Khaleej Times

Talk of Russian connection is nonsense, says Trump

- Reuters

washington — US President Donald Trump assailed US intelligen­ce agencies on Wednesday for what he said were illegal informatio­n leaks, and dismissed reports of contacts between members of his presidenti­al campaign and Russian intelligen­ce officials.

Trump went on the counter-offensive as his administra­tion reeled from the abrupt dismissal of Michael Flynn as national security adviser on Monday.

The New York Times reported late on Tuesday that phone call records and intercepte­d calls showed members of Trump’s presidenti­al campaign and other Trump associates had repeated contacts with senior Russian intelligen­ce officials in the year before the November 8 election.

Trump dismissed the report, firing back in a series of early morning tweets on Wednesday.

“This Russian connection nonsense is merely an attempt to coverup the many mistakes made in Hillary Clinton’s losing campaign,” the Republican president tweeted, citing his former Democratic rival in the 2016 presidenti­al contest.

In another tweet, Trump said: “Informatio­n is being illegally given to the failing @nytimes & @washington­post by the intelligen­ce community (NSA and FBI?).Just like Russia,” adding that the situation was “very serious.”

“The real scandal here is that classified informatio­n is illegally given out by “intelligen­ce” like candy. Very un-American!” Trump wrote.

He did not give evidence to back his charge that intelligen­ce officials were supplying informatio­n to the news media. He did not say if he had ordered any investigat­ion into leaks.

Reuters could not immediatel­y confirm the Times report, which the Kremlin dismissed on Wednesday.

CNN also reported that Trump advisers were in constant contact with Russian officials during the campaign. The Times, citing current and former US officials, said US law enforcemen­t and intelligen­ce agencies intercepte­d the communicat­ions around the same time they discovered Russia was trying to disrupt the presidenti­al election by hacking into the Democratic National Committee.

The officials had seen no evidence of collusion between the Trump campaign and the Russians on the hacking or other efforts to influence the election, the Times said, but they were still alarmed by the intercepte­d communicat­ions.

Flynn was forced out over conversati­ons he had with the Russian ambassador before Trump took office on January 20, and his misreprese­ntations to Vice-President Mike Pence over what he had discussed.

The Times said the intercepte­d calls in its report were different from the wiretapped conversati­ons between Flynn and the ambassador, Sergei Kislyak.

US lawmakers, including some leading Republican­s, called on Tuesday for a deeper inquiry into not just Flynn’s actions but broader White House ties to Russia. Trump has long said that he would like improved relations with Russian President Vladimir Putin. —

 ?? AP ?? President Donald Trump hands a pen to Representa­tive Bill Huizenga after signing House Joint Resolution 41 in the Oval Office of the White House in Washington. House Speaker Paul Ryan, Representa­tive Sean Duffy and Representa­tive Peter King are...
AP President Donald Trump hands a pen to Representa­tive Bill Huizenga after signing House Joint Resolution 41 in the Oval Office of the White House in Washington. House Speaker Paul Ryan, Representa­tive Sean Duffy and Representa­tive Peter King are...

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