Chicago Sun-Times

U.S. DIPLOMAT: TRUMP LINKED UKRAINE AID TO PROBE DEMAND

Lawmakers stunned, see ‘quid pro quo’

- BY LISA MASCARO, MARY CLARE JALONICK AND MATT LEE

WASHINGTON — A top U.S. diplomat testified Tuesday that President Donald Trump was holding back military aid for Ukraine unless the country agreed to investigat­e Democrats and a company linked to Joe Biden’s family, providing lawmakers with a detailed new account of the quid pro quo central to the impeachmen­t probe.

In a lengthy opening statement to House investigat­ors obtained The Associated Press, William Taylor described Trump’s demand that “everything” President Volodymyr Zelensky wanted, including vital aid to counter Russia, hinged on making a public vow that Ukraine would investigat­e Democrats going back to the 2016 U.S. election as well as a company linked to the family of Trump’s potential 2020 Democratic rival.

Taylor testified that what he discovered in Kiev was the Trump administra­tion’s “irregular” back channel to foreign policy led by the president’s personal lawyer, Rudy Giuliani, and “ultimately alarming circumstan­ces” that threatened to erode the United States’ relationsh­ip with a budding Eastern European ally facing Russian aggression.

In a date-by-date account, detailed across several pages, the seasoned diplomat who came out of retirement to take over as charge d’affaires at the embassy in Ukraine details his mounting concern as he realized Trump was trying to put the newly elected president of the young democracy “in a public box.”

“I sensed something odd,” he testified, describing a trio of Trump officials planning a call with Zelensky, including one, Ambassador Gordon Sondland, who wanted to make sure “no one was transcribi­ng or monitoring” it.

Lawmakers who emerged after nearly 10 hours of the private deposition were stunned at Taylor’s account, which some Democrats said establishe­d a “direct line” to the quid pro quo at the center of the impeachmen­t probe.

“It was shocking,” said Rep. Karen Bass, a California Democrat. “It was very clear that it was required — if you want the assistance, you have to make a public statement.”

Rep. Dina Titus, a Democrat from Nevada, said, “You can see how damning this is.”

Titus said, “This certainly makes it pretty clear what was going on. And it was a quid pro quo.”

The account reaches to the highest levels of the administra­tion, drawing in Vice President Mike Pence and Trump’s acting chief of staff, Mick Mulvaney.

It also lays bare the struggle between Trump’s former national security adviser John Bolton and those who a previous State Department witness described as the “three amigos” — Sondland, Energy Secretary Rick Perry and special envoy Kurt Volker — who were involved in the alternativ­e Ukraine policy vis-a-vis Russia.

“President Trump has done nothing wrong,” said White House press secretary Stephanie Grisham. “This is a coordinate­d smear campaign from far-left lawmakers and radical unelected bureaucrat­s waging war on the Constituti­on. There was no quid pro quo.”

 ?? ANDREW HARNIK/AP ?? Former Ambassador William Taylor leaves a closed-door meeting after testifying Tuesday.
ANDREW HARNIK/AP Former Ambassador William Taylor leaves a closed-door meeting after testifying Tuesday.

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