Sun Sentinel Palm Beach Edition

Ousted envoy testifies she felt ‘intimidate­d’

Ex-ambassador Yovanovitc­h provides testimony as Trump berates her anew

- By Lisa Mascaro and Mary Clare Jalonick

WASHINGTON — Former U.S. Ukraine Ambassador Marie Yovanovitc­h provided chilling detail Friday in Trump impeachmen­t hearings of being suddenly ousted from her post and feeling threatened upon learning President Donald Trump had denounced her in a phone call to Ukraine’s president. In that call, Trump assailed her as “bad news” and said she was “going to go through some things.”

In an extraordin­ary moment, even in an administra­tion filled with them, Trump himself went after her again as she spoke, tweeting from the White House that everywhere she served had “turned bad.”

Asked at the hearing about the potential effect of such censure on U.S. officials and witnesses, she said, “Well, it’s very intimidati­ng.”

Yovanovitc­h was testifying on the second day of public impeachmen­t hearings into Trump, just the

fourth time in American history that the House of Representa­tives has launched such proceeding­s. The investigat­ion centers on whether Trump’s push for Ukrainian officials to investigat­e his political rivals amounted to an abuse of power, a charge he and Republican­s vigorously deny.

After Trump’s tweet on Friday, the chairman of the House Intelligen­ce Committee swiftly intervened, halting the questionin­g to read the president’s comments out loud to the witness — and Americans following the hearing — during a live broadcast across the country.

“As we sit here testifying, the president is attacking you on Twitter,” said Democratic Rep. Adam Schiff of California. He asked if it was designed to intimidate.

“I can’t speak to what the president is trying to do, but I think the effect is to be intimidate­d,” she said.

Said Schiff, “Well, I want to let you know, ambassador, that some of us here take witness intimidati­on very, very seriously.”

Trump, asked about it later, said, “I have the right to speak. I have freedom of speech.”

Rather than distract from the career diplomat’s testimony, Trump’s interferen­ce could provide more evidence against him in the probe. Democrats said an allegation of witness intimidati­on could become an obstructio­n of justice charge in the impeachmen­t probe.

In her testimony, Yovanovitc­h described a “smear campaign” against her by Trump’s personal lawyer, Rudy Giuliani, and others, including the president’s son Donald Trump Jr., before her firing.

She told the lawmakers her sudden removal had played into the hands of “shady interests the world over” with dangerous intentions toward the United States. They have learned, she said, “how little it takes to remove an American ambassador who does not give them what they want.”

She said quietly, “Even now words fail me.”

Her removal from her post is one of several events at the center of the impeachmen­t effort.

In his July phone call with new Ukrainian President Volodymyr Zelenskiy, Trump asked for a “favor,” according to an account provided by the White House. He wanted an investigat­ion of Democrats and 2020 rival Joe Biden. Later it was revealed that the administra­tion was withholdin­g military aid from Ukraine at the time.

“These events should concern everyone in this room,” the diplomat testified in opening remarks.

Schiff, the Democratic chairman of the panel, said she was “too tough on corruption for some, and her principled stance made her enemies.”

It became clear, he said, “President Trump wanted her gone.”

The daughter of immigrants who fled the former Soviet Union and Nazi Germany, she described a 33-year career, including three tours as an ambassador to some of the world’s tougher postings, before arriving in Ukraine in 2016. She was forced out in May 2019.

She rejected the notion that Ukraine tried to interfere in the election, as Trump claims, counter to mainstream U.S. intelligen­ce findings that it was Russia.

The top Republican on the panel, Rep. Devin Nunes of California, bemoaned the hearings as a “daylong TV spectacle.”

Nunes complained that Democrats are relying on hearsay testimony from witnesses who only know of Trump’s actions secondhand, and Republican­s noted during questionin­g that Yovanovitc­h had left her position before the July phone call.

But one Republican, Rep. Liz Cheney of Wyoming, said Trump’s live tweeting at the ambassador was wrong. She said, “I don’t think the president should have done that.”

Yovanovitc­h, a career diplomat, who has served both Republican and Democratic presidents, relayed her striking story of being told to “watch my back” and then being suddenly recalled by Trump in a series of events that sounded alarms about a White House shadow foreign policy.

In particular, Yovanovitc­h and others have described Giuliani, Trump’s lawyer, as leading what one called an “irregular channel” outside the diplomatic mainstream of U.S.-Ukraine relations. Asked during an earlier, closed-door deposition if anyone at the State Department who was alerted to Giuliani’s role tried to stop him, she testified, “I don’t think they felt they could.”

Under questionin­g from Republican­s, she acknowledg­ed that Joe Biden’s son, Hunter, serving on the board of a gas company in Ukraine could have created the appearance of a conflict of interest. But she testified the former vice president acted in accordance with official U.S. policy.

The White House has instructed officials not to comply with the probe, and most have been issued subpoenas to appear.

Later Friday, the panel in closed-door session heard was to hear from David Holmes, a political adviser in Kyiv, who overheard Trump asking about the investigat­ions the day after the July conversati­on with Zelenskiy. Holmes was at dinner with Gordon Sondland when the Ambassador to the European Union called up Trump. The conversati­on was apparently loud enough to be heard.

 ?? DREW ANGERER/GETTY ?? Ex-U.S. Ambassador to Ukraine Marie Yovanovitc­h testifies before the House Intelligen­ce Committee on Friday in Washington.
DREW ANGERER/GETTY Ex-U.S. Ambassador to Ukraine Marie Yovanovitc­h testifies before the House Intelligen­ce Committee on Friday in Washington.
 ?? J. SCOTT APPLEWHITE/AP ?? Former U.S. Ambassador to Ukraine Marie Yovanovitc­h leaves as the audience applauds at the end her testimony before the House Intelligen­ce Committee on Friday.
J. SCOTT APPLEWHITE/AP Former U.S. Ambassador to Ukraine Marie Yovanovitc­h leaves as the audience applauds at the end her testimony before the House Intelligen­ce Committee on Friday.

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