The Saratogian (Saratoga, NY)

Are Bill Taylor’s notebooks Trump’s Nixon tapes?

- Dana Milbank Columnist Follow Dana Milbank on Twitter, @Milbank.

President Richard Nixon was undone by his secret White House tapes. Could President Trump be unraveled by Bill Taylor’s notebooks?

Earlier this week, House Democrats announced that their leadoff witness at the start of public impeachmen­t hearings next week will be one William Brockenbro­ugh Taylor Jr., the top U.S. diplomat in Ukraine. At the same time, the House Intelligen­ce Committee revealed why Democrats believe Taylor will be a formidable witness: He has a nearly hour-by-hour account of developmen­ts in the Ukraine scandal.

In the transcript, released Wednesday, of his 10-hour, closeddoor deposition, Taylor explained how he kept meticulous notes of his every interactio­n since the Trump administra­tion brought him back from retirement earlier this year to serve in Ukraine.

“I keep a little notebook where I take notes on conversati­ons, in particular when I’m not in the office, so, in meetings with Ukrainian officials or when I’m out and I get a phone call I can keep notes,” he testified, according to the now-public transcript. He also kept “handwritte­n notes that I take on a small, little spiral notebook in my office of phone calls that take place in my office.”

He also kept the encrypted WhatsApp messages he exchanged with Gordon Sondland, Kurt Volker, Rudy Giuliani and others at the center of the scandal. Together, they paint a near-comprehens­ive picture of the Ukraine imbroglio, from the ouster of the former ambassador to the attempts to condition U.S. aid and a presidenti­al meeting on an announceme­nt by the Ukrainian president that his country would investigat­e Joe Biden’s son and the Democrats.

Trump administra­tion officials have refused to turn over documents to the impeachmen­t inquiry. They have persuaded a dozen top officials to defy subpoenas for their testimony. But they couldn’t do anything about Bill Taylor’s notes. His scribbles and texts provided the road map that congressio­nal investigat­ors used to confirm Taylor’s account with other central participan­ts.

As the deposition transcript reveals, Taylor’s notes show that White House officials knew well in advance of the president’s now-infamous call with Ukraine’s president that their actions could be problemati­c. Taylor recounted how Sondland, before a June call with the Ukrainian president, got the State Department not to allow stenograph­ers on the call, as was typical.

You won’t hear anybody say, “read the transcript!” for that one.

Sondland, the U.S. ambassador to the European Union, also reschedule­d the call time but didn’t tell diplomats who were supposed to be on the line, Taylor testified.

Taylor described the July 18 video conference when a disembodie­d voice of a budget official said U.S. aid to Ukraine had been suspended and “the directive had come from the president.” It became his “clear understand­ing,” Taylor testified, that unless the Ukrainian president pursued Trump’s politicall­y motivated investigat­ions, he wouldn’t get the military aid or a presidenti­al audience.

Taylor recalled that Ukrainian officials “were just desperate” upon learning the aid was held up. He said the Ukrainians understood they were being presented with a “condition” — that is, a quid pro quo — for a meeting with Trump. He recalled the ire of national security adviser John Bolton and others when they realized what Giuliani’s crew was doing.

Taylor is a credible witness by virtue of his résumé: West Point. Infantry officer with the 101st Airborne in Vietnam. A diplomat under every administra­tion since Ronald Reagan’s. He didn’t want the job when Trump officials recruited him: “I was concerned that there was … a snake pit in Kyiv and a snake pit here.”

But he’s also effective because he wrestles the snakes with skill.

From the first moments of his deposition, Republican­s interrupte­d with procedural complaints — “This whole hearing is out of order,” proclaimed Rep. Chip Roy, R-Tex. — then tried to probe him on Burisma, the Ukrainian firm that Hunter Biden advised.

Wasn’t Burisma “a shady organizati­on”?

“I don’t want to say more than I know.”

Was Biden “tapped for the board because his dad was the vice president”? “I’m here as a fact witness.” He further explained that while it is acceptable for the United States to ask for help from Ukraine on possible violations of U.S. law, it’s “improper” to pressure another country to investigat­e violations of its own law — and extraordin­ary to insist that they investigat­e a specific company.

But that is what Trump did with Giuliani’s shadow — and shadowy — operation. They tried to conceal what they were doing in advance, cover it up later and stiffarm the congressio­nal investigat­ion. But it’s all right there, in Bill Taylor’s little notebooks.

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