U.S. lawmakers push for answers on Trump
team's Russia ties
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[February 16, 2017]
By Steve Holland and Patricia Zengerle
WASHINGTON (Reuters) - A crisis over the
relationship between President Donald Trump's aides and Russia deepened
on Wednesday as a growing number of Trump's fellow Republicans demanded
expanded congressional inquiries into the matter.
Trump sought to focus attention on what he called criminal intelligence
leaks about his ousted national security adviser, Michael Flynn.
Trump forced Flynn out on Monday after disclosures he had discussed U.S.
sanctions on Russia with the Russian ambassador to the United States
before Trump took office, and that he later misled Vice President Mike
Pence about the conversations.
The drama of Flynn's departure was the latest in a series of White House
missteps and controversies since the Republican president was sworn in
on Jan. 20.
At a news conference with Israeli Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu on
Wednesday, Trump said Flynn, a retired U.S. Army lieutenant general, was
a "wonderful man" who had been mistreated by the news media.
But Republican Trump critics including Senators John McCain and Lindsey
Graham voiced fresh consternation. Adding to the pressure were comments
by Senate Foreign Relations Committee Chairman Bob Corker, who has been
a Trump supporter.
Corker said the Russia issue was threatening Trump's agenda on foreign
affairs and domestic matters like healthcare and tax policy. He
questioned whether the White House was able to stabilize itself and said
Flynn should testify before Congress.
"Let's get everything out as quickly as possible on this Russia issue,"
Corker told MSNBC's "Morning Joe" program. "Maybe there's a problem that
obviously goes much deeper than what we now suspect."
Democrats, doubting Trump's Justice Department or the Republican-led
Congress will pursue the matter vigorously, have demanded an independent
investigation of possible illegal communications between Flynn and the
Russian government and any efforts by Flynn or other White House
officials to conceal wrongdoing.
CALLS FOR RECUSAL
The most powerful Democrat in the Senate, Chuck Schumer, said Attorney
General Jeff Sessions, a close ally of Trump, must recuse himself from
any investigation.
The Republican and Democratic leaders of the U.S. Senate Judiciary
Committee asked Sessions and FBI Director James Comey on Wednesday to
send the committee documents and provide a briefing on Flynn's
resignation.
Citing reports that both the Federal Bureau of Investigation and Justice
Department were involved in events leading to Flynn's departure,
Senators Chuck Grassley and Dianne Feinstein said they raised
"substantial questions" about Flynn's discussion with Russian officials.
Graham called for a broader bipartisan congressional investigation to be
conducted by a newly formed special committee rather than existing
committees, if it turns out Trump's presidential campaign communicated
with the Russians.
But the top Republicans in the Senate and House of Representatives have
insisted the matter be investigated by existing Republican-led
committees.
The Senate and House Intelligence Committees and a subcommittee of the
Senate Judiciary committee have announced they launched investigations
into alleged Russian efforts to influence the election through computer
hacking.
U.S. intelligence agencies previously concluded that Russia hacked and
leaked Democratic emails during the presidential campaign as part of
efforts to tilt the vote in the Nov. 8 election in Trump's favor.
Congressional inquiries into alleged Russian interference in the U.S.
elections are gaining momentum as Capitol Hill investigators press
intelligence and law enforcement agencies for access to classified
documents.
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President Donald Trump speaks during a listening session with the
Retail Industry Leaders Association and member company CEOs in the
Rosevelt Room of the White House in Washington, U.S., February 15,
2017. REUTERS/Joshua Roberts
The FBI and several U.S. intelligence agencies are investigating
Russian espionage operations in the United States. They are also
looking at contacts in Russia between Russian intelligence officers
or others with ties to President Vladimir Putin's government and
people connected to Trump or his campaign.
The FBI recently questioned Flynn about his telephone contacts with
the Russian ambassador in Washington. People familiar with the
agency's multiple probes said there was no evidence so far of
pre-election collusion between Russians and Trump's campaign, or any
evidence of criminal activity by Flynn or anyone else connected to
Trump.
Some experts expressed concern the White House could curtail or
divert probes into Flynn and Russian involvement in the election
unless Congress becomes more aggressive by holding hearings and
appointing an independent commission or special prosecutor into
whether Trump's team violated federal laws in their contacts with
Russia.
Intelligence agencies now overseen by Trump may not be ideally
suited to the job, they added.
"It's not, at the end of the day, the job of the intelligence
community to regulate the White House - and it shouldn't be," said
Stephen Vladeck, a University of Texas law professor who focuses on
constitutional law and national security.
'VERY UN-AMERICAN'
In Twitter posts on Wednesday, Trump called the reported Russian
connection with his campaign team nonsense and said the leaks were
the "real scandal."
From early on in his White House bid, Trump said he would like
improved relations with Putin, a stance criticized by Democrats and
those Republicans concerned about Washington softening its stance
after Russia's annexation of Crimea from Ukraine and aggression in
Syria.
Only a few Republican lawmakers have supported even the idea of
extending any investigation to cover actions by Trump's team in the
weeks after the election, when Flynn made his calls.
Some Republicans, including House Intelligence Committee Chairman
Devin Nunes, are calling for investigations into leaks to the news
media of conversations between Flynn and Russia's ambassador in
Washington.
The Trump administration has offered Flynn's former job to U.S. Navy
Vice Admiral Robert Harward, said two U.S. officials familiar with
the matter. It was not immediately clear if Harward, a former deputy
commander of U.S. Central Command, had accepted the offer, according
to sources.
(Additional reporting by Rick Cowan, Mohammad Zargham, Susan
Cornwell, Susan Heavey, Julia Edwards Ainsley, Doina Chiacu, Julia
Harte and Mark Hosenball; Writing by Will Dunham and Lisa Lambert;
Editing by Frances Kerry and Peter Cooney)
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