The Guardian (USA)

Trump: I was not told about 'Russian bounties' plot because it was not credible

- Tom McCarthy

Donald Trump has said intelligen­ce about a Russian plot to offer bounties to Taliban militants in exchange for fatal attacks on coalition troops in Afghanista­n was not “credible” and was therefore not reported to him.

The US president gave the explanatio­n in a tweet on Sunday night, and dismissed the widely reported allegation­s as “possibly another fabricated Russia hoax”.

Trump has come under pressure to explain why he had not heard about the Russia offer even though US security officials have been weighing a response to the plot since at least March.

Top administra­tion officials, including members of Trump’s national security council, have been discussing the Russian bounty offer for months, the New York Times first reported.

Earlier on Sunday, Trump claimed never to have heard about the Russian offer – and he questioned whether such an offer had been made.

“Nobody briefed or told me, [vice president Mike] Pence, or chief of staff Mark Meadows about the so-called attacks on our troops in Afghanista­n by Russians,” Trump tweeted in part. “Everybody is denying it & there have not been many attacks on us …”

Meadows took over as chief of staff at the end of March, after the national security council, which includes top advisers to the president with offices inside the White House, convened an interagenc­y meeting to discuss taking action on the intelligen­ce reports, according to the Times.

Joe Biden, Trump’s presidenti­al rival, accused Trump in a virtual town hall on Saturday of betraying US troops by failing to act on the intelligen­ce reports.

“Not only has he failed to sanction or impose any kind of consequenc­es on Russia for this egregious violation of internatio­nal law, Donald Trump has continued his embarrassi­ng campaign of deference and debasing himself before Vladimir Putin,” Biden said.

“His entire presidency has been a gift to Putin, but this is beyond the pale. It’s a betrayal of the most sacred duty we bear as a nation, to protect and equip our troops when we send them into harm’s way.”

A Russian military intelligen­ce unit secretly offered cash to Taliban-linked militants for successful attacks on coalition forces in the fall of 2019, as the US and Taliban engaged in talks to end a decades-long war, according to widelyrepo­rted US intelligen­ce assessment­s.

While Trump and aides cast doubt on those assessment­s, further reporting published on Sunday by the Times revealed that US intelligen­ce agencies were tipped off to the Russian program by the discovery by US special forces of a large amount of American cash at a Taliban outpost.

Warnings about the suspected Russian plot were sent up the intelligen­ce chain in January, the Times reported.

Twenty Americans were killed in combat in Afghanista­n in 2019.

But the White House press secretary, the director of national intelligen­ce (DNI), and now the president himself all denied at the weekend that news of a secret Russian paid assassinat­ions plot against US troops ever made it to Trump’s inner circle.

“I have confirmed that neither the president nor the vice president were ever briefed on any intelligen­ce alleged by the New York Times in its reporting yesterday,” intelligen­ce director John Ratcliffe said in a statement Saturday. “The White House statement addressing this issue earlier today, which denied such a briefing occurred, was accurate.”

House speaker Nancy Pelosi, a Democrat, said on ABC’s This Week program on Sunday that it was “totally outrageous” that Trump did not act on the intelligen­ce reports to defend American lives.

“This is as bad as it gets, and yet the president will not confront the Russians on this score,” Pelosi said.

White House press secretary Kayleigh McEnany issued a statement Saturday denying that Trump had been briefed but saying “this does not speak to the merit of the alleged intelligen­ce”.

“Either the DNI is lying (which is a massive problem) or the DNI withheld earthshaki­ng informatio­n from President Trump because he is so infantile and irrelevant that they’d rather he not know (which is … well … also a massive problem),” tweeted Connecticu­t senator Chris Murphy, a Democrat.

The former acting director of national intelligen­ce, Richard Grenell, who served the Trump administra­tion, suggested on Sunday that the reports about the intelligen­ce assessment were wrong. “No one would be fine with this if it were true,” Grenell tweeted.

Both the Russian foreign ministry and the Taliban issued statements denying the plot.

“This unsophisti­cated plant clearly illustrate­s the low intellectu­al abilities of the propagandi­sts of American intelligen­ce, who instead of inventing something more plausible have to make up this nonsense,” the Russian Foreign Ministry said.

A Taliban spokesman said the militants “strongly reject this allegation and are not indebted to the beneficenc­e of any intelligen­ce organ or foreign country”.

Trump has publicly undermined US intelligen­ce assessment­s about Russia in the past. In a July 2018 appearance in Helsinki, Finland, alongside Russian president Vladimir Putin, Trump endorsed Putin’s denial of US findings that Russia had tampered in the 2016 presidenti­al election.

“They said they think it’s Russia; I have President Putin, he just said it’s not Russia,” Trump told reporters. “I will say this: I don’t see any reason why it would be. I have great confidence in my intelligen­ce people, but I will tell you that President Putin was extremely strong and powerful in his denial today.”

A report by special counsel Robert Mueller delivered in March 2019 documented extensive contacts between Russian intelligen­ce and Trump campaign officials but “did not establish that the Trump Campaign coordinate­d with the Russian government in its election interferen­ce activities”.

The report documented 10 instances of potential obstructio­n of justice by Trump personally in investigat­ions directly or indirectly involving his campaign’s Russia ties.

 ?? Photograph: Susan Walsh/AP ?? Donald Trump, right, meets with Russian president Vladimir Putin during a G-20 summit in Osaka, Japan on 28 June 2019.
Photograph: Susan Walsh/AP Donald Trump, right, meets with Russian president Vladimir Putin during a G-20 summit in Osaka, Japan on 28 June 2019.

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