. was no longer a reliable ally.

“The era in which we could rely completely on others is gone, at least partially,” Germany’s Chancellor Angela Merkel said during a campaign speech in Munich. “I have experience­d that over the last several days.

“It is now time that we really take our own fate into our own hands,” she added.

Trump, who had been on a Twitter fast during much of his trip, returned to his favorite social media platform Sunday morning, voicing frustratio­n over the widening investigat­ion into ties between people in his inner circle and Russia.

“It is my opinion that many of the leaks coming out of the White House are fabricated lies made up by the Fake-News media,” he wrote.

The latest turn in the leak-driven narrative came Friday with a Washington Post report that during the transition, Kushner had talked with Russian Ambassador Sergey Kislyak about using Russian equipment and diplomatic facilities to set up a communicat­ions channel between Trump emissaries and Moscow that U.S. intelligen­ce would not be able to monitor.

Despite Trump’s broadside about fake news, administra­tion officials on Sunday did not deny the report.

Instead, Homeland Security Secretary John F. Kelly — echoing a position taken the day before by national security advisor H.R. McMaster — said there was nothing inherently wrong with an incoming presidenti­al administra­tion establishi­ng “back channel” communicat­ions with a foreign power such as Russia.

Appearing on “Fox News Sunday,” Kelly said the principle of establishi­ng such contacts during a presidenti­al transition “doesn’t bother me,” describing it as a legitimate means of building relationsh­ips.

“I think that any channel of communicat­ion, back or otherwise, with a country like Russia is a good thing,” he said.

Kelly did not address the question of using Russian communicat­ions channels from a Russian diplomatic outpost to shield those discussion­s.

In a separate interview on NBC’s “Meet the Press,” Kelly defended the integrity of Kushner, whose involvemen­t in communicat­ions with Russia has brought the investigat­ion closer than ever to Trump personally.

Calling Kushner “a great guy, a decent guy,” the Homeland Security secre-

tary said the president’s son-in-law’s “No. 1 interest, really, is the nation.”

Democrats, not surprising­ly, had a less forgiving view.

A leader of the congressio­nal investigat­ion into Russian efforts to influence the 2016 election said Kushner should perhaps be denied access to the nation’s most closely held secrets.

Back-channel communicat­ions might be seen as harmless “in the abstract,” Rep. Adam B. Schiff (DBurbank) said on ABC’s “This Week,” but not in the context of serious concern about Russia’s meddling in the U.S. presidenti­al campaign.

Enough questions have been raised about Kushner’s contact with Russian officials — and whether he had been forthcomin­g about them — that his access to classified intelligen­ce should be reviewed, said Schiff, a former prosecutor.

“I think we need to get to the bottom of these allegation­s,” he said. “But I do think there ought to be a review of his security clearance to find out whether he was truthful, whether he was candid. If not, then there’s no way he can maintain that kind of a clearance.

“I think that was the case with all of us in the intelligen­ce community — very concerned about the nature of these approaches to the Russians.”

Sen. Cory Booker (DN.J.), for whose campaigns Kushner once held a fundraiser, said the president’s son-in-law “needs to answer” for his actions. Speaking on CNN’s “State of the Union,” Booker cited a “continuous drumbeat of inappropri­ate contacts with the Russians” by members of Trump’s team.

Former Director of National Intelligen­ce James R. Clapper also said any such contacts were viewed at the time as worrisome, especially what had already come to light about Russian election interferen­ce.

“I will tell you that my dashboard warning light was clearly on,” he said without addressing the specific allegation­s about Kushner’s encounters with Kremlinlin­ked figures.

The FBI, a special counsel and congressio­nal committees are investigat­ing Russian interferen­ce in the presidenti­al campaign and whether the Trump camp colluded in it. The U.S. intelligen­ce community says Russian cyberattac­ks were meant to boost Trump and harm his opponent, Hillary Clinton.

The sense of a White House under intensifie­d siege was heightened by the sobering comments from Merkel, Europe’s most powerful politician.

“Naturally, we’ll maintain our friendship with the United States … wherever possible,” Merkel said. “But we have to realize that we Europeans are going to have to fight on our own behalf.”

Although Trump touted “big results” in a tweet Sunday about his European trip, Merkel’s comments were a potentiall­y far-reaching negative assessment of his meetings with European Union officials and NATO heads of state in Brussels and the leaders of major industrial­ized nations at the Group of 7 summit in Sicily, Italy.

In Brussels, Trump had rattled allies by declining to explicitly endorse the North Atlantic Treaty Organizati­on’s bedrock common defense pledge.

At both meetings, he also disagreed with the Europeans over efforts to combat global warming.

Merkel did not mention Trump by name. But in remarks earlier in the weekend, before leaving Sicily, she told reporters that the discussion with him on climate change, in particular, had been “extremely difficult, indeed unsatisfyi­ng. It’s a situation where there are six countries lined up against one.”

Trump had delayed until after the G-7 meeting in making a decision about whether the U.S. should withdraw from the landmark Paris climate accord. He faces a choice of breaking with major U.S. allies and abandoning the agreement, or sticking with it and risking alienating some of his most ardent supporters.

Defense Secretary James N. Mattis, interviewe­d on CBS’ “Face the Nation,” said Trump remained “wide open” on the issue. The president said in a tweet that he would make a decision this week.

 ?? Brendan Smialowski AFP/Getty Images ?? PRESIDENT TRUMP, with First Lady Melania Trump, returned to Twitter to attack the media over the widening inquiry into ties between his aides and Russia.
Brendan Smialowski AFP/Getty Images PRESIDENT TRUMP, with First Lady Melania Trump, returned to Twitter to attack the media over the widening inquiry into ties between his aides and Russia.

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