Hartford Courant (Sunday)

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Ouster of ambassador to Ukraine emerging as a key event in whistleblo­wer’s complaint

- By Ben Fox and Matthew Lee

WASHINGTON — Months before the call that set off an impeachmen­t inquiry, many in the diplomatic community were alarmed by the Trump administra­tion’s abrupt removal of a career diplomat from her post as ambassador to Ukraine.

The ambassador’s ouster, and the campaign against her that preceded it, are now emerging as a key sequence of events behind a whistleblo­wer’s complaint alleging that the president pressured a foreign country to investigat­e his political rival.

In a letter Friday to Secretary of State Mike Pompeo, Sen. Bob Menendez demanded answers about the ouster of Ambassador Marie Yovanovitc­h.

“Why was the U.S. ambassador to Ukraine recalled in May 2019?” the Democratic senator wrote in a list of questions about what he called the “perversion of U.S. foreign policy” outlined by the whistleblo­wer. “Did you approve that decision?”

Yovanovitc­h is one of five State Department officials who are to be deposed by the House intelligen­ce, foreign affairs and oversight committees about the whistleblo­wer’s complaint. The committees also issued a subpoena for documents from Pompeo.

In addition to Yovanovitc­h, those to be deposed include U.S. special envoy for Ukraine Kurt Volker and U.S. Ambassador to the European Union Gordon Sondland.

Volker, a former U.S. ambassador to NATO caught in the middle of the whistleblo­wer complaint, resigned from his post Friday as special envoy to the Eastern European nation.

A U.S. official said Volker told Pompeo on Friday of his decision to leave the job, following disclosure­s that he had connected Trump’s personal lawyer Rudy Giuliani with Ukrainian officials to investigat­e former Vice President Joe Biden and his son Hunter.

Meanwhile, the removal of Yovanovitc­h gained little attention at the time it occurred, when many in Washington were preoccupie­d with escalating tensions with Iran.

State Department officials said she was ending her term a few months ahead of a departure that had been scheduled for July. She kept quiet and moved back to Washington, remaining a diplomat but with a university fellowship and no fixed State Department assignment.

But, in private, many in the diplomatic community in the U.S. and around the world were appalled, believing she had been improperly removed from a sensitive post at a critical moment, as a new president without any previous political experience was taking office in a struggling country in dire need of American economic and military aid in an ongoing fight against Russiaback­ed separatist­s.

President Donald Trump said in his July 25 phone call with Ukrainian President Volodymyr Zelenskiy that Yovanovitc­h was “bad news” and that she is “going to go through some things,” according to the memo of the call released last week by the White House.

But that characteri­zation of her and her performanc­e was contradict­ed by five current and former officials who spoke to The Associated Press.

The officials described Yovanovitc­h as a respected and highly skilled diplomat who was carrying out two main missions on behalf of the administra­tion: pressing the Ukrainian government to address long-standing U.S. concerns about public corruption in the East European nation and building support for Ukraine’s effort to fight the separatist­s.

It was only because elements of the Ukrainian government wanted her to ease up on pressing for investigat­ions into corruption — and expected her to do so because they perceived Trump would care less about the issue — that they began a campaign against her, said the current and former officials, who spoke on condition of anonymity.

That campaign gained steam with the arrival on of Giuliani.

At first, the officials said, Pompeo resisted the demands for her recall and argued she should complete her tour in Kyiv.

Pompeo “was opposed to her early removal,” one of the current officials said. However, when it became clear that opposition to her was not receding, Pompeo arranged for “a soft landing” for her in Washington, according to the official.

Yovanovitc­h, a fluent Russian speaker, had previously served as ambassador to Kyrgyzstan and Armenia and had been deputy chief of mission at the embassy in the Ukraine from 2001 to 2004. The removal of the experience­d diplomat, and Trump’s cryptic but apparently threatenin­g comments about her, prompted protests last week from the diplomatic community.

“The threatenin­g tone of this statement is deeply troubling,” the American Academy of Diplomacy said of Trump’s comments.

The former and current officials said she was likely dismayed by the attention on her, which included a May 2018 letter from Rep. Pete Sessions, a Texas Republican who lost his bid for reelection in November, to Pompeo seeking her dismissal because he had “notice of concrete evidence” that she had “spoken privately and repeatedly about her disdain for the current Administra­tion.”

Sessions was among GOP politician­s and a Trumpaffil­iated political action committee who received campaign donations in 2018 from Soviet-born business partners Lev Parnas and Igor Fruman. Sessions received $5,400 of the nearly $500,000 given by the men, and met with one of them. They have been working with Giuliani on his investigat­ion of Hunter Biden, who served on the board of an energy company in Ukraine.

Ukrainian media have reported that the business partners arranged a January meeting in New York between Giulia ni and Ukraine’s former prosecutor general, Yuri Lutsenko.

Over the next several months, a series of articles appeared criticizin­g the ambassador.

Donald Trump Jr. referred to her and other ambassador­s as “jokers” on Twitter and tweeted a link to one piece critical of her. Lutsenko then gave an interview alleging that Yovanovitc­h, who had been critical of the prosecutor in the past, had given him a “do not prosecute” list of people who should not be pursued, according to the whistleblo­wer complaint. He publicly retracted that claim April 17.

But the ambassador would be out of her position by the end of the next month.

As the whistleblo­wer noted: “I learned from U.S. officials with direct knowledge of the situation that Ambassador Yovanovitc­h had been suddenly recalled to Washington by senior State Department officials for ‘consultati­ons’ and would most likely be removed from her position.”

 ?? MIKHAIL PALINCHAK/PRESIDENTI­AL PRESS SERVICE POOL PHOTO ?? Many in the diplomatic community were alarmed by the removal of Marie Yovanovitc­h.
MIKHAIL PALINCHAK/PRESIDENTI­AL PRESS SERVICE POOL PHOTO Many in the diplomatic community were alarmed by the removal of Marie Yovanovitc­h.

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