Northwest Arkansas Democrat-Gazette

AUSTRALIA: Request unlikely to be filled.

- ROD MCGUIRK

CANBERRA, Australia — Australia’s prime minister said Wednesday that his country is unlikely to provide the United States with internal government communicat­ions with an Australian diplomat who is partially responsibl­e for triggering the FBI investigat­ion into Russian interferen­ce in the 2016 American presidenti­al election.

President Donald Trump recently asked Prime Minister Scott Morrison and other foreign leaders to help U.S. Attorney General William Barr with an investigat­ion into the origins of the Russia probe that was triggered in part by a tip from an Australian diplomat, Alexander Downer.

Morrison said he had agreed to cooperate with the inquiry during a phone conversati­on with Trump last month.

But Morrison indicated Australia was unlikely to provide Downer’s diplomatic communicat­ions about the matter to the U.S. investigat­ors.

“It would be a very unusual thing to do and Australia would never do anything that would prejudice our national interest,” Morrison told Sky News Australia.

Trump’s interactio­ns with foreign leaders — and Barr’s role in those discussion­s — are under heightened scrutiny now that the U.S. House of Representa­tives has launched an impeachmen­t inquiry into the president.

The probe centers on Trump’s call this summer with Ukraine’s president, revealed by a whistleblo­wer CIA intelligen­ce officer, in which Trump presses for help investigat­ing Democrat Joe Biden.

Australia’s ambassador to Washington had formally offered Australia’s help with the investigat­ion back in May.

Morrison on Wednesday described his September phone call with Trump as a “fairly uneventful conversati­on.”

“The president contacted me and asked for a point of contact between the Australian government and the U.S. attorney, which I was happy to do on the basis that it was something we had already committed to do,” Morrison said.

“It would have been, I think, frankly more surprising had we chosen not to cooperate,” he added.

Morrison said Trump did not phrase the request as a “favor.”

“I’ve had many conversati­ons with the president and it was a very brief conversati­on and it was not one that I’d characteri­ze as being laden with pressure,” Morrison said.

“It was a fairly polite request for something the Australian government had already made pretty clear we were happy to do,” Morrison added.

The opposition has questioned whether Morrison is drawing Australia into a U.S. domestic political battle and has demanded a transcript of the phone conversati­on.

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