The Guardian (USA)

Trump allegedly shared potentiall­y sensitive informatio­n about US nuclear subs with Australian billionair­e

- Martin Pengelly in Washington, Sarah Basford Canales and Daniel Hurst in Canberra

Donald Trump allegedly discussed potentiall­y sensitive informatio­n about US nuclear submarines with an Australian billionair­e, Anthony Pratt, three months after leaving office, according to a new report.

Citing a source with knowledge of the Australian’s account to investigat­ors for the special counsel Jack Smith, US news outlet ABC News reported an “excited” Trump allegedly discussed “the supposed exact number of nuclear warheads [US submarines] routinely carry, and exactly how close they supposedly can get to a Russian submarine without being detected”.

Smith has charged Trump with 40 criminal counts related to his retention of classified informatio­n after leaving office. The former president also faces 17 criminal counts regarding election subversion (four federal, from Smith, and 13 in Georgia) and 34 concerning hush-money payments to the adult film actor Stormy Daniels.

Despite such an extreme predicamen­t – also including civil trials for fraud and defamation – he leads Republican presidenti­al polling by wide margins and is the overwhelmi­ng favorite to face Joe Biden in the 2024 race for the White House.

According to the report, Smith did not include any informatio­n about Trump’s alleged April 2021 conversati­on with Pratt in his June indictment against Trump.

ABC said Trump spoke to Pratt, at his Mar-a-Lago resort in Florida in April 2021.

Pratt then allegedly shared the informatio­n about submarines “within minutes” of learning it, shocking a Trump employee who heard him.

Pratt, the ABC report alleged, went on to share the informatio­n with at least 45 people, including his own employees, journalist­s, foreign and Australian officials “and three former Australian prime ministers”.

It is not clear if what Trump told

Pratt was accurate, ABC said. Neverthele­ss, investigat­ors reportedly asked him to stop repeating what he heard.

Pratt, whose corrugated packaging firm, Pratt Industries, is US-based, reportedly told investigat­ors he repeated what Trump told him because he wanted to show he was advocating for Australia in the US.

At the time, Australia was negotiatin­g the purchase of nuclear submarines from the US. The deal was sealed this year.

The report has reverberat­ed in Australian politics, with the opposition’s foreign affairs spokespers­on predicting that US and Australian national security officials would take the claims “very seriously”.

Simon Birmingham, who was a senior minister in Scott Morrison’s government when it negotiated the Aukus security partnershi­p with the Biden administra­tion, said he and other members of Australia’s national security committee (NSC) were expected to keep operationa­l details secret “for the rest of our lives”.

Birmingham said he could not “prejudge exactly what took place in these discussion­s” between Trump and Pratt, but observed that US nuclear submarine technologi­es were “the most advanced in the world”.

“They are the the most treasured, if you like, prized asset of parts of the US defence establishm­ent,” Birmingham told Sky News Australia.

“It’s why it was such a big breakthrou­gh for Australia to be in a position to have them shared with us. But it’s also why I’m sure many in the United

States will take very, very seriously the suggestion that these types of technologi­es and the capabiliti­es associated with them could be subject to discussion­s outside of those confined spaces, such as, in our case, the Australian NSC.”

Trump and Pratt developed a relationsh­ip after Trump won power in 2016 and Pratt joined Mar-a-Lago, Trump’s members club in Florida.

In 2019, Trump attended the opening of a Pratt Industries plant in Wapakoneta, Ohio, also attended by Scott Morrison, then the Australian prime minister.

As reported by the Guardian, Trump and Pratt “exchange[d] lavish compliment­s as they amble[d] towards the gaggle of reporters. Presumably the box maker [was] explaining recycling to Trump as they [went]. Rubbish in, box out, cash in.”

Of Pratt, Trump said “this man is No 1 in Australia, they say”, adding in formal remarks: “We’re here to celebrate a great opening and a great gentleman … one of the most successful men in the world – perhaps Australia’s most successful man.”

Pratt told reporters Trump would win the 2020 election. He did not.

On Thursday, ABC said Pratt told investigat­ors he now supported Joe Biden – because he was “someone who tends to just ‘side with the king’”.

Trump did not immediatel­y comment, but a spokespers­on for Trump later told ABC News: “President Trump did nothing wrong, has always insisted on truth and transparen­cy, and acted in a proper manner, according to the law.”

The former Australian prime minister Malcolm Turnbull told the Guardian that Pratt did not speak to him.

“Trump did ask me in early 2017 why we were buying French rather than US subs,” Turnbull said. “I explained it was important that they be a sovereign capability and we did not have the means at that stage to sustain and maintain nuclear powered submarines ourselves. Sovereignt­y was of the utmost importance to my government.”

The office of the former prime minister John Howard said he, too, did not have such a conversati­on with Pratt. Other former prime ministers were also contacted for comment.

The Australian government did not have an immediate response to the report. The offices of the prime minister and the foreign minister were contacted for comment.

Pratt has been asked for comment via his company, Visy Industries.

 ?? Photograph: Jonathan Ernst/Reuters ?? Former US president Donald Trump, left, pictured with Australian billionair­e Anthony Pratt, middle, and the then Australian prime minister, Scott Morrison, during a tour of a Pratt Industries facility in 2019. Trump allegedly shared details about US nuclear submarines with Pratt in 2021.
Photograph: Jonathan Ernst/Reuters Former US president Donald Trump, left, pictured with Australian billionair­e Anthony Pratt, middle, and the then Australian prime minister, Scott Morrison, during a tour of a Pratt Industries facility in 2019. Trump allegedly shared details about US nuclear submarines with Pratt in 2021.

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