Los Angeles Times

Salvos from Trump over Flynn

The president accuses Comey of ‘another ... lie’ regarding the investigat­ion of the fired security advisor.

- By Laura King

WASHINGTON — At a crucial juncture in special counsel Robert S. Mueller III’s wide-ranging Russia investigat­ion, President Trump embarked on a risky gambit on Sunday, going on record to directly dispute his former FBI chief’s sworn contention that the president had sought to derail an investigat­ion into fired national security advisor Michael Flynn.

The imbroglio — set off, not surprising­ly, by a presidenti­al tweet — comes on the heels of Flynn’s guilty plea to charges of having lied to the FBI in connection with conversati­ons with Russia’s then-ambassador to Washington during the presidenti­al transition.

Friday’s dramatic developmen­t was met with initial silence from Trump, then with a deluge of weekend tweets in which he muddied the waters over his reasons for firing Flynn, excoriated the Justice Department and the FBI, renewed his attacks on rival Hillary Clinton and seemingly questioned the impartiali­ty of Mueller’s inquiry. He also explicitly contested statements by James B. Comey, who was fired seven months ago, regarding events before his dismissal.

Shortly after 6 a.m. Sunday, the president tweeted, “I never asked Comey to stop investigat­ing Flynn,” adding: “Just more Fake News covering another Comey lie!”

Sunday’s statement by Trump on Twitter was largely in line with his previous disparagem­ent of Comey, whose truthfulne­ss and even mental stability have been questioned by the president in the past.

Last month, the president told reporters traveling with him in Asia that Comey was a “liar” and a “leaker.” In May, the day after firing the FBI director — an action that set in motion Mueller’s appointmen­t as special counsel — the president told senior Russian officials in an Oval Office meeting that Comey was “crazy, a real nut job,” according to news reports based on transcript­s of the encounter.

But the specificit­y and timing of the president’s public denial of Comey’s contention that Trump asked him to back off on investigat­ing Flynn took on added significan­ce with news that the former na-

tional security advisor is now cooperatin­g with Mueller’s investigat­ion.

Within hours of Trump’s tweet, the ranking Democrat on the Senate Intelligen­ce Committee, Mark R. Warner of Virginia, flatly declared: “I believe FBI Director Comey.”

Speaking on CNN’s “State of the Union,” Warner said the fired FBI chief was “very credible in his testimony” when Comey went before the committee in June. The ex-FBI director has said he kept contempora­neous notes of an encounter in which Trump asked if he could ease off Flynn, characteri­zing the fired national security advisor as a “good guy.”

Warner said he expected that Flynn being charged with only a single count of lying suggested that the former advisor had “many more stories … to tell” about the Trump campaign and transition.

The response to major developmen­ts in the Mueller investigat­ion has often diverged along partisan lines. But Flynn’s guilty plea, which for the first time takes the inquiry inside the White House, drew cautionary language from some GOP lawmakers.

Sen. Tim Scott (R-S.C.), also interviewe­d on CNN, said he agreed with those who said Trump should not pardon Flynn.

“We have to have a way to restore confidence of the American people in their elected officials and the leaders of this country,” he told journalist Jake Tapper. “One way you do that is by holding those folks who are … lying to the FBI, you hold those folks accountabl­e.”

Against what would otherwise have been the triumphal backdrop of Trump’s first major legislativ­e victory, Senate approval of a major GOP tax overhaul plan, the current national security advisor, H.R. McMaster, was asked whether interactio­ns with key allies were being colored by uncertaint­y over the fate of Trump’s presidency due to the Mueller investigat­ion.

“I don’t think our allies need any reassuranc­e,” McMaster said on “Fox News Sunday,” adding: “What we’re doing is continuing to work with them on all the key challenges we face today,” including North Korea and the fight against Islamic State.

McMaster declined to characteri­ze any personal feelings about his predecesso­r, a military man like himself, having admitted to lying to the FBI.

“My thoughts are on what we have to do for the country,” he said. “I don’t really have a lot of spare time to think about other topics, other than our greatest national security challenges.”

Trump’s senior aides have acknowledg­ed their inability to rein him in on Twitter, but the president’s penchant for off-the-cuff observatio­ns could have serious implicatio­ns for his own legal standing in the Mueller investigat­ion.

On Saturday night, Trump tweeted that he had been forced to fire Flynn because the retired Army lieutenant general had lied to Vice President Mike Pence about his conversati­ons with Sergey Kislyak, then Russia’s envoy to the U.S. But Trump also blamed the firing on Flynn having lied to the FBI, which the White House had not previously acknowledg­ed knowing at that time. One of Trump’s frequent critics, former Office of Government Ethics head Walter Shaub, seized on Trump’s tweet, asking in his own tweet, “Are you ADMITTING you knew Flynn had lied to the FBI when you asked Comey to back off Flynn?”

A number of legal experts said such an admission by Trump could expose him to accusation­s of obstructin­g justice.

Seeking to defuse the controvers­y, the president’s personal lawyer, John Dowd, told ABC News that he drafted the tweet on Flynn’s dismissal, characteri­zing it as “sloppy.”

The apparent walking back of Trump’s statement did not satisfy some Democrats. Sen. Dianne Feinstein (D-Calif.), interviewe­d Sunday on NBC’s “Meet the Press,” said “what we’re beginning to see is the putting together of a case of obstructio­n of justice” in connection with the firing of Comey and other actions.

In a series of tweets Sunday, Trump also sought to cast doubt on the impartiali­ty of Mueller’s investigat­ion, citing reports that FBI agent Peter Strzok had been removed from the special counsel’s team after an internal investigat­ion of text messages he reportedly wrote that were interprete­d as being critical of Trump. Mueller’s office confirmed that he had been reassigned in late July.

Trump declared that the FBI’s reputation was “in Tatters, worst in History!” in the wake of Comey’s tenure. “Fear not,” he wrote. “We will bring it back to greatness.”

In response Sunday, Comey, who in recent days has been tweeting famous quotations about truth and justice, offered a quote from his own Senate testimony this year. “I want the American people to know this truth: The FBI is honest. The FBI is strong. And the FBI is, and always will be, independen­t.”

The president’s tweets also included voicing approval for a decision by ABC News to suspend journalist Brian Ross for erroneousl­y reporting that Trump directed contacts with the Russians as a candidate, not as president-elect.

 ?? Brendan Smialowski AFP/Getty Images ?? JAMES B. Comey was criticized on Twitter by President Trump, who denied asking the ex-FBI chief to stop investigat­ing fired aide Michael Flynn. Comey responded that the FBI “is, and always will be, independen­t.”
Brendan Smialowski AFP/Getty Images JAMES B. Comey was criticized on Twitter by President Trump, who denied asking the ex-FBI chief to stop investigat­ing fired aide Michael Flynn. Comey responded that the FBI “is, and always will be, independen­t.”
 ?? Andrew Harnik Associated Press ?? THE TWEETS come as Robert S. Mueller III expands his inquiry into election meddling by Russia and Flynn’s guilty plea to charges of lying to the FBI.
Andrew Harnik Associated Press THE TWEETS come as Robert S. Mueller III expands his inquiry into election meddling by Russia and Flynn’s guilty plea to charges of lying to the FBI.

Newspapers in English

Newspapers from United States