The Phnom Penh Post

US braces for Comey hearing

- Michael Mathes

THE US capital will grind to a halt today, glued to computer and television screens as sacked FBI chief James Comey testifies about whether President Donald Trump pressured him to halt a probe into an adviser’s links to Russia.

Trump, a ratings-obsessed former reality television star, may not appreciate the worldwide attention paid to Comey’s public testimony, which is being touted as the Super Bowl of high political drama.

Comey is the star witness in the Senate Intelligen­ce Committee’s investigat­ion of alleged Russian election meddling last year, with the possible collusion of the Trump campaign. The allegation­s have drawn comparison to the 1970s Watergate scandal that brought down president Richard Nixon.

Comey was given the go-ahead to deliver potentiall­y explosive testimony after the White House announced it would not use its executive privilege to block his appearance, less than a month after he was controvers­ially sacked by the president.

The former Federal Bureau of Investigat­ion director is expected to dispute Trump’s claim that Comey told him multiple times that he was not under investigat­ion by the FBI, CNN reported sources familiar with Comey’s thinking as saying.

Trump himself weighed in on Tuesday, even as the revelation­s could spell more bad news for his administra­tion.

“I wish him luck,” Trump said, when asked in a meeting with Republican leaders whether he had a message for the former FBI chief.

With Capitol Hill abuzz, at least two Washington bars were set to open their doors before the hearing’s 10am start to Washington­ians wanting to tune in live.

“Don’t you like the suspense?” Senate Republican Marco Rubio, who is on the intelligen­ce panel, asked a scrum of reporters. “Rather than relying on articles and third-hand informatio­n, we’re going to ask the director, and the American people are going to get to watch it.”

The Senate’s top Democrat, Chuck Schumer, offered a more sombre assessment of Comey’s testimony, which marks a moment of peril for the embattled president.

“I just hope he tells everything he can,” Schumer said. “The American people, on a subject as serious as this, are entitled to the whole truth and nothing but.”

A warm-up act of sorts was to come yesterday, when the same committee was to hear from Director of National Intelligen­ce Dan Coats, National Security Agency head Mike Rogers, interim FBI director Andrew McCabe, and Deputy US Attorney General Rod Rosenstein.

Adding to the drama, a top-secret NSA report leaked to online news outlet the Intercept shows that hackers from Russian military intelligen­ce repeatedly tried to break into US voting systems before last year’s presidenti­al election.

Keen to crack down on leaks, the Trump administra­tion quickly announced the arrest of a 25-year-old in- telligence contractor on charges of violating the espionage act.

Comey’s testimony will be his first public remarks since Trump summarily fired him on May 9.

The dismissal – a stunning move by any measure – came as the FBI is probing possible collusion between his campaign team and Russia, which US intelligen­ce agencies concluded sought to tilt the election in the Republican’s favour.

Comey is said to have written detailed notes about three conversati­ons he had with Trump, which reportedly document the president’s efforts to get the FBI to ease the investigat­ion’s focus on former national security adviser Michael Flynn.

Any confirmati­on that Trump tried to press Comey would open the president to damaging allegation­s that he attempted to obstruct an ongoing FBI investigat­ion – which several Democrats have warned would propel the crisis into Watergate-like territory.

Trump himself invoked Nixonian symbolism last month, when he warned via Twitter Comey “better hope that there are no ‘tapes’ of our conversati­ons”.

Revelation­s that Nixon secretly taped visits in the White House, and refused to turn over the audio tapes under subpoena, led to his resignatio­n in 1974.

Senator Mark Warner, the intelligen­ce panel’s top Democrat, said Trump would have violated longstandi­ng guidelines if he pressured Comey to drop or slowwalk an investigat­ion.

“It would be unthinkabl­e if the president actually did what was reported,” Warner told CBS News Sunday.

“We have no smoking gun at this point, but there is a lot of smoke.”

What Comey will reveal, if anything, is the topic of intense speculatio­n.

 ?? MARK WILSON/GETTY IMAGES/AFP ?? Early morning light hits the US Capitol building on Tuesday.
MARK WILSON/GETTY IMAGES/AFP Early morning light hits the US Capitol building on Tuesday.

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