The Record (Troy, NY)

What made Trump afraid?

- By David Ignatius David Ignatius can be reached via Twitter: @ IgnatiusPo­st.

It’s a truism of Washington scandals that it’s not the initial actions that lead to legal disaster, but the attempt to cover them up. It’s possible that is the case with Friday’s indictment of former national security adviser Michael Flynn -- and in the broader investigat­ion of the Trump team’s contacts with Russia. But there is much we still do not know.

This sweater has been unraveling from a thin initial thread. When I reported on Jan .12 the phone calls between Flynn and Russian ambassador SergeyK isl ya k on Dec. 29 -- which were at the center of Friday’s indictment and guilty plea -- the propriety of Flynn’s actions was a matter of legitimate debate.

Because the Obama administra­tion had expelled 35 Russian diplomats that same day to retaliate against Moscow’s meddling in the 2016 campaign, my column posed the basic question: “What did Flynn say, and did it undercut the U.S. sanctions?” But even if it had undermined Obama’s move and checked Russian reprisal, that wasn’t acapital crime. “If the Trump team’s contacts helped discourage the Russians from a counter-retaliatio­n, maybe that’s a good thing,” my columnnote­d. “But we ought to know the facts.”

Flynn’s catastroph­ic mistake was that he lied about the Dec. 29 calls, first in denials to Trump spokesmen that were shared with me and other reporters on Jan. 12, then to Vice President Mike Pence and, most important, to FBI officials who interviewe­d him on Jan. 24. The indictment specified that Flynn made “false, fictitious and fraudulent statements” when he told FBI agents he hadn’t urged Kislyak “to refrain from escalating the situation in response to sanctions that the United States had imposed against Russia that same day.”

Why was Flynn lying about the Kislyak calls? What was he covering up? We have one hint in the “Statement of the Offense” that accompanie­s the plea agreement. The prosecutor­s say that Flynn cleared his comments to Kislyak beforehand with an unnamed official who is described as “a senior official of the Presidenti­al Transition Team” who was staying with Trump at Mar-a-Lago. Only then, with top-level approval to discuss sanctions, did Flynn call the Russian ambassador.

Say what you like about Flynn, but an ex-general follows the chain of command. Given his seniority as the designated national security adviser, there are only two people who would likely have authorized this contact with Russia: Jared Kushner, the president’s son-in-law and senior adviser, who had been conducting his own extensive back-channel contacts with Kislyak and other Russians, and the president-elect himself, who had said throughout the campaign that he wanted to improve relations with Russia.

The public lies about the Dec. 29 call began to cascade. But the most senior levels of the Trump transition team were aware, from the first, of what really happened. Their silence condoned the lies. Given that Trump publicly thanked Russian president Vladimir Putin on Dec. 30 for not retaliatin­g, it has always been hard to believe that Trump wasn’t aware of the Flynn-Kislyak discussion­s. Now we’ll know the truth. The plea agreement makes clear that Flynn is cooperatin­g with Special Counsel Robert Mueller about his discussion­s with the “senior official” and others.

At the center of this story is a mystery that will propel the rest of the inquiry: What wasTrump so worried about, that made himdeny contacts withRussia anddenounc­e attempts to investigat­e those contacts? Whatwas he afraid might emerge?

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