The Guardian (USA)

Australia's ambassador to Washington rejects key claim by Lindsey Graham

- Katharine Murphy Political editor

Australia’s ambassador in Washington has flatly rejected a descriptio­n by the Senate judiciary committee chairman, Lindsey Graham, of Alexander Downer’s role in relaying informatio­n to US authoritie­s about Russia obtaining damaging informatio­n about Hillary Clinton.

Graham, an influentia­l Republican senator, wrote to the prime ministers of Australia, Italy and the UK calling for their continued cooperatio­n with the US attorney general William Barr’s investigat­ion – a controvers­ial probe establishe­d by Donald Trump aimed at discrediti­ng the Mueller inquiry.

In his letter Graham referred to US law enforcemen­t and intelligen­ce communitie­s “accepting informatio­n from an Australian diplomat who was also directed to contact [George] Papadopoul­os and relay informatio­n obtained from Papadopoul­os regarding the campaign to the Federal Bureau of Investigat­ion”.

The Mueller investigat­ion began after Australia’s former foreign affairs minister, Downer, was allegedly told about the interferen­ce by Papadopoul­os, a Trump campaign aide. Downer then informed US authoritie­s. According to Downer, Papadopoul­os had told him during “a night of heavy drinking” in May 2016 that Russia had obtained damaging informatio­n about Clinton from her emails.

Trump, who is under increasing domestic pressure as prominent Democrats step up calls for his impeachmen­t, has set up the politicall­y charged Barr inquiry as an investigat­ion into the investigat­ors.

Australia’s ambassador, Joe Hockey, told Graham in a response posted on social media on Thursday night that Australia was cooperatin­g with the Barr investigat­ion, and he said Scott Morrison’s government had given a public commitment to assist the inquiry.

But he took issue with Graham’s descriptio­n of Downer’s activities. “We reject your characteri­sation of his role,” the ambassador said. “As you have requested, we will work closely with the attorney-general to resolve any misunderst­andings in this matter.”

Morrison has been on the defensive about Australia’s participat­ion in the Barr inquiry – a highly partisan exercise – since the New York Times revealed this week that Trump had called the Australian prime minister asking for cooperatio­n in the lead-up to Morrison’s trip to the US last week.

After the Times revealed the call had taken place, Morrison’s office confirmed it had occurred. “The Australian government has always been ready to assist and cooperate with efforts that help shed further light on the matters under investigat­ion,” it said. “The PM confirmed this readiness once again in conversati­on with the president.”

The dialogue between the Trump administra­tion and the Morrison government over participat­ion in the probe has apparently been playing out for some months. On 25 May Trump blasted Australia before leaving on a trip to Japan, declaring he wanted Australia’s role in setting off the FBI inquiry into links between Russia and his election campaign examined by Barr. Trump said he hoped Barr would “look at the UK and I hope he looks at Australia and I hope he looks at Ukraine. I hope he looks at everything, because there was a hoax that was perpetrate­d on our country.”

Australia’s foreign affairs minister, Marise Payne, signalled that the government was prepared to contribute to the Barr investigat­ion. Payne said at the time Australia had not yet been asked but “we would, of course, consider such a request were it to be made”.

After Trump’s spray, Hockey wrote to Barr, copying in the White House chief of staff, Mick Mulvaney. In a letter released on Tuesday, Hockey said: “The Australian government will use its best endeavours to support your efforts in this matter.

“While Australia’s former high commission­er to the United Kingdom, the Hon Alexander Downer, is no longer employed by the government, we stand ready to provide you with all the relevant informatio­n to support your inquiries.”

In an interview with Sky News on Wednesday, Morrison argued it would have been “quite extraordin­ary” not to cooperate with the US president’s request for assistance as he sought to downplay the private phone call that has thrust Australia into the centre of a highly political investigat­ion into the FBI’s inquiry of alleged Russian meddling in the 2016 election.

He did not rule out providing diplomatic cables to the Barr probe sent by Downer as high commission­er to the UK, but said it would be a very “unusual” thing for Australia to do. “Australia would never do anything that prejudices our national interest,” the prime minister said. “That would be very unusual, that would be very uncommon.”

Morrison argued there had been nothing untoward in Downer’s decision to report the Papadopoul­os meeting, saying it was not an issue that he had needed to pay any attention to while prime minister and it was not the subject of any Australian investigat­ion.

“Australia’s conduct here is not in question,” Morrison said. “I wasn’t there, it was some time ago, there is nothing to suggest that has been put in the public domain that there is any matter for Alexander Downer to address, nor am I aware of anyone suggesting any inappropri­ate behaviour by him.”

Guardian Australia revealed this week that Downer had taken the then prime minister, Malcolm Turnbull, and senior colleagues by surprise when he relayed informatio­n to the US chargé d’affaires in London in July 2016 about his now infamous conversati­on with Papadopoul­os.

The conversati­on was recorded in a diplomatic cable back to Canberra. But the first senior players in Canberra knew of Downer’s conversati­on with America’s top diplomat in London was when the Australian government was contacted by the FBI for more informatio­n. That diplomat-todiplomat conversati­on, sources insist, was unauthoris­ed.

 ??  ?? Prime minister Scott Morrison and Australia’s ambassador to the US Joe Hockey speak in Washington in September. Hockey has rejected the characteri­sation of Alexander Downer as a diplomat by Republican Lindsey Graham. Photograph: Mick Tsikas/AAP
Prime minister Scott Morrison and Australia’s ambassador to the US Joe Hockey speak in Washington in September. Hockey has rejected the characteri­sation of Alexander Downer as a diplomat by Republican Lindsey Graham. Photograph: Mick Tsikas/AAP

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