U.S. diplomat thought it was 'crazy' to withhold Ukraine aid: texts
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[October 04, 2019]
By Patricia Zengerle
WASHINGTON (Reuters) - A top U.S. diplomat
in Ukraine thought it was "crazy" to withhold military aid for the
country as it confronted Russian aggression, according to evidence
presented on Thursday in an impeachment probe of President Donald Trump.
Trump's former special representative for Ukraine negotiations, Kurt
Volker, testified on Thursday for more than eight hours to members of
the U.S. House of Representatives and staff of the House Foreign
Affairs, Intelligence and Oversight Committees.
Volker resigned last week after he was named in a whistleblower
complaint about the Trump administration and Ukraine the prompted the
House's Democratic leader, Speaker Nancy Pelosi, to announce the start
of a formal impeachment inquiry.
As part of Thursday's testimony, Volker turned over text messages
between himself, diplomats in Kiev and others involved with Ukraine,
including Trump's personal attorney, Rudy Giuliani, who played a major
part in the administration's dealing with Kiev.
The texts provide the first insider account of last summer's
negotiations between Washington and Kiev.
In the several pages of messages released by the Democratic leaders of
the committees, U.S. diplomats discussed setting up the July 25
telephone call between Trump and Ukrainian President Volodymyr Zelenskiy
that has been central to the impeachment investigation into whether
Trump should be removed from office.
Trump asked Zelenskiy in that call to investigate former Vice President
Joe Biden, a leading rival in Trump's bid for re-election in 2020.
The committee leaders made the text messages public late on Thursday,
along with a copy of a letter to other members of the House expressing
"grave concern" about what they described as Trump's actions and
accusing him of a campaign of misdirection in relation to the
impeachment inquiry.
However, Republicans who participated in the interview of Volker, said
the evidence he presented fell far short of a "quid pro quo" -
exchanging or withholding U.S. assistance according to whether Ukraine
helped damage a Trump political rival.
In a text from Sept. 9, after news that the Trump administration had
been withholding military assistance for Kiev, William Taylor, the U.S.
chargé d'affaires in the Ukrainian capital, discussed the importance of
the message Washington was sending to Kiev.
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urt Volker, U.S. President Donald Trump's former envoy to Ukraine,
arrives to be interviewed by staff for three House of
Representatives committees as part of the impeachment inquiry into
the president's dealings with Ukraine, at the U.S. Capitol in
Washington, U.S. October 3, 2019. REUTERS/Jonathan Ernst
"With the hold (the delay in delivering the military aid), we have
already shaken their faith in us," Taylor said in a text message to
Gordon Sondland, the U.S. ambassador to the European Union.
"I think it's crazy to withhold security assistance for help with a
political campaign," Taylor said in another text.
Sondland responded that he believed Taylor was wrong about Trump's
intentions, saying Trump had wanted to withhold the aid over
concerns about corruption in Ukraine. In a text, he denied that
there was a "quid pro quo," linking assistance to Ukraine to whether
Zelenskiy agreed to investigate the Bidens.
Trump froze nearly $400 million in U.S. military assistance to
Ukraine shortly before speaking to Zelenskiy, prompting accusations
from Democrats that he had misused U.S. foreign policy for personal
gain.
Trump has denied wrongdoing and defended the call as "perfect," and
many of his fellow Republicans have blasted the impeachment
investigation as blatant partisan politics.
Taylor has been the top U.S. diplomat in Kiev since the Trump
administration ordered the then-ambassador, Marie Yovanovitch, to
return to Washington before the end of her term. Yovanovitch had
been attacked in right-leaning media.
She is due to testify in the House inquiry next week.
The texts address a wide range of issues, including diplomats
discussing Ukrainian officials' desire that their country be taken
seriously by Washington, and not just used as a tool in domestic
U.S. politics.
The three chairman - Adam Schiff, who leads House Intelligence;
Eliot Engel, who leads House Foreign Affairs and Elijah Cummings,
who leads House Oversight - said they had far more material and
hoped to make more of it public.
(Reporting by Patricia Zengerle; Editing by Robert Birsel)
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