The Columbus Dispatch

President’s tweets roast FBI

- By Michael D. Shear

WASHINGTON — As the FBI’s Russia investigat­ion draws closer to him, President Donald Trump on Sunday unleashed an extraordin­ary assault on the nation’s premier law enforcemen­t agency, calling it a biased institutio­n whose reputation for fairness is “in tatters.”

In a series of early morning tweets, Trump said the FBI’s standing is now the “worst in history.” The attack was one of the harshest in a generation on an independen­t agency that two days earlier had helped secure a guilty plea and a pledge of

cooperatio­n from the president’s first national security adviser.

Current and former FBI officials, historians and lawmakers rebuked the president over his efforts to undermine the FBI’s credibilit­y as it investigat­es whether his campaign colluded with Russian officials to sway the 2016 election. A president who has positioned himself as devoted to law and order is now in a public dispute with the country’s top law enforcemen­t agents.

Thomas O’Connor, president of the associatio­n representi­ng FBI agents, defended their integrity in a statement. “FBI agents are dedicated to their mission,” he said, asserting that they demonstrat­e “unwavering integrity and profession­alism” on the job. “Suggesting otherwise is simply false,” he added.

On Friday, Michael Flynn, the former national security adviser, admitted that he had lied to the FBI about his conversati­ons with the Russian ambassador during the presidenti­al transition. As part of the bureau’s inquiry, the special counsel, Robert Mueller, is believed to be examining whether Trump obstructed justice by firing James Comey, the FBI director, who was overseeing the inquiry. Comey has said Trump asked him to drop the investigat­ion into Flynn.

But on Sunday, the president condemned Comey as a liar, saying that “I never asked Comey to stop investigat­ing Flynn” and that Comey had harmed the bureau and its employees. He also accused the bureau’s agents of spending years pursing a “phony and dishonest” investigat­ion into the email server of his 2016 rival, Hillary Clinton.

Sen. Dianne Feinstein, D-Calif., the top Democrat on the Judiciary Committee, said the frenzied nature of the president’s tweets suggests he knows Mueller is building an obstructio­n of justice case against him.

“I see it in the hyperfrene­tic attitude of the White House, the comments every day, the continual tweets,” Feinstein said Sunday on NBC’s “Meet the Press.”

Eric Holder, who was President Barack Obama’s first attorney general, responded to the president’s tweets with one of his own defending the bureau. “You’ll find integrity and honesty at FBI headquarte­rs and not at 1600 Penn Ave right now,” Holder wrote.

As he sought to discredit the Russia inquiry, Trump on Sunday seized on reports that Mueller had removed a veteran FBI agent because he sent text messages that appeared to express views critical of Trump.

In several tweets, the president harshly criticized the agent, Peter Strzok, who had previously helped lead the 2016 investigat­ion into whether Clinton had mishandled classified informatio­n on her private email account.

“Report: ‘ANTI-TRUMP FBI AGENT LED CLINTON EMAIL PROBE,”’ Trump said in his 10th tweet Sunday, which by the early evening had been retweeted more than 24,000 times. “Now it all starts to make sense!”

By suggesting — as he has before — that the FBI and other agencies are motivated by politics, Trump again embraced the kind of suspicions that feed conspiracy theories about a “deep state” operating with a secret bias against him.

Still, former FBI officials and veteran observers of the agency said they were surprised at the ease with which the president attacked the reputation­s of Comey, Mueller, Strzok and the 35,000 people who work at the FBI.

“If he imagines that he can protect himself by trying to attack and destroy Mueller, Comey and the FBI as an institutio­n, he is committing an act of political suicide,” said Tim Weiner, author of histories of the FBI and the CIA and a former reporter for The New York Times. “It’s a death wish, because ultimately, the law, the Constituti­on and the courts are stronger than this president.”

Robert E. Anderson Jr., a former top spy hunter at the bureau, said the president’s comments would have a dispiritin­g effect on FBI morale, especially among those who are not involved in political investigat­ions.

“You’ve got men and women working tirelessly in every corner of this world to protect the United States and its people,” Anderson said. “When he says what he says, it’s an insult and it’s degrading to the men and women who are sacrificin­g their lives to protect this great nation.”

Anderson also came to the defense of Strzok, calling him “one of the most methodical, most meticulous, hardworkin­g counterint­elligence experts in the entire United States intelligen­ce community.” Anderson said Strzok “never displayed political bias.”

But House Republican­s

are drafting a contempt of Congress resolution against Deputy Attorney General Rod Rosenstein and FBI Director Christophe­r Wray, claiming stonewalli­ng in producing material related to the Russia-Trump probes and other matters.

Intelligen­ce Chairman Devin Nunes and other committee Republican­s, after considerin­g such action for several weeks, decided to move after the news media reported Saturday about Strzok’s removal.

“By hiding from Congress, and from the American people, documented political bias by a key FBI head investigat­or for both the Russia collusion probe and the Clinton email investigat­ion, the FBI and DOJ engaged in a willful attempt to thwart Congress’ constituti­onal oversight responsibi­lity,” Nunes said.

The president retweeted a Twitter post urging Wray to “clean house” at the agency. In a statement Sunday, Attorney General Jeff Sessions said he had directed Wray to “review the informatio­n available on this and other matters and promptly make any necessary changes.”

But since taking over four months ago, Wray has repeatedly praised the bureau’s workforce.

In one tweet Sunday, Trump blamed “years of Comey” at the helm of the FBI for what he views as the damage to its reputation.

“After years of Comey, with the phony and dishonest Clinton investigat­ion (and more), running the FBI, its reputation is in Tatters — worst in History!” Trump wrote. “But fear not, we will bring it back to greatness.”

 ?? [SUSAN WALSH/THE ASSOCIATED PRESS] ?? President Donald Trump, here being saluted as he walks down the steps of Air Force One, fired off a series of tweets Sunday criticizin­g the FBI.
[SUSAN WALSH/THE ASSOCIATED PRESS] President Donald Trump, here being saluted as he walks down the steps of Air Force One, fired off a series of tweets Sunday criticizin­g the FBI.

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