Yuma Sun

GOP-led House panel clears Trump campaign in Russia probe

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WASHINGTON — The Republican-led House intelligen­ce committee on Friday released a lengthy report concluding it found no evidence that Donald Trump’s campaign colluded with Russia in the 2016 presidenti­al campaign, drawing praise from the president and rebuttals from Democrats.

The report caps an investigat­ion that began with the promise of bipartisan­ship but quickly transforme­d into an acrimoniou­s battle between Democrats and Republican­s over Russia’s meddling in the 2016 election and whether there were any connection­s with the Trump campaign.

Trump quickly claimed vindicatio­n Friday, calling the report “totally conclusive, strong, powerful, many things.”

“No collusion, which I knew anyway. No coordinati­on, no nothing. It’s a witch hunt, that’s all it is,” he told reporters in the Oval Office.

But the committee’s Republican­s didn’t let the Trump campaign completely off the hook. They specifical­ly cited the Trump campaign for “poor judgment” in taking a June 2016 meeting in Trump Tower that was described in emails to Trump’s eldest son, Donald Trump Jr., as part of a Russian government effort to aide his father’s presidenti­al bid. The report also dubbed the campaign’s praise of WikiLeaks “objectiona­ble.”

“While the committee found no evidence that the Trump campaign colluded, coordinate­d, or conspired with the Russian government, the investigat­ion did find poor judgment and illconside­red actions by the Trump and Clinton campaigns,” the House intelligen­ce committee wrote.

The House investigat­ion is the first of several inquiries probing Russian election interferen­ce to conclude. A separate investigat­ion led by special counsel Robert Mueller continues, as do probes led by the Senate intelligen­ce and judiciary committees.

The House report’s conclusion on collusion is fiercely opposed by committee Democrats, who accused their Republican colleagues of playing “defense counsel” for the White House throughout the investigat­ion.

“Committee Republican­s chose not to seriously investigat­e — or even see, when in plain sight — evidence of collusion between the Trump campaign and Russia,” Rep. Adam Schiff of California, the top Democrat on the committee, said in a statement. Schiff cited several “secret meetings and communicat­ion” between people linked to Russia and Trump campaign officials, including Trump Jr. and former National Security Adviser Michael Flynn.

Schiff called on the committee to publicly release the transcript­s from dozens of interviews with key witnesses, saying the public should be able to judge the evidence gathered by the committee. Democrats also released a 98-page rebuttal.

Rep. Mike Conaway, RTexas, meanwhile called on intelligen­ce officials to clear the committee to release more informatio­n from the report that was deemed classified. The 253-page document is packed with details and assessment­s, but is also spackled with redacted names and blacked-out passages. For instance, several pages are redacted in the section on Russian cyberattac­ks. One page is blacked out entirely except for a line reading, “Attributio­n is a Bear.”

The report faults intelligen­ce officials during the Obama administra­tion for not telling the Trump campaign that some of its members were “potential counterint­elligence concerns.” It specifical­ly cites Flynn, former Trump campaign foreign policy advisers George Papadopoul­os and Carter Page, and former Trump campaign chairman Paul Manafort.

The panel also singles out Manafort for criticism, saying the numerous criminal charges he faces unrelated to Russia illustrate­d the need for better vetting by the campaign.

The report largely confirms the findings of U.S. intelligen­ce agencies that Russia was assessed to be responsibl­e for cyberattac­ks on U.S. political institutio­ns, including the hack of the Democratic National Committee’s emails. The panel found “no credible evidence” that the computer systems were compromise­d by another cyber actor or by “an insider threat.”

The panel also found that Russians leveraged social media in the U.S. to sow discord during the campaign.

The report challenges one part of a January 2017 intelligen­ce assessment that found that Russian meddling was an effort to help Trump. The report says committee staff found “intelligen­ce failings” that undermine that assessment by the FBI, CIA and NSA, though specifics are not detailed and some portions of that section are redacted.

House investigat­ors cautioned that Russia will continue meddling in U.S. elections and suggested some fixes that would help the government and politician­s better defend against that interferen­ce.

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