The Times Herald (Norristown, PA)

Michael Flynn’s rise was rapid, his fall even faster

- By Chad Day, Eric Tucker and Stephen Braun

WASHINGTON » Michael Flynn was President Donald Trump’s favorite general, rapidly vaulted to prominence by his fiery speech at the 2016 Republican National Convention and Trump’s decision to reward him with a plum job as his top national security aide.

Flynn’s plunge was even faster. He was fired by Trump after just a month in the White House and left to contend with a mounting criminal probe that led to his decision to plead guilty Friday to lying to the FBI about his contacts with the Russian ambassador.

Flynn is the first person who served in the Trump White House to be charged in the wide-ranging investigat­ion led by special counsel Robert Mueller into possible coordinati­on between the Trump campaign and Russia. He also becomes the first former national security adviser to be charged with a felony since the fallout from the Iran-Contra affair of the mid-1980s.

Flynn was a familiar presence on the Trump campaign trail, his appearance intended to lend national security gravitas to an election effort short on establishe­d names. At campaign events, and at the Republican convention, he led cheers of “Lock her up” about Democrat Hillary Clinton and her email practices.

Flynn’s path to the courtroom can be traced back to two events on the same day — Election Day 2016. That morning, Flynn published an op-ed in The Hill newspaper, trumpeting the talking points of the Turkish government. That evening, Trump won the election, thrusting the retired general known for his attacks on Islam into the leading candidate for a top national security post.

Within weeks, Flynn had been named national security adviser and the Justice Department had taken an interest in the op-ed as possible evidence of unregister­ed foreign agent work.

While Flynn’s attorneys began the process of determinin­g whether he would need to register under the Foreign Agents Registrati­on Act, Flynn had a phone conversati­on with the Russian ambassador to the United States that was recorded by the U.S. government and that swiftly caught the attention of the Justice Department.

He was interviewe­d by FBI agents on Jan. 24 about his communicat­ions with the ambassador, Sergey Kislyak, and about whether they had discussed sanctions imposed on Russia following its election interferen­ce.

Days later, then-acting Attorney General Sally Yates warned White House counsel Don McGahn that Flynn had been compromise­d because of discrepanc­ies between the White House public narrative — that Flynn and Kislyak had not discussed sanctions — and the reality of what occurred.

White House officials took no immediate action against Flynn, and he was not forced to resign his position until after news reports indicated that he had discussed sanctions and that Justice Department officials had raised concerns.

In the weeks after his firing, Flynn registered retroactiv­ely with the Justice Department, disclosing that $530,000 worth of lobbying his company did for a Turkish businessma­n could have benefited the government of Turkey. Flynn’s business partner, former Export-Import Bank board member Bijan Kian, also registered.

In the filings, both men laid out a contract Flynn signed in the final months of the presidenti­al campaign that called for his firm, the Flynn Intel Group, to gather informatio­n that could support a criminal case against a Turkish cleric living in the U.S. The cleric, Fethullah Gulen, has been accused of being behind a failed coup last year, and Turkish President Recep Tayyip Erdogan has called for his extraditio­n. The U.S. has rebuffed those calls for lack of evidence.

But Flynn’s retroactiv­e disclosure of the work did not satisfy federal prosecutor­s. A grand jury in the Eastern District of Virginia soon began investigat­ing, and FBI agents began asking questions about how much Flynn and Kian knew about Ekim Alptekin, the Turkish businessma­n who hired them.

When Mueller was appointed in May, he incorporat­ed that investigat­ion.

The Turkish contract landed by Flynn’s consulting firm was the first significan­t promise of business success since he had left the military. Flynn had won plaudits as a military intelligen­ce officer in combat zones in Afghanista­n and Iraq and was rewarded in July 2012 with a post as director of the Defense Intelligen­ce Agency, the Army’s spy organizati­on.

He lasted two years, criticized by Obama administra­tion officials for his management and temper, and was forced to retire in August 2014. Flynn’s post-military career was a succession of consulting gigs and directorsh­ips at small defense contractor­s. He traveled to the Mideast in 2015 to lend credibilit­y to a proposal for a U.S.-Russia private nuclear partnershi­p that has yet to work out. And he took payments from several foreign firms that have come back to haunt him.

Congressio­nal committees investigat­ing Flynn earlier this year found that he had been paid more than $37,000 by RT, a Russian state-sponsored television station, to attend its anniversar­y gala in Moscow in December 2015. Flynn was given a dignitary’s welcome, seated beside Russian President Vladimir Putin at the network’s lavish dinner. The Russian network has since been identified by a U.S. intelligen­ce community assessment as a propaganda arm of Putin’s government.

Flynn is also under investigat­ion by the Defense Department’s inspector general to determine whether he failed to obtain government approval before accepting payments from foreign government­s.

 ?? SUSAN WALSH - THE ASSOCIATED PRESS ?? Former Trump national security adviser Michael Flynn leaves federal court in Washington, Friday. Flynn pleaded guilty Friday to making false statements to the FBI, the first Trump White House official to make a guilty plea so far in a wide-ranging...
SUSAN WALSH - THE ASSOCIATED PRESS Former Trump national security adviser Michael Flynn leaves federal court in Washington, Friday. Flynn pleaded guilty Friday to making false statements to the FBI, the first Trump White House official to make a guilty plea so far in a wide-ranging...

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