USA TODAY International Edition

Watchdog testifies in probe of his own firing

Ex- State Department IG talks of Pompeo inquiry

- Deirdre Shesgreen

WASHINGTON – A top adviser to Secretary of State Mike Pompeo’s tried to derail an investigat­ion into a controvers­ial $ 8 billion in weapons sales to Saudi Arabia, the agency’s ousted federal watchdog told lawmakers Wednesday.

During closed- door testimony, Steve Linick, who was removed as the State Department’s inspector general last month, told lawmakers Brian Bulatao – one of Pompeo’s closest aides – tried to “bully” the IG on several occasions, according to Democrats who are leading an investigat­ion into Linick’s removal.

“Mr. Linick testified that Mr. Bulatao pressured him to act in ways that Mr. Linick felt were inappropri­ate – including Bulatao telling Linick that the investigat­ion into weapons sales to Saudi Arabia was not a matter for the IG to investigat­e,” Democrats said in a statement after Linick’s closed- door testimony.

Linick told lawmakers his office had requested an interview with Pompeo as part of the inquiry into the Saudi arms sale, but Pompeo refused after the IG insisted that a witness from his office be present. Pompeo gave Linick’s office written answers to questions instead.

The $ 8 billion weapons deal created a bipartisan firestorm in 2019. Pompeo bypassed lawmakers who objected to the sale, citing an “emergency” provision of a 1976 arms control law that allowed the administra­tion to go around Congress. The weapons fueled the horrific war in Yemen, which pitted the Saudis and the United Arab Emirates against rebels backed by Iran.

Linick testified that Bulatao and Marik String – who was named acting State Department legal adviser the same day of Pompeo’s emergency declaratio­n – argued that his office should not pursue an investigat­ion into the arms sale.

“We still have many unanswered questions, and today’s testimony makes it all the more critical that the administra­tion immediatel­y comply with outstandin­g requests for additional witness interviews and documents,” said the chairman of the House Foreign Affairs Committee, Eliot Engel, in a joint statement with other Democrats leading the probe.

The Democrats said Linick also confirmed that his office was investigat­ing allegation­s that Pompeo used a State Department employee to run personal errands for him and his wife, Susan Pompeo.

Democrats have accused Pompeo of seeking Linick’s removal to shield himself from those investigat­ions. Pompeo has rejected that charge and said Linick’s firing was not retaliator­y.

“All we’ve done is simply make sure that in respect to the inspector general that we had an inspector general that was working towards the mission of the United States Department of State and the foreign policy of Donald Trump,” Pompeo said in a Fox News interview that aired Sunday.

At Pompeo’s urging, President Donald Trump’s notified Congress on May 15 of his plan to fire Linick. Trump said then that he had lost confidence in Linick.

Linick’s interview – part of a joint inquiry by the House Foreign Affairs and Oversight Committee and Democrats on the Senate foreign affairs panel – was done remotely because of coronaviru­s restrictio­ns.

According to Democrats, Linick said he was “shocked” when he found out he was being fired. He disputed the administra­tion’s justifications for his removal as “either misplaced or unfounded.”

Linick has spent nearly three decades investigat­ing waste and malfeasanc­e inside federal government agencies, first at the Federal Housing Finance Agency and then at the State Department.

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