Weekend Herald

Trump aware of Giuliani- Russia ties

Intelligen­ce officials gave warning

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Intelligen­ce agencies warned the White House late last year that Russian intelligen­ce officers were using President Donald Trump’s personal lawyer Rudy Giuliani as a conduit for disinforma­tion aimed at underminin­g Joe Biden’s presidenti­al run, according to four current and former US officials.

The agencies imparted the warning months before disclosing publicly in August that Moscow was trying to interfere in the election by taking aim at Biden’s campaign, officials said.

Trump and Giuliani have promoted unsubstant­iated claims about Biden that have aligned with Russian disinforma­tion efforts, and Giuliani has met with a Ukrainian lawmaker who US officials believe is a Russian agent.

Robert O’Brien, the national security adviser, presented the warning about Giuliani to Trump in December. Two former officials gave conflictin­g accounts about its nature. One said the report was presented to Trump as unverified and vague, but another said the intelligen­ce agencies had developed solid and credible informatio­n that Giuliani was being “worked over” by Russian operatives.

Trump shrugged it off, officials said, but the first former official cautioned that his reaction could have been coloured in part by other informatio­n given to him not long before that appeared to back some of Giuliani’s claims about Ukraine.

Giuliani did not return requests for comment. The Washington Post reported the intelligen­ce agencies’ warning to the White House earlier yesterday.

The warning, the second former official said, was prompted by a meeting on December 5 between Giuliani and Andriy Derkach, a Ukrainian member of Parliament who takes pro-Kremlin positions. The Treasury Department recently labelled him “an active Russian agent for more than a decade”, disclosing that he maintained ties to Moscow’s intelligen­ce services as it imposed sanctions on him in September.

Giuliani’s campaign to undermine Biden has focused on his anticorrup­tion efforts in Ukraine while he was vice- president and his son Hunter Biden’s work there on the board of a gas company owned by an oligarch widely seen as corrupt.

Derkach has been releasing tapes of the former vice- president’s conversati­ons with Ukrainian officials. US officials said those tapes had been edited in misleading ways.

Giuliani has made multiple trips to Ukraine to gather material that i s damaging to the Biden campaign, and his December visit came as he tried to shift the political conversati­on from impeachmen­t proceeding­s against Trump to unsubstant­iated claims about Biden’s wrongdoing.

He later hosted Derkach on his podcast and has repeatedly highlighte­d the Ukrainian’s claims against the Biden family.

Giuliani has accused the Bidens of protecting Burisma, the energy company where Hunter Biden was a board member. Those allegation­s are mostly baseless. While vice- president, Biden took actions to fight corruption that Burisma would not have welcomed, Democrats have said.

Intelligen­ce officials delivered a classified report to top Trump advisers late last year that included informatio­n related to Giuliani and disinforma­tion efforts, according to a former administra­tion official. Another official said Trump was involved in at least a casual discussion about those efforts.

But at the time, advisers were urging Trump to keep his distance from Giuliani amid the House impeachmen­t inquiry. Giuliani had helped prompt the inquiry because of his push to undermine Biden and became a key figure in it. He expressed anger that he was tarnished during the impeachmen­t inquiry, people briefed on conversati­ons with him said, and has been seeking ever since to prove he was right about Biden.

Giuliani’s work seized attention in the presidenti­al race again this week when the New York Post published articles about Biden and his son based on material Giuliani provided. The Biden campaign rejected the reports, and Facebook and Twitter deemed them so dubious that they limited access to them.

The New York Times has not been able to verify the informatio­n that Giuliani furnished to the Post, which he said came from a laptop left at a Delaware repair shop. The owner of the shop has given conflictin­g accounts to reporters, and Giuliani’s acquisitio­n of the laptop has raised questions about the material on it.

Some former officials who have not reviewed the material suspect it could be Russian disinforma­tion.

The intelligen­ce warning to Trump in December had nothing to do with the laptop, a former official said.

Intelligen­ce officials have issued a series of warnings about Derkach and other Ukrainians they believe are being used to spread disinforma­tion, either directly by Russian intelligen­ce or by oligarchs friendly to Moscow.

It has been known for months that Russian intelligen­ce was using allies in Ukraine to spread disinforma­tion and purported damaging material about Biden. Intelligen­ce officials have warned Republican­s in Congress that some of the people they were seeking informatio­n from were conduits for Russian disinforma­tion.

But raising any i ssue related to Russian interferen­ce with the President is a challenge for the intelligen­ce community. Trump, who views such intelligen­ce as an attempt to undermine his legitimacy, has questioned it, and raising the issue will often derail his regular intelligen­ce briefings by an analyst, so it has fallen to O’Brien to brief him on such matters, current and former officials have said.

Still, despite Trump’s scepticism, intelligen­ce officials have repeatedly warned about Derkach.

In August, the Office of the Director of National intelligen­ce said in a statement that Derkach was spreading disinforma­tion about Biden. The CIA later issued a more detailed classified warning in its Worldwide Intelligen­ce Review, a secret document read by members of Congress and the administra­tion.

Giuliani was dealing with people widely believed to be at worst Russian operatives and at best conduits for Kremlin disinforma­tion efforts, said current and former officials.

“Giuliani has made no secret he has met with people the intelligen­ce community has identified as Russian operatives,” said Amos Hochstein, a former aide to Biden who served on the board of Ukraine’s gas company, Naftogaz. “It i s widely known throughout Ukraine if you want to peddle any kind of informatio­n damaging to Biden, there is a receptive audience in Giuliani.”

Intelligen­ce officials have asserted that Russia favours Trump’s reelection, and the Kremlin has allies among Ukraine’s own oligarchs, who believe Biden will fight corruption there more aggressive­ly than the Trump administra­tion has.

“There is a meeting of interests between what Giuliani wants to do and the notorious corrupt oligarchs in Ukraine,” Hochstein said. “The Ukrainian oligarchs are afraid the Joe Biden presidency returns the anticorrup­tion focus and the focus on good governance. They don’t want that.

“They know there is a market with Rudy Giuliani for informatio­n, real or fake, that is damaging to the [ former] vice- president.”

 ?? Photo / AP ?? Rudy Giuliani, in his campaign to undermine Joe Biden, has met with a Ukrainian lawmaker who US officials believe is a Russian agent.
Photo / AP Rudy Giuliani, in his campaign to undermine Joe Biden, has met with a Ukrainian lawmaker who US officials believe is a Russian agent.

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