Trump says he ‘100%’ will reveal memo
PRESIDENT Donald Trump has told a lawmaker he plans to release a secret Republican memo alleging that a politically motivated Department of Justice and FBI flagrantly abused regulations to spy on his campaign.
The issue of the memo has gripped Washington just as the Russia meddling probe edges closer to the White House.
Republicans are keen to see the four-page memo – written by Republican lawmaker Devin Nunes, the chairman of the House Intelligence Committee and a close defender of Trump – released, and his committee voted to do so.
After finishing his State of the Union address on Tuesday night, Trump was caught on television cameras telling a Republican lawmaker who urged him to release it, “Don’t worry, 100 percent.”
Democrats say the memo is highly distorted and political, and ultimately aims to discredit special prosecutor Robert Mueller’s probe of possible collusion between the Trump campaign and Russia in the 2016 election.
According to news reports citing people who have seen the document, it sums up how the Justice Department and FBI were able to obtain a so-called FISA national security warrant to run surveillance on Carter Page, a Trump election campaign adviser with extensive Moscow contacts.
“There are legitimate questions about whether American civil liberties were violated by the FISA process,” House Majority leader Paul Ryan said on Tuesday. “There may have been malfeasance at the FBI by certain individuals.”
The memo alleges that the department depended on the contentious and unproven“Russia dossier” – compiled by former British intelligence agent Christopher Steele and financed in part by Democrat Hillary Clinton’s presidential campaign – to justify the warrant to the topsecret FISA court.
In addition, the memo alleges that after Trump became president, the warrant was extended by Deputy Attorney General Rod Rosenstein – the DOJ official who appointed Mueller to lead the Russia probe, and the only person who can fire him. Rosenstein took charge of the probe when Attorney General Jeff Sessions recused himself – a move Trump has often criticised.
The release of the document, based on highly classified information, is opposed by the Justice Department and the FBI.
Democrats also say they cannot debunk it without themselves releasing secret counterintelligence information.