Trump adviser joined key party meeting on
Ukraine
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[August 12, 2016]
By Mark Hosenball
WASHINGTON (Reuters) - A foreign policy
adviser to U.S. presidential candidate Donald Trump confirmed his
attendance at a meeting last month during which the Republican Party
agreed to watered-down language in its support of Ukraine.
J. D. Gordon, the adviser who previously served as a Pentagon spokesman,
said that while he was present during the meeting at the Republican
National Convention, he sat at a side table with staff and was not among
the delegates charged with shaping the Ukraine platform.
But one delegate in attendance, Diana Denman, said Gordon told her he
was going to speak with Trump during the debate over the platform's
language on Ukraine, saying she believed Trump's campaign played a
direct role in softening the party's support for Ukraine at a time of
heightened tensions with Russia.
The Trump campaign has denied it played any role in the weakening of the
party's position regarding Ukraine. Gordon called Denman's version of
events "inaccurate."
Stephen Yates, co-chair of the national security subcommittee, confirmed
that Trump campaign members were present at the meeting where Ukraine
language for the RNC platform was discussed. But he said only delegates
participated in the debate and denied the Trump campaign played any role
in softening the Ukraine language.
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The details of the meeting in Cleveland have attracted scrutiny and
raised questions about the Trump campaign's stance toward Russia.
Trump has said he would seek to build a closer relationship with Russian
President Vladimir Putin, praising him as a stronger leader than U.S.
President Barack Obama. In the last month, Trump has also suggested he
might not defend NATO allies if they did not spend more on defense,
appeared to invite Russia to hack the emails of Democratic opponent
Hillary Clinton and suggested he might accept Russia's 2014 annexation
of Crimea from Ukraine.
Denman, a member of the platform committee's national security
subcommittee, said she proposed language that supported "providing
lethal defensive weapons to Ukraine's armed forces and greater
coordination with NATO on defense planning." That phrase was eventually
changed to remove the reference to "lethal defensive weapons."
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Republican U.S. presidential nominee Donald Trump speaks at an
American Renewal Project event at the Orlando Convention Center in
Orlando, Florida, August 11, 2016. REUTERS/Eric Thayer
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In the end, the platform, which serves as a largely symbolic
statement of the party's priorities, criticizes the Obama
administration for encouraging a "resurgent Russia" and supports
continued sanctions on Moscow and "appropriate assistance to the
armed forces of the Ukraine" without specifying what that would
involve.
Yates said Denman could have reintroduced the amendment in the full
committee meeting if she felt strong-armed in subcommittee. "I don't
have particular sympathy for delegates who chose not to avail
themselves of the opportunity in full committee, and then start
spinning yarn about how this came about," he said.
Denman said she stands by her account.
Russia on Thursday announced it would conduct war games in the Black
Sea, a day after Putin accused Ukraine of trying to provoke a
conflict over Crimea.
(Editing by Jonathan Oatis)
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