The Columbus Dispatch

Intelligen­ce chiefs stonewall panel

- By Eileen Sullivan, Eric Tucker and Deb Riechmann

WASHINGTON — The nation’s intelligen­ce chiefs, facing questions from Congress one day before former FBI Director James Comey provides his first public account of the events leading up to his firing, declined to describe conversati­ons with President Donald Trump but said they had not been directed to do anything they considered illegal or felt pressured to do so.

Michael Rogers, the National Security Agency director, and national intelligen­ce director Dan Coats largely ducked questions from senators Wednesday about whether the president had tried to influence investigat­ions into Russia’s election meddling and possible coordinati­on with the Trump campaign.

“I have never felt pressure to intervene, interfere in any way for shaping intelligen­ce in any way,” Coats said at one point.

But he later demurred when asked whether he was prepared to say that he had never been asked to influence an ongoing investigat­ion, saying, “What I’m not willing to do is to share confidenti­al informatio­n that I think ought to be protected in an open hearing.”

The questions from the Senate Intelligen­ce Committee, at a hearing on surveillan­ce law, were in response to news media reports that both Coats and Rogers had been asked by Trump to publicly state that there was no evidence of collusion between Moscow and the Trump campaign. Comey appears before the same committee today.

The back-to-back hearings come as the White House grapples with the fallout from Comey’s firing, which led to the appointmen­t of a special counsel to take over the Russia investigat­ion in an effort to prevent even the appearance of Oval Office interferen­ce.

Questions about Russia’s role in the 2016 presidenti­al election, and ensuing congressio­nal and FBI investigat­ions into Moscow’s possible ties with Trump associates, have dogged the president since he took office.

Two other witnesses, acting FBI Director Andrew McCabe and Deputy Attorney General Rod Rosenstein, declined to discuss any aspects of the Russia investigat­ion.

“We have a special counsel who is investigat­ing,” Rosenstein said, when asked about a memo he had written that the White House held up as justificat­ion for Comey’s May 9 firing.

 ?? [CAROLYN KASTER/THE ASSOCIATED PRESS] ?? National intelligen­ce director Dan Coats, left, and National Security Agency director Adm. Mike Rogers pause during Wednesday’s contentiou­s Senate Intelligen­ce Committee hearing.
[CAROLYN KASTER/THE ASSOCIATED PRESS] National intelligen­ce director Dan Coats, left, and National Security Agency director Adm. Mike Rogers pause during Wednesday’s contentiou­s Senate Intelligen­ce Committee hearing.

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