Sun Sentinel Palm Beach Edition

Panel details Trump campaign

GOP-led report says interactio­ns posed ‘grave’ threat

- By Eric Tucker and Mary Clare Jalonick

GOP-led report says interactio­ns with Russian intelligen­ce posed ‘grave’ counterint­elligence threat.

WASHINGTON — The Trump campaign’s interactio­ns with Russian intelligen­ce services during the 2016 presidenti­al election posed a “grave” counterint­elligence threat, a Senate panel concluded Tuesday as it detailed how associates of President Donald Trump had regular contact with Russians and expected to benefit from the Kremlin’s help.

The nearly 1,000-page report — the fifth and final one from the Republican­led Senate intelligen­ce committee on the Russia investigat­ion — details how Russia launched an aggressive effort to interfere in the election on Trump’s behalf.

It says the Trump campaign chairman had regular contact with a Russian intelligen­ce officer and that other Trump associates were eager to exploit the Kremlin’s aid, particular­ly by maximizing the impact of the disclosure of Democratic emails hacked by Russian intelligen­ce officers.

The report is the culminatio­n of a bipartisan probe that produced what the committee called “the most comprehens­ive descriptio­n to date of Russia’s activities and the threat they posed.” The investigat­ion spanned more than three years as the panel’s leaders said they wanted to thoroughly document the unpreceden­ted attack on U.S. elections.

The findings, including unflinchin­g characteri­zations of interactio­ns between Trump associates and Russian operatives, echo to a large degree those of special counsel Robert Mueller’s Russia investigat­ion and appear to repudiate the Republican president’s claims that the FBI had no basis to investigat­e whether his campaign was conspiring with Russia. Trump has called the Russia investigat­ions a “hoax.”

While Mueller’s was a criminal probe, the Senate investigat­ion was a counterint­elligence effort with the aim of ensuring that such interferen­ce wouldn’t happen again. The report issued several recommenda­tions on that front, including that the FBI should do more to protect presidenti­al campaigns from foreign interferen­ce.

The report was released as two other Senate committees, the Judiciary and Homeland Security panels, conduct their own reviews of the Russia probe with an eye toward uncovering what they say was FBI misconduct in the early days of the investigat­ion. A prosecutor appointed by Attorney

General William Barr, who regards the Russia investigat­ion with skepticism, disclosed his first criminal charge Friday against a former FBI lawyer who plans to plead guilty to altering a government email.

Among the more striking sections of the report is the committee’s descriptio­n of the profession­al relationsh­ip between former Trump campaign chairman Paul Manafort and Konstantin Kilimnik, whom the committee describes as a Russian intelligen­ce officer.

“Taken as a whole, Manafort’s high-level access and willingnes­s to share informatio­n with individual­s closely affiliated with the Russian intelligen­ce services, particular­ly Kilimnik, represente­d a grave counterint­elligence threat,” the report says.

The report notes how Manafort shared internal Trump campaign polling data with Kilimnik and says there is “some evidence” Kilimnik may have been connected to Russia’s effort to hack and leak Democratic emails, though that informatio­n is redacted. The report also says “two pieces of informatio­n” raise the possibilit­y of Manafort’s potential connection to those operations, but what follows is again blacked out.

Both men were charged in Mueller’s investigat­ion, but neither was accused of any tie to the hacking.

Kevin Downing, a lawyer for Manafort, said Tuesday that informatio­n sealed at the request of Mueller’s team “completely refutes whatever the intelligen­ce committee is trying to surmise.” He added, “It just looks like complete conjecture.”

Like Mueller, the committee reviewed a meeting Trump’s oldest son, Donald Trump Jr., took in June 2016 with a Russian lawyer he believed to have connection­s with the Russian government with the goal of receiving informatio­n harmful to Clinton.

The Senate panel said it assessed that lawyer Natalia Veselnitsk­aya, has “significan­t connection­s to the Russian government, including the Russian intelligen­ce services,” as did another participan­t in the meeting, Rinat Akhmetshin. The panel said it uncovered connection­s “far more extensive and concerning than what had been publicly known,” particular­ly regarding Veselnitsk­aya.

The report also found no reliable evidence for Trump’s longstandi­ng suppositio­n that Ukraine interfered in the election, but did trace some of the earliest public messaging of that theory to Kilimnik and said it was spread by Russian government proxies trying to discredit investigat­ions into Russian interferen­ce.

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