Santa Fe New Mexican

Trump waffles on vow to grant Mueller interview under oath

President calls investigat­ions by Congress ‘Democrat hoax,’ calls for GOP to step in

- By Julie Hirschfeld Davis and Nicholas Fandos

WASHINGTON — President Donald Trump declined Wednesday to commit to being interviewe­d by Robert Mueller, the special counsel investigat­ing whether his campaign colluded with Russia to sway the 2016 election, backing off his statement last year that he would be willing to talk to Mueller under oath.

“I’ll speak to attorneys,” Trump said during a news conference with Prime Minister Erna Solberg of Norway, when asked whether he would agree to an interview. “We’ll see what happens.”

That answer was a marked change from June, when Trump defended his firing of the FBI director, James Comey, denying that it was related to his handling of the Russia investigat­ion, and said he would be “100 percent” willing to give a sworn statement to Mueller.

It came as the president’s advisers have been discussing whether Trump should submit to what would be an extraordin­ary but not unpreceden­ted instance of a presi-

dent being interviewe­d by a prosecutor investigat­ing him for wrongdoing.

Trump also repeated his criticism of Mueller’s inquiry as a “witch hunt” and the investigat­ions being pursued by congressio­nal committees as a “Democrat hoax.” In a Twitter post, he referred to Sen. Dianne Feinstein of California, the senior Democrat on the Senate committee conducting an investigat­ion into Russian interferen­ce, as “Sneaky Dianne Feinstein.”

“For 11 months, they’ve had this phony cloud over this administra­tion, over our government, and it has hurt our government,” Trump said. “It’s a Democrat hoax that was brought up as an excuse for losing an election.”

The president was angry at Feinstein in particular for releasing a transcript of Senate testimony by one of the founders of the firm that produced a salacious and largely unsubstant­iated dossier outlining a Russian effort to aid the Trump campaign, and he demanded that Republican­s “finally take control” of the investigat­ions.

Also on Wednesday, Senate Democrats released an extensive report concluding that Russia’s interferen­ce in the 2016 presidenti­al election fit into a nearly two-decade pattern of meddling with government­s around the world, and charging that Trump himself had hindered the U.S. response to a serious national security threat.

“Never before in American history has so clear a threat to national security been so clearly ignored by a U.S. president,” the report asserts.

Trump, in his remarks, repeated his often-stated assertion that he has essentiall­y been cleared of colluding with Russia. “It has been determined that there’s been no collusion — and by virtually everybody,” he said. “When they have no collusion, and nobody’s found any collusion at any level, it seems unlikely that you’d even have an interview.”

In fact, the Senate Intelligen­ce Committee and its House counterpar­t have not reached a conclusion on that question, which Mueller is also believed to be exploring, along with whether the president or his team obstructed justice in firing Comey.

The Democratic report on Russian interferen­ce looked at efforts of the government of President Vladimir Putin in 19 countries, and describes misinforma­tion campaigns, the funding of far-right political causes and the manipulati­on of energy supplies long before 2016 in an attempt to glean lessons for U.S. officials considerin­g how to counteract similar efforts here.

In total, the report offers more than 30 recommenda­tions to safeguard the country’s electoral process and to work with allies, primarily in Europe, to establish new standards to address these types of threats. They include new sanctions to punish states that initiate cyberattac­ks on elections or critical infrastruc­ture, an internatio­nal summit meeting centered on such threats, an allied commitment of mutual defense against cyberattac­ks, as well as forcing social media companies to disclose the sources of funding for political ads.

The document begins by calling on Trump to “assert presidenti­al leadership” to establish a government­wide response to the Russian efforts, including setting up an interagenc­y center modeled after the National Counterter­rorism Center to coordinate the U.S. response to threats and policy related to their deterrence. And it argues that merely investigat­ing what the Russians did in 2016 will be insufficie­nt in protecting against future attacks, given their persistenc­e.

Overall, the report argues that Putin’s rise and hold on power in Russia has depended on the use of force and the underminin­g of institutio­ns at home and abroad. It points to successful actions taken by European nations, including Germany and Nordic countries, as models for counteract­ing Russian tools like disinforma­tion and hacking.

Sen. Benjamin Cardin of Maryland, the top Democrat on the Foreign Relations Committee, who commission­ed the report, said it was not the investigat­ions into Russia’s meddling but the president’s own inaction in the face of Moscow’s brazen attack that was harming the country.

“While President Trump stands practicall­y idle, Mr. Putin continues to refine his asymmetric arsenal and look for future opportunit­ies to disrupt governance and erode support for the democratic and internatio­nal institutio­ns,” he said.

U.S. spy agencies have concluded that Putin directed a multifacet­ed campaign using hacking and propaganda to try to sway the 2016 presidenti­al election against the Democratic candidate, Hillary Clinton, and, eventually, in favor of Trump.

Trump’s response to those findings has varied. After Congress overwhelmi­ngly passed new sanctions in August retaliatin­g against Russia over a range of issues including the election interferen­ce, Trump was forced to sign the measure into law despite his own objections. In November, after speaking with Putin, Trump said he believed that the Russian leader was sincere in his denials of interferin­g with the 2016 race.

In sidesteppi­ng the question of whether he would submit to an interview with Mueller, the president pointed to the circumstan­ces surroundin­g the FBI interview of Clinton in the investigat­ion of her use of a private email server.

“She wasn’t sworn in; she wasn’t given the oath; they didn’t take notes; they didn’t record,” Trump said. “That is perhaps ridiculous, and a lot of people looked upon that as being a very serious breach — and it really was.”

The most famous time a sitting president was interviewe­d by a special prosecutor was 20 years ago, when Bill Clinton, via closed-circuit television from the White House, testified for four hours under oath before a federal grand jury convened by Kenneth Starr.

His answers, including defending his assertion that he had not had sexual relations with Monica Lewinsky, a former White House intern, led to a damning report by Starr and prompted his impeachmen­t by the Republican-led Congress on charges of perjury and obstructio­n of justice.

 ??  ?? Dianne Feinstein
Dianne Feinstein

Newspapers in English

Newspapers from United States