Santa Fe New Mexican

Trump claims ‘right’ to share highly classified informatio­n with Russia

- By Greg Miller and Ashley Parker

WASHINGTON — The White House offered shifting explanatio­ns for President Donald Trump’s disclosure of highly classified informatio­n to senior Russian diplomats last week, a scattered defense that began with an early-morning Trump tweet that he had the “absolute right” to share “facts.”

Administra­tion officials went from denouncing the Washington Post article as “false” to either confirming or declining to challenge nearly every key aspect of the account, which described how Trump’s sharing of sensitive details about a terrorist plot jeopardize­d access to a stream of intelligen­ce from a critical U.S. ally.

“As President I wanted to share with Russia … which I have the absolute right to do, facts pertaining to terrorism and airline safety,” Trump said in two postings to his Twitter account, the first at 7 a.m. He then shifted the focus from his conduct to prod the FBI “to find the LEAKERS in the intelligen­ce community.”

Trump also enlisted his national security adviser, H.R. McMaster, to help contain the fallout from the latest damaging revelation­s about the administra­tion’s relationsh­ip with Russia. Trump revealed the classified intelligen­ce in a White House meeting with Russia’s foreign minister and ambassador one day after firing FBI Director James Comey over frustratio­n with the bureau’s investigat­ion of any ties between Trump associates and Russian officials.

Speaking to reporters at the White House, McMaster refused to say whether Trump had shared classified informatio­n with the representa­tives from Moscow, falling back on a refrain that Trump’s disclosure­s were “wholly appropriat­e.”

“What the president discussed with the foreign minister was wholly appropriat­e to that conversati­on and is consistent with the routine sharing of informatio­n between the president and any leaders with whom he’s engaged,” McMaster said. “It is wholly appropriat­e for the president to share whatever informatio­n he thinks is necessary to advance the security of the American people. That’s what he did.”

McMaster did not explain how sharing classified informatio­n with Russian officials advanced U.S. interests. The long-standing adversarie­s sometimes alert one another to

security threats, but otherwise engage in little if any intelligen­ce cooperatio­n. Indeed, U.S. spy agencies earlier this year concluded that their Russian counterpar­ts engaged in an unpreceden­ted covert influence campaign to upend the 2016 presidenti­al election.

Current and former U.S. officials said that Trump went well beyond outlining basic threat informatio­n in his meeting with Russian Foreign Minister Sergei Lavrov and Ambassador Sergey Kislyak.

Trump described steps the Islamic State was taking to pursue a plot involving the use of laptop computers on civilian aircraft, officials said. He discussed measures the United States has taken to suppress the threat, including military operations in Syria. Trump also identified the city in the Islamic State’s territory where the U.S. ally had been monitoring the plot through a valuable and ongoing stream of intelligen­ce.

Trump “revealed more informatio­n to the Russian ambassador than we have shared with our own allies,” according to one current U.S. official.

Trump did not identify the particular method of intelligen­ce gathering employed in the operation or the partner nation. But officials cited concern that Moscow emerged from the meeting with clues that Russian spy agencies could use to zero in on the U.S. ally’s sources and methods.

The Washington Post withheld details about the intelligen­ce-sharing arrangemen­t and plot at the request of White House officials, who cited concern over national security. By Tuesday, however, The New York Times and other news organizati­ons identified the partner country as Israel.

Israel has in the past complained about the United States’ inability to safeguard secrets. In a statement, the Israeli ambassador to the United States, Ron Dermer, said that despite the disclosure­s, “Israel has full confidence in our intelligen­ce sharing relationsh­ip with the United States and looks forward to deepening that relationsh­ip in the years ahead under President Trump.”

The disclosure­s about the Oval Office meeting came as Trump prepares for his first foreign trip — a multi-stop itinerary that will take him to Saudi Arabia, Israel, Bethlehem in the West Bank, and the Vatican, as well as Brussels for European Union and NATO meetings and back to Italy for a gathering of the leaders of the Group of Seven leading industrial democracie­s. White House officials had hoped the trip would distract from some of the political turmoil in Washington, but it is now likely to be dogged by close scrutiny of Trump’s performanc­e in multiple foreign settings and how allies react to him.

On Capitol Hill, both Republican and Democratic lawmakers expressed concern and alarm about the president’s sensitive disclosure­s to the Russians.

“As an intelligen­ce officer by training, I know firsthand the life and death implicatio­ns of safeguardi­ng classified informatio­n,” Rep. Mike Gallagher, R-Wis., a freshman lawmaker and former Marine intelligen­ce officer, tweeted Tuesday. “Our allies and partners must have the utmost confidence that sensitive informatio­n they share with us will not be disclosed,” he wrote.

Senate Majority Leader Mitch McConnell, R-Ky., pleaded for “less drama” from the White House.

Democrats, who had been demanding that Trump turn over any tapes of his conversati­ons with Comey, broadened their requests to include transcript­s of his meeting with the Russians.

Senate Minority Leader Charles Schumer, D-N.Y., said Trump should release the alleged transcript “if [he] has nothing to hide.”

“Until the administra­tion fully explains the facts of this case, the American people will rightly doubt if their president can handle our nation’s most closely kept secrets,” Schumer said Tuesday on the Senate floor.

McMaster sought to play down the significan­ce of Trump’s disclosure­s during a briefing at the White House. But when pressed on specifics, McMaster confirmed certain essential aspects of the story and refused to address others.

He retreated from his initial assertion Monday evening that the Post article was “false,” saying that his remark applied only to its “premise.”

He refused to answer whether Trump had revealed classified informatio­n, saying that “we don’t say what’s classified”; acknowledg­ed that Trump had wandered off script during the meeting; and confirmed that Trump had mentioned the city where the U.S. intelligen­ce partner saw the threat emerging.

At one point, McMaster said that the informatio­n Trump revealed “was nothing that you would not know from opensource reporting.” But that raised the question of why his own aides had felt it necessary to place calls to the leaders of the CIA and National Security Agency to alert them to what Trump had disclosed.

At first McMaster said that his subordinat­es may have done so “from an overabunda­nce of precaution,” but he then said he couldn’t be sure because he had not spoken with the subordinat­e who had made the calls, Thomas P. Bossert, assistant to the president for homeland security and counterter­rorism.

Finally, McMaster said that Trump “wasn’t even aware of where this informatio­n came from,” a comment intended to reinforce that the president couldn’t have revealed the source but one that left open the question of why Trump had been kept in the dark on that detail.

Later in the day, following a meeting with the Turkish president, Trump responded to a shouted question about his interactio­n with the Russians last week, casting a rosier picture of the potential partnershi­p between the two nations than even many of his own advisers think is realistic.

“We had a very, very successful meeting with the foreign minister of Russia — our fight is against ISIS,” the president said, using an acronym for the Islamic State. “So we’re going to have a lot of great success over the next coming years, and we want to get as many to help fight terrorism as possible, and that’s one of the beautiful things that’s happening with Turkey. The relationsh­ip that we have together, we’ll be unbeatable.”

The Washington Post’s William Booth, David Nakamura and Elise Viebeck contribute­d to this report.

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