The Morning Journal (Lorain, OH)

Ex-official: Trump’s past memos also concealed

- By Zeke Miller

A former White House official says memos detailing President Trump’s calls with foreign leaders have been restricted.

WASHINGTON >> The White House severely restricted distributi­on of memos detailing President Donald Trump’s calls with foreign leaders, including Russia’s Vladimir Putin and Saudi Arabia’s Mohammed bin Salman, after embarrassi­ng leaks of his conversati­ons early in his tenure, a former White House official said.

The White House’s handling of Trump’s calls with foreign leaders is at the heart of House Democrats’ impeachmen­t inquiry. A whistleblo­wer alleges the White House tried to “lock down” Trump’s July 25 phone call with Ukraine’s new president because officials were worried about Trump’s request for help investigat­ing Trump’s Democratic rival Joe Biden. The anonymous whistleblo­wer alleges the White House also tried to cover up the content of other calls by moving memos onto a highly classified computer system.

The former White House official acknowledg­ed that other calls were concealed, while casting the decision as part of an effort to minimize leaks, not an attempt to hide improper discussion­s. The former official was not authorized to discuss the classifica­tion system publicly and spoke on condition of anonymity.

The White House was beset by leaks of highly sensitive informatio­n in the early days of Trump’s presidency. Trump was particular­ly enraged by leaks that disclosed tough conversati­ons with the leader of Mexico on paying for a border wall and with Australia on abiding by an Obama administra­tion deal on asylum-seekers.

After those disclosure­s, a White House adviser raised the possibilit­y of lie detector tests for the small number of people in the West Wing and elsewhere with access to transcript­s of Trump’s phone calls.

In previous administra­tions, rough transcript­s of presidenti­al phone calls were kept private, but not housed on the highly classified computer system unless sensitive national security informatio­n was discussed. Summaries of the calls were distribute­d to relevant officials in the White House, the State Department and other agencies. The Trump administra­tion’s process curtailed the number of people who had access. The question is now why.

The whistleblo­wer’s complaint paints a picture of a White House scrambling to conceal damaging informatio­n about the president, including the July call in which he pressed Ukraine’s leader for help investigat­ing Biden.

The White House released a rough transcript of the call this past week in which Trump repeatedly says Attorney General William Barr and his personal lawyer Rudy Giuliani could help with that effort. The call came days after Trump ordered a freeze to some military assistance for Ukraine.

The contents of the restricted calls with Putin and bin Salman are unknown. But Trump’s relationsh­ip with both leaders has been controvers­ial, given Russia’s attack on the 2016 U.S. election on Trump’s behalf and Saudi Arabia’s human rights violations, including the murder of a Washington Post journalist.

The former official noted that even some of Trump’s calls with U.S. allies were restricted due to the classified matters that arise during the discussion­s.

CNN first reported on the White House effort to conceal those calls.

Trump has repeatedly sought to discredit the whistleblo­wer in recent days, accusing the anonymous CIA officer of having a political motivation. His advisers, however, have confirmed some details of the whistleblo­wer’s complaint, but offered different explanatio­ns for the White House’s actions.

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 ?? CAROLYN KASTER — THE ASSOCIATED PRESS ?? President Donald Trump speaks at the Hispanic Heritage Month Reception in the East Room of the White House in Washington, Friday.
CAROLYN KASTER — THE ASSOCIATED PRESS President Donald Trump speaks at the Hispanic Heritage Month Reception in the East Room of the White House in Washington, Friday.

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