'Can I actually say something?'
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[November 22, 2019]
By Patricia Zengerle and Doina Chiacu
WASHINGTON (Reuters) - A British-born U.S.
national security expert never lost her cool during hours parrying
heated questions from the House of Representatives Intelligence
Committee on Thursday, and emerged as the latest star of the
congressional impeachment inquiry.
Fiona Hill, who resigned in July after 2 -1/2 years as the White House’s
top expert on Russia and Europe, scored point after point during more
than five hours of close questioning, calmly absorbing criticism from
Republican committee members and at times making the chamber's audience
laugh.
"Can I actually say something?" she eventually asked in her
north-eastern English accent after a speech from Representative Brad
Wenstrup, an ardent defender of President Donald Trump who was chiding
her for her opening statement faulting those who push a false narrative
that Ukraine, not Russia, sought to meddle in the 2016 election.
Wenstrup, Hill noted, was the third congressman in a row who had used up
their allotted five minute question period without asking her a question
during the proceedings, the final public hearing scheduled by Democratic
lawmakers leading the historic inquiry into Trump's Ukraine dealings.
The lawmakers are looking into whether Trump asked Ukraine to
investigate political rival Joe Biden in return for a White House
meeting or the release of U.S. security aid.
Later, Democratic Representative Jackie Speier asked about a story often
cited in profiles of Hill as an indicator of her strength of character:
When she was a girl, a boy set her hair on fire during a test. She put
the fire out with her bare hands, and finished the test.
"It is a true story ... It's one of the stories I occasionally tell
because it had some very unfortunate consequences. Afterwards my mother
gave me a bowl haircut," she said, to laughter in the hearing room.
"So for the school photograph later in that week I looked like Richard
the Third."
Hill, 54, has decades of expertise on Russia and Europe. She was an
intelligence analyst under Republican President George W. Bush and
Democrat Barack Obama from 2006 to 2009, and joined the Trump
administration in 2017.
On Thursday, she urged lawmakers not to promote "politically driven
falsehoods" that cast doubt on Russia's election interference, saying:
"We must not let domestic politics stop us from defending ourselves
against the foreign powers who truly wish us harm."
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Fiona Hill, former senior director for Europe and Russia on the
National Security Council, returns after a recess break at a House
Intelligence Committee hearing as part of the impeachment inquiry
into U.S. President Donald Trump on Capitol Hill in Washington,
U.S., November 21, 2019. REUTERS/Loren Elliott
The notion that Ukraine interfered in 2016 was one of two issues
that Trump urged Ukrainian President Volodymyr Zelenskiy to
investigate in a July 25 phone call that is at the heart of the
impeachment inquiry.
Hill stressed that she had come to testify to the committee without
an agenda, to describe what had happened.
"I have no interest in advancing the outcome of your inquiry in any
particular direction, except toward the truth," she said.
At one point in the proceedings, a lawmaker asked her about the
testimony of another witness who had described Hill as having at one
point become irritated with Gordon Sondland - the U.S. ambassador to
the European Union who played a central role in the U.S. effort to
get Ukraine to open investigations.
Hill noted that women's justified anger is often ignored, and said
she understood why Sondland had not often communicated well, given
what she learned later about his involvement in an "irregular"
policy channel.
"I had not put my finger on that at the moment, but I was irritated
with him and angry with him that he wasn't fully coordinating. And I
did say to him, 'Ambassador Sondland, Gordon, I think this is also
going to blow up,'" she said.
"And here we are," she added.
(Reporting by Patricia Zengerle and Doina Chiacu; additional
reporting by Susan Cornwell; writing by Patricia Zengerle; editing
by Richard Valdmanis and Grant McCool)
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