The Phnom Penh Post

Top Obama officials set to testify on Russia election interferen­ce

- Paul Handley

THE scandal over Russian meddling in last year’s presidenti­al election returns to the forefront of Washington politics after weeks of quiet today, when two top officials from the Obama administra­tion are set to testify in Congress.

Sally Yates – acting attorneyge­neral in the Trump administra­tion for 10 days before being fired – could bring new pressure on the White House over what it knew about former National Security Adviser Michael Flynn’s communicat­ions with Russian officials.

Obama’s Director of National Intelligen­ce James Clapper is also set to testify, after repeatedly warning of the need to get to the bottom of how the Russians interfered in the election, and whether anyone on President Donald Trump’s team colluded with Moscow.

The case has simmered for weeks as attention focused elsewhere on what keynote legislatio­n the president could push through in his first 100 days, reached last Sunday.

Congressio­nal investigat­ions into the matter have also been held up by infighting between Democrats and Republican­s over how aggressive­ly to pursue a matter that continues to cast a cloud over Trump’s election win.

Trump this week repeated his dismissal of US intelligen­ce chiefs’ conclusion that Moscow had sought to boost his campaign over his Democratic ri- val Hillary Clinton’s in an effort overseen by Russian President Vladimir Putin.

In an interview with CBS’s Face the Nation programme marking his 100 days, Trump again rejected the official view that Russians hacked Democratic Party computers and communicat­ions.

“[It] could have been China, could have been a lot of different groups,” he said.

On Tuesday, he again branded the whole story as fake. “The phony Trump/Russia story was an excuse used by the Democrats as justificat­ion for losing the election,” he said on Twitter.

Trump’s dismissals notwithsta­nding, the Senate Judiciary Committee – where Yates and Clapper appear today – and the House and Senate Intelligen­ce Committees are stepping up their probes, calling numerous current and former government witnesses to testify, mostly behind closed doors.

And the FBI continues its own active investigat­ion into possible collusion.

The country’s top intelligen­ce officials have no doubt Moscow tried to swing the election against Clinton last year through hacking and disinforma­tion.

Nor is there any doubt that people closely associated with the Trump campaign – including Flynn, onetime foreign affairs adviser Carter Page and campaign chairman Paul Manafort – all had ongoing contacts with Russians.

But whether those contacts resulted in any collusion with Moscow remains unproved.

Asked on CNN this week if she had yet seen any evidence of collusion in private intelligen­ce briefings, Senator Diane Feinstein, the top Democrat on the Senate Intelligen­ce Committee, responded: “Not at this time.”

In today’s hearing, Yates – an Obama deputy attorney-gen- eral who was fired by Trump for refusing to support his immigratio­n ban – reportedly could testify that she warned the incoming administra­tion in January that Flynn’s discussion­s with Russia’s US ambassador left him vulnerable to blackmail.

A former military intelligen­ce chief, Flynn was Trump’s national security adviser for 24 days before he was fired for lying about the substance of the calls.

Clapper, still bound by secrecy requiremen­ts of his former job, might not add more than what the intelligen­ce community has already said publicly about the scandal.

The more serious investigat­ive action in the coming weeks will take place out of the public eye. The House and Senate intelligen­ce committees are holding interviews with current intelligen­ce and Trump campaign officials behind closed doors.

The Senate side has warned possible witnesses, including Flynn, Page and Manafort, that they could be subpoenaed to testify if they do not voluntaril­y cooperate with the probe, according to the New York Times.

In a statement Friday, the top senators of the Senate committee specifical­ly warned Page, a former Moscow-based investment banker, to meet their week-old request for specific documents.

“Should Mr Page choose to not provide the material requested” by specified dates, they said, “the committee will consider its next steps”.

 ?? NICHOLAS KAMM/AFP ?? The US Capitol in Washington, DC. Today, Congress will hear from Sally Yates, deputy attorney-general under President Barack Obama, and former Director of National Intelligen­ce James Clapper on Russia’s meddling in last year’s presidenti­al election.
NICHOLAS KAMM/AFP The US Capitol in Washington, DC. Today, Congress will hear from Sally Yates, deputy attorney-general under President Barack Obama, and former Director of National Intelligen­ce James Clapper on Russia’s meddling in last year’s presidenti­al election.

Newspapers in English

Newspapers from Cambodia