The Record (Troy, NY)

Bannon removed from council

Trump’s chief strategist will no longer serve on NSC

- By Vivian Salama

WASHINGTON>> President Donald Trump has removed chief strategist Steve Bannon from the National Security Council, reversing an earlier, controvers­ial decision to give Bannon access to the high-level meetings.

A new memorandum about the council’s compositio­n was published Wednesday in the Federal Register. The memo no longer lists the chief strategist as a member of the Principals Committee, a group of high-ranking officials who meet to discuss pressing national security priorities.

Tom Bossert, the assistant to the president for homeland security and counterter­rorism, also had his role downgraded as part of the changes.

A senior White House official said Wednesday that Bannon was initially placed on the National Security Council after Trump’s inaugurati­on as a measure to ensure implementa­tion of the president’s vision, including efforts to downsize and streamline operations at the NSC.

Trump’s first national security adviser, Michael Flynn, was at the helm of the NSC at the time, but the official said Bannon’s role had nothing to do with the troubles facing Flynn, who was asked to resign in early February for misleading the administra­tion about his communicat­ion with Russian officials.

Flynn’s replacemen­t, Lt. Gen. H.R. McMaster, was given free rein to reorganize the NSC as he saw fit. McMaster immediatel­y expressing a desire to run a less hierarchic­al organizati­on and be more accessible to his staff, something that created widespread frustratio­n when Flynn was in charge, according to three current and former administra­tion officials familiar with the changes.

As a participan­t of the Principals Commit-

tee, Bannon would have had the authority to call a vote if the president’s vision for the NSC was not being implemente­d. The committee, which includes top officials from various government agencies, meets regularly to address important policy issues.

The official said Bannon’s removal from the NSC was not a reflection of any change in his standing as one of Trump’s closest advisers. Bannon will maintain his security clearance as is standard for most top West Wing officials.

Trump’s White House is facing allegation­s that it funneled secret intelligen­ce reports to a Republican congressma­n leading an investigat­ion into his campaign’s possible ties to Russian officials as well as Moscow’s interferen­ce in the 2016 election. The New York Times last week identified two NSC officials as having helped House intelligen­ce committee chairman Devin Nunes view secret reports. A U. S. official confirmed to The Associated Press that Ezra Cohen- Watnick had access to those kinds of intelligen­ce materials, but maintained he did not play a role in helping the congressma­n gain access the documents. The official pointed instead to the other official named in The New York Times report, Michael Ellis, a White House lawyer who previously worked for Nunes on the House committee. Senior administra­tion officials said McMaster was out of town when these revelation­s occurred. The senior White House official would not comment on who was responsibl­e for the changes, but said they were a ref lection of the confidence the president has in McMaster and were not in response to the recent controvers­y linked to the NSC.

The of f icials spoke anonymousl­y because they were not authorized to discuss the changes or other details that have not been formally announced.

The new memo also restores the director of national intelligen­ce and the chairman of the Joint Chiefs of Staff to the principals committee.

Bannon’s addition to the NSC sparked concerns from Trump critics, who said it was inappropri­ate for the political adviser to play a role in national security matters.

 ?? AP FILE ?? White House chief strategist Steve Bannon, left, walks on Capitol Hill in Washington.
AP FILE White House chief strategist Steve Bannon, left, walks on Capitol Hill in Washington.

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