The Guardian (USA)

Senate aide investigat­ed over supplying Ukraine forces with sniper gear – report

- Richard Luscombe

A senior staffer who advises the US Senate on Russia policy is under investigat­ion for making trips to Ukraine in military uniform and supplying the country’s armed forces with privately donated sniper equipment, it was reported on Monday.

The actions of Kyle Parker, chief of staff to the Helsinki commission that informs senators on issues of European security, might have crossed legal and ethical grounds that could make him an unregister­ed foreign agent, according to the New York Times, which reviewed a confidenti­al report by the commission’s director and general counsel.

Parker “traveled Ukraine’s frontlines wearing camouflage and Ukrainian military insignia and had hired a Ukrainian official for a US government fellowship over the objections of congressio­nal ethics and security officials”, the newspaper said.

An independen­t law firm is investigat­ing the allegation­s, and undertakin­g what the Times said was a broad investigat­ion into conduct by staff of the commission, which has taken a strongly pro-Ukrainian stance as the country defends itself against the invasion by Russia.

The report, written by Helsinki commission executive director, Steven Schrage, and counsel Michael Geffroy, said Parker was “wittingly or unwittingl­y being targeted and exploited by a foreign intelligen­ce service”, raising unidentifi­ed “counterint­elligence issues” that needed to be reported to the FBI.

The Times said it was not known if federal law enforcemen­t had been made aware. But it said Parker’s representa­tives insisted he had done nothing wrong and was instead the victim

of retaliatio­n by the report’s authors for making allegation­s of misconduct against them.

The Helsinki commission’s chairperso­n, South Carolina Republican congressma­n Joe Wilson, wanted Parker fired after he read the report, the Times said. “I urgently recommend you secure his immediate resignatio­n or terminatio­n,” Wilson wrote to his co-chairperso­n, the Maryland Democrat Benjamin Cardin, citing “serious alleged improper acts involving Ukrainian and other foreign individual­s”.

Parker is a longtime adviser to the commission and has traveled to Ukraine at least seven times since Russia invaded in February 2022, the Times said. He has delivered numerous pro-Ukraine lectures, podcasts and social media posts, and he describes himself as “the most well-traveled US official in Ukraine since” the war began, according to his online biography.

On one such visit, the report said, he handed over to Ukraine’s military about $30,000 of sniper’s range finders and ballistic wind gauges he had bought on Amazon in the US using money raised by a relative in Ukraine.

In a written response to the newspaper’s questions, a representa­tive for Parker said none of his trips were official visits – even though the commission posted a photograph of him in Kherson – and that he never wore military insignia while dressed in armystyle camouflage.

A video seen by the Times of Parker cutting up and urinating on a Russian hat was “a personal expression of rage and grief” at Russia’s brutality in Ukraine, the representa­tive said.

 ?? Photograph: Evgeniy Maloletka/AP ?? Ukrainian marines on the outskirts of Avdiivka, Ukraine, on 19 June 2023.
Photograph: Evgeniy Maloletka/AP Ukrainian marines on the outskirts of Avdiivka, Ukraine, on 19 June 2023.

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