The Arizona Republic

Manafort to speak to intel committee

Panel’s top Democrat presses for hearing with Obama officials

- Bartholome­w D Sullivan House Intelligen­ce Chairman Devin Nunes, R-Calif., says he has asked the FBI and NSA directors to testify again. Paul Manafort was Donald Trump’s campaign manager for four months in 2016. Rep. Trump

WASHINGTON Paul Manafort, Donald Trump’s former campaign chairman who reportedly received millions from a Russian billionair­e to advance the interests of Russian President Vladimir Putin a decade ago, has volunteere­d to speak with the House Intelligen­ce Committee, its chairman said Friday.

Chairman Devin Nunes, a California Republican, told reporters the committee was contacted by Manafort’s lawyer with the offer Thursday.

“We thank Mr. Manafort for volunteeri­ng and encourage others with knowledge of these issues to voluntaril­y interview with the committee,” he said.

Rep. Adam Schiff of California, the ranking Democrat on the committee, said at a separate news conference that announcing the Manafort offer was simply an excuse by Nunes to cancel a public committee hearing scheduled for next week featuring members of former president Barack Obama’s intelligen­ce team.

Nunes also announced that the committee has asked FBI Director James Comey and National Security Agency director Admiral Michael S. Rogers, who testified in an open session Monday, to return to testify in a closed session.

“It’s necessary to get both of them down here before we can move on,” he said.

In testimony Monday, Comey revealed that the Trump campaign is the subject of an FBI investigat­ion into whether it coordinate­d with Russia in the 2016 presidenti­al campaign against Hillary Clinton.

The developmen­ts follow a week of dramatic events in which Nunes briefed Trump at the White House after seeing documents that he says identified U.S. citizens in the Trump transition being caught up in incidental surveillan­ce of intelligen­ce agency targets. Friday, he made a point of noting that he had known of what is referred to as the “unmasking” of those people before he saw documents proving it. He said he doesn’t know who authorized the unmasking or whether there was a legitimate reason for it.

American citizens caught up incidental­ly when speaking with surveillan­ce targets are not supposed to be identified except under a strict set of exceptions. Democrats say Nunes’ trip to the White House has compromise­d the investigat­ions his committee and the FBI are conducting.

Nunes said Manafort can testify at a public hearing or in a closed setting, and it was unclear when it might occur.

“We want more people to come forward, and the good thing is that we have continued to have people come forward voluntaril­y to the committee,” Nunes said. “And I will tell you that will not happen if we tell you who our sources are.” He vowed to “protect the identity of those people at all costs.”

Schiff said during his news conference that he would prefer that the testimony be offered in open session and, if necessary, a later closed session can be arranged. He said he had no objection to hearing from Comey and Rogers again in a closed session.

“But as much of this investigat­ion we can do in public, I think we should do,” Schiff said.

Schiff said committee Democrats “strongly object” to Nunes’ decision to cancel a hearing scheduled for Tuesday with former NSA director James Clapper, former acting attorney general Sally Yates and former CIA director John Brennan. He said the cancellati­on was an effort to “choke off” informatio­n the White House doesn’t want the Adam Schiff, public to hear. Clapper was the first in the intelligen­ce community to say there was no basis for Trump’s accusation that his predecesso­r had wiretapped Trump Tower before the election.

“We still urge the majority to reconsider. The witnesses have made clear they’re still available,” Schiff said.

“There must have been a really strong push-back from the White House” about the nature of the now-postponed hearing, Schiff said. “What other explanatio­n can there be?” He said he hoped constituen­ts would contact committee members, especially its Republican­s, and urge them to hold the hearing.

As for the briefing of the White House and the documents regarding unmasked Trump associates that only Nunes on the panel has seen, Schiff said he is “concerned that the chairman has been unwilling to rule out that the documents came either from the White House or in coordinati­on with the White House.”

With Democrats saying they have lost confidence that Nunes can direct a credible investigat­ion, Schiff was asked whether he should be removed as chairman.

Schiff said that’s Speaker Paul Ryan’s call.

“The events of this week are not encouragin­g,” he said. “One of the profound takeaways of the last couple of days is we really need an independen­t commission here because the public ... needs to have confidence that someone has done a thorough investigat­ion.”

“The public is discourage­d by this week’s events,” Schiff said. He wants a probe “unhampered by political pressures and uninterfer­ed with by the White House.”

Schiff repeated that it is “abundantly clear” that Trump’s wiretap allegation­s are “pure nonsense.” He said allowing press secretary Sean Spicer to claim British intelligen­ce could have had Trump under surveillan­ce harmed relations with Britain.

“To further justify the unjustifia­ble,” he said of Trump, “he is now interferin­g with this investigat­ion.”

D-Calif., of President

 ?? SHAWN THEW, EUROPEAN PRESSPHOTO AGENCY MATT ROURKE, AP ??
SHAWN THEW, EUROPEAN PRESSPHOTO AGENCY MATT ROURKE, AP

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