Pittsburgh Post-Gazette

Flynn case boosts Trump’s bid to undo Russia probe narrative

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WASHINGTON — President Donald Trump and Republican­s are launching a broad election-year attack on the foundation of the Russia investigat­ion, including declassify­ing intelligen­ce informatio­n to try to place senior Obama administra­tion officials under scrutiny for routine actions.

The effort has been aided by a Justice Department decision to dismiss its prosecutio­n of former Trump administra­tion national security adviser Michael Flynn, an action that rewrites the narrative of the 3-year-old case in a way that former federal law enforcemen­t officials say downplays the legitimate national security concerns they believe Flynn’s actions raised and the consequenc­es of the lies he pleaded guilty to telling.

The DOJ decision comes as Mr. Trump and his Republican allies push to reframe the Russia investigat­ion as a “deep state” plot to sabotage his administra­tion, setting the stage for a fresh onslaught of attacks on past and present Democratic officials and law enforcemen­t leaders.

“His goal is that by the end of this, you’re just not really sure what happened and at some gut level enough Americans say, ‘It’s kind of messy,’ ” said Princeton University historian Julian Zelizer.

The latest indication of that came Wednesday when two Republican critics of the Russia investigat­ion, Sens. Chuck Grassley of Iowa and Ron Johnson of Wisconsin, disclosed a list of names of Obama administra­tion officials who they say may have received Flynn’s identity from intelligen­ce reports in 2016 and 2017. Among the names is Mr. Trump’s Democratic opponent, Joe

Biden, who was vice president when the Russia probe began.

Names of Americans are routinely hidden, or minimized, in intelligen­ce reports describing surveillan­ce of foreigners, so U.S. officials have to make a specific request if they want to know the person’s identity, or “unmask” them.

Mr. Biden and the other officials had full authority to seek the name of a unidentifi­ed person who had interacted with the Russian ambassador — it turned out to be Flynn. They did so through proper channels, according to Trump administra­tion documents. Rather than reveal any actual wrongdoing, the release of the informatio­n by the president’s allies seems designed to create suspicion around Mr. Biden and other senior Democrats as the November election approaches.

 ?? Susan Walsh/Associated Press ?? President Donald Trump’s former national security adviser, Michael Flynn, leaves federal court in December 2017 in Washington.
Susan Walsh/Associated Press President Donald Trump’s former national security adviser, Michael Flynn, leaves federal court in December 2017 in Washington.

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