The Press

Comey violated FBI policy but won’t be prosecuted

-

Former FBI Director James Comey violated bureau policy but didn’t break the law by feeding a memo about a private conversati­on with President Donald Trump to the press, the Justice Department’s inspector general said yesterday.

In a long-awaited report on the May 2017 leak, Inspector General Michael Horowitz concluded Comey broke with FBI protocol by sending the memo to his attorney along with instructio­ns to share its contents with a reporter.

However, as the document did not contain classified material, Horowitz reiterated the Justice Department’s decision earlier this month that it won’t prosecute Comey over the misstep.

In the memo, Comey detailed a meeting he had with Trump at the White House in February 2017, during which the president infamously suggested the FBI drop its investigat­ion into his then-national security adviser, Michael Flynn, who had lied to federal agents about his conversati­ons with Russia’s US ambassador. According to the memo, Trump told Comey he ‘‘hoped’’ the FBI could see to ‘‘letting Flynn go’’ because he’s a ‘‘good guy.’’ Flynn ended up pleading guilty to lying to the FBI after special counsel Robert Mueller picked up that investigat­ion following Comey’s axing.

In addition to the leaked document, Horowitz gave Comey a slap on the wrist for failing to inform the FBI after Trump fired him in March 2017 that he had other memos detailing conversati­ons with the president stowed away in a safe at his home.

Horowitz did not hide his distaste for Comey’s unauthoris­ed leak, charging the FBI ‘‘depends’’ on the safeguardi­ng of ‘‘sensitive informatio­n.’’ ‘‘Comey failed to live up to this responsibi­lity,’’ the IG wrote. ‘‘Comey set a dangerous example for the over 35,000 current FBI employees – and the many thousands more former FBI employees – who similarly have access to or knowledge of non-public informatio­n.’’ Horowitz noted that Comey had testified before Congress that he leaked the Trump memo because he wanted to ensure that a special counsel was appointed to investigat­e the Trump campaign’s ties to Russia and whether it played part in the Kremlin’s attack on the 2016 election.

However, ‘‘Comey had several other lawful options available to advocate for the appointmen­t of a special counsel,’’ Horowitz said.

‘‘What was not permitted was the unauthoris­ed disclosure of sensitive investigat­ive informatio­n, obtained during the course of FBI employment, in order to achieve a personally desired outcome,’’ Horowitz said.

Comey cherry-picked the IG’s findings. ‘‘DOJ IG ‘found no evidence that Comey or his attorneys released any of the classified informatio­n contained in any of the memos to members of the media,’’’ he tweeted shortly after the report was released.

‘‘I don’t need a public apology from those who defamed me, but a quick message with a ‘sorry we lied about you’ would be nice,’’ the exG-man continued. – TNS Russia has offered to help Iran to skirt US sanctions by allowing it to transport crude oil through ports in Crimea, in a further sign of growing ties between Moscow and Tehran.

Iran has previously sent oil deliveries to Syria and Turkey through the Suez Canal. That route has become problemati­c, according to Iran and Syria, since President Donald Trump pulled out of a nuclear deal with Tehran and imposed economic sanctions.

Countries that purchase Iranian oil or assist its shipment risk US economic penalties. A tanker carrying Iranian oil to Syria was detained last month by the Egyptian authoritie­s as it travelled through the Suez Canal, according to Iranian state media. Cairo denied the reports and insisted that the waterway remained open to Iranian vessels.

Georgy Muradov, the Kremlin’s representa­tive in Crimea, which Russia seized from Ukraine in 2014, announced the offer. ‘‘Iran can use our shipping capabiliti­es and transport oil through the Volga-Don canal, via Crimea, to the Black Sea,’’ he said. ‘‘Mutual interest in cooperatio­n between Iran and Crimea is growing, especially considerin­g the anti-Iranian policies of the United States.’’

The Volga-Don canal is 101km long and is part of a system of inland waterways that link the Caspian Sea to the world’s oceans via the Sea of Azov and the Black Sea.

Tehran has not publicly responded to the Russian offer, but the prospect of an alternativ­e supply route could provide valuable breathing space for its oil industry. The US sanctions, which were imposed in November, four months after Trump withdrew from the Obamaera nuclear deal, have sent Iranian oil exports tumbling from about 2.5 million barrels a day to half a million, according to analysts.

Turkey said in May that it was reluctantl­y halting imports of Iranian oil to comply with US sanctions. Aside from Syria, Iran also ships oil eastwards to China, its only other known customer.

The US has so far been reluctant to impose punitive sanctions on China, the biggest importer of Iranian oil, over fears that the move could worsen a trade rift between the two countries.

Last month British Marines and the port authoritie­s in Gibraltar seized a supertanke­r that was suspected to be carrying crude oil from Iran to Syria in violation of European Union sanctions against the Assad regime. The vessel, Grace 1, was released after a five-week standoff. Iran said on Tuesday that it had sold the 2.1 million barrels of crude oil that the supertanke­r was carrying to an unnamed buyer.

The annexation of Crimea led to US economic sanctions, plunging relations between Moscow and Washington to their lowest point since the end of the Cold War. In contrast, mutual animosity towards the US has resulted in closer ties between Iran and Russia.

Rear Admiral Hossein Khanzadi, the Iranian naval commander, said last month that his forces would hold joint military exercises with Russia by the end of the year. The drills are expected to be held in the northern Indian Ocean and the Gulf of Oman.

The drills were announced after the US said that it had evidence that proved Iran was behind limpet mine attacks on oil tankers in the Persian Gulf in May and June. Washington later carried out a secret cyberattac­k against an Iranian database used to plot covert attacks on shipping in the Gulf, The New York Times reported this week.

– The Times

 ??  ?? James Comey
James Comey

Newspapers in English

Newspapers from New Zealand