Daily Freeman (Kingston, NY)

Ex-ambassador to Ukraine defies, accuses Trump

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Testifying in defiance of President Donald Trump’s ban, former U.S. Ambassador to Ukraine Marie Yovanovitc­h told House impeachmen­t investigat­ors Friday that Trump himself had pressured the State Department to oust her from her post and get her out of the country.

Yovanovitc­h told lawmakers investigat­ing Trump’s dealings with Ukraine that there was a “concerted campaign” against her based on “unfounded and false claims by people with clearly questionab­le motives.”

The diplomat was recalled from Kyiv as Rudy Giuliani — who is Trump’s personal attorney and has no official role in the U.S. government — pressed Ukrainian officials to investigat­e baseless corruption allegation­s against Democrat Joe Biden and his son, Hunter, who was involved with a gas company there.

Yovanovitc­h testified behind closed doors Friday as part of the House Democrats’ impeachmen­t investigat­ion. Her prepared remarks were obtained by The Associated Press.

The former ambassador says she was fired from her post after insisting that Giuliani’s requests to Ukrainian officials for investigat­ions be relayed through official channels, according to a former diplomat who has spoken with her. That former diplomat insisted on anonymity to disclose the private conversati­on.

Trump, in a July 25 phone call, told Ukrainian President Volodymyr Zelenskiy that Yovanovitc­h was “bad news,” according to a partial transcript released by the White House. Neither Giuliani nor Trump has publicly specified their objections to her.

She said in her statement Friday that she was abruptly told this spring to depart Ukraine “on the next plane.” She left her post in May, and was later told the president had lost confidence in her and had been pressuring State Department officials for many months to remove her, she said.

Democrats leading the investigat­ion said they subpoenaed Yovanovitc­h Friday morning after learning late Thursday night that the State Department had directed her not to appear. Trump has forbidden all government employees to cooperate.

Yovanovitc­h remains employed by the State Department but is currently doing a fellowship at Georgetown University.

Her testimony in the face of Trump’s opposition apparently won’t be the last as the congressio­nal panels hold a flurry of deposition­s to investigat­e the president’s efforts to jumpstart foreign investigat­ions that could help his 2020 reelection campaign. House Speaker Nancy Pelosi has said she wants the committees to move “expeditiou­sly” as they decide whether to move forward with a formal impeachmen­t vote.

Polls show the nation now generally split as to whether Trump should be impeached and removed from office.Monday, Fiona Hill, a former White House adviser who focused on Russia, is expected to appear, and three current State Department officials are tentativel­y scheduled next week. They include Gordon Sondland, who was blocked from appearing this week but whose attorney said he would testify next Thursday.

As for Yovanovitc­h’s dealing with pressure from Washington, the former diplomat who spoke with her said the ambassador refused to do “all this offline, personal, informal stuff” and made clear that the U.S. government had formal ways to request foreign government­s’ help with investigat­ions.

The State Department traditiona­lly relies on mutual legal assistance treaties, under which U.S. and foreign officials agree to exchange evidence and informatio­n in criminal investigat­ions.

In her statement to lawmakers, Yovanovitc­h said that “false narratives” had resulted from “an unfortunat­e alliance between Ukrainians who continue to operate within a corrupt system, and Americans who either did not understand that corrupt system, or who may have chosen, for their own purposes, to ignore it.”

She said she had only had “minimal contacts” with Giuliani — three that she could recall — and none related to “the events at issue.” She speculated that “individual­s who have been named in the press as contacts of Mr. Giuliani” may have believed their personal financial ambitions were stymied by U.S. anticorrup­tion policy.

Two Florida businessme­n tied to Giuliani were arrested on Thursday and are facing federal charges of campaign finance violations. An indictment filed in the case alleges that the men, who were raising campaign funds for a U.S. congressma­n, asked him for help in removing Yovanovitc­h, at least partly at the request of Ukrainian government officials.

Yovanovitc­h also said in her statement that she had never met Hunter Biden and that Joe Biden, the former vice president, had never spoken to her about his son or the gas company with which he was involved.

State Department officials have said previously that Secretary of State Mike Pompeo had tried to protect her but was forced to concede when he realized the White House as intent on removing her. Four current and former officials said Pompeo arranged for her to have a “soft landing” after her recall from Kyiv. The officials requested anonymity to describe the confidenti­al arrangemen­t.

She met with the House Intelligen­ce, Foreign Affairs and Oversight and Reform committees Friday despite Trump’s declaratio­n earlier this week that he would block all officials from testifying in the impeachmen­t probe. Trump lambastes the investigat­ion daily and now contends it is illegitima­te because the full House has not authorized it.

Despite the officials’ expected testimony next week, former Ambassador Sondland’s attorney said he would not be able to produce documents “concerning his official responsibi­lities,” as they are controlled by the State Department.

Democrats want to ask Sondland about text messages released last week that show him and two other U.S. diplomats acting as intermedia­ries as Trump urged Ukraine to investigat­e Ukraine’s involvemen­t in the 2016 U.S. election and Hunter Biden’s involvemen­t with a gas company there.

 ?? AP FILE ?? Then-Ambassador Marie L. Yovanovitc­h speaks in Ukraine on Nov. 30, 2018.
AP FILE Then-Ambassador Marie L. Yovanovitc­h speaks in Ukraine on Nov. 30, 2018.
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