Santa Fe New Mexican

Top official: Trump asked him to intervene in probe

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tail the bureau’s probe.

Coats will testify Wednesday before the Senate Intelligen­ce Committee. Lawmakers on the panel said they would press him for informatio­n about his interactio­ns with the president regarding the FBI investigat­ion.

The question of whether the president obstructed the Russia investigat­ion is expected to take center stage this week with Comey’s highly anticipate­d testimony on the Hill on Thursday. Comey associates say that before the director was fired in May, the president had asked him to drop the investigat­ion into Flynn, and Comey refused.

Brian Hale, a DNI spokesman, declined to comment on whether Trump asked Coats to intervene with Comey regarding the Flynn investigat­ion. Hale said in a statement: “Director Coats does not discuss his private conversati­ons with the President. However, he has never felt pressured by the President or anyone else in the Administra­tion to influence any intelligen­ce matters or ongoing investigat­ions.”

A spokesman for Pompeo declined to comment on the closed-door discussion­s. The White House referred questions to outside lawyers, who did not immediatel­y respond to a request for comment.

Trump has repeatedly denied any coordinati­on took place between his campaign and the Russian government, which, according to U.S. intelligen­ce agencies, stole emails embarrassi­ng to Democratic presidenti­al candidate Hillary Clinton and leaked them to undermine her campaign.

Flynn had served as an enthusiast­ic surrogate for Trump during the campaign and then was fired after just 24 days as national security adviser over revelation­s he misreprese­nted his discussion­s with the Russian ambassador to the United States.

The incidents suggest that Trump may not have appreciate­d the traditiona­l barriers meant to insulate the intelligen­ce agencies from politics.

Though the office of the DNI oversees other intelligen­ce agencies, the FBI director operates independen­tly of the DNI on many matters. For example, Comey kept James Clapper, Coats’ predecesso­r in the DNI job during the Obama administra­tion, in the dark about the bureau’s investigat­ion into possible coordinati­on.

A day or two after the March 22 meeting, the president followed up with a phone call to Coats, according to officials familiar with the discussion­s. In the call, Trump asked the DNI to issue a public statement denying the existence of any evidence of coordinati­on between the Russian government and the Trump campaign. Again, Coats decided not to act on the request.

Trump similarly approached Adm. Mike Rogers, the director of the National Security Agency, to ask him to publicly deny the existence of any evidence of coordinati­on between the Russians and the Trump campaign, as the Post previously reported, according to current and former officials. Like Coats, Rogers refused to comply with the president’s request.

Trump announced in January that he was nominating Coats to serve as DNI, an office which is responsibl­e for overseeing U.S. intelligen­ce agencies and for briefing the president on global developmen­ts.

In February, as tensions flared between intelligen­ce agencies and the White House over Russia and other issues, some of Trump’s advisers floated the idea of appointing a New York billionair­e, Stephen Feinberg, to undertake a review of the DNI. Coats, who was preparing for his confirmati­on hearing, felt blindsided, officials said.

The White House backed away from the idea of naming Feinberg after Coats and members of the intelligen­ce community and Congress raised objections.

Officials say Trump’s advisers have since revived their proposal to appoint Feinberg to a senior position, possibly to review the roles of the DNI and other intelligen­ce agencies.

Some officials said they viewed the prospectiv­e appointmen­t of Feinberg as an effort by the White House to put pressure on intelligen­ce agencies to close ranks with the White House.

In an appearance last month before the Senate Armed Services Committee, Coats refused to provide details about his interactio­ns with Trump.

But Coats indicated that he would cooperate with the Russia probe now being led by special counsel Robert Mueller. Under questionin­g by Sen. Martin Heinrich, D-N.M., Coats said that if asked, he would provide details of his conversati­ons with Trump to Mueller.

Coats also said that if he is called before an investigat­ive committee, such as the Senate Intelligen­ce Committee, “I certainly will provide them with what I know and what I don’t know.” He said the Trump administra­tion has not directed the Office of the Director of National Intelligen­ce to withhold informatio­n from members of Congress conducting oversight.

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