Trump impeachment witnesses lose their jobs
WASHINGTON, Feb 8 (AFP) - US President Donald Trump on Friday fired two of the highest profile witnesses in his impeachment probe, sparking accusations that he is on a campaign of revenge.
Trump recalled his ambassador to the European Union, Gordon Sondland, just hours after Lieutenant Colonel Alexander Vindman, a decorated soldier who worked at the National Security Council, was ordered out of the White House.
The firings came two days after the
Republican-majority Senate acquitted Trump of charges that he abused his office and one day after he gave a victory speech branding his opponents as “evil.” Sondland, a political appointee who got his post after donating $1 million to Trump's inauguration, said in a brief statement, “I was advised today that the president intends to recall me effective immediately.” The ouster of Vindman, a respected officer who was wounded in Iraq, was even more abrupt, when he was ordered out of his NSC offices at the White House.
He was “escorted out of the White House where he has dutifully served his country and his president,” his lawyer David Pressman said in a statement.
“Vindman was asked to leave for telling the truth,” Pressman said.
Vindman's twin brother Yevgeny, also a lieutenant colonel who worked as an attorney in the NSC, was fired simultaneously, US media reported.
Trump has described the impeachment process as a hoax, denying there was anything wrong in his push for Ukraine to open a politically embarrassing investigation into Democratic presidential candidate Joe Biden's family.
On Friday, Trump told reporters that he wants Republicans to retake control of the lower house of Congress in the next election and to “expunge” his impeachment.
When asked earlier Friday whether he wanted Vindman gone, Trump responded with a veiled threat.
“I'm not happy with him,” he said.