White House tries to insulate Trump from Russia scandal

Wednesday

The White House battled Tuesday to insulate Donald Trump from a scandal over his top aide’s contacts with Russia, as it emerged that the president was aware of the problem for weeks before acting.


With calls for an independent investigation gathering pace, the White House admitted that Trump was told three weeks ago that national security advisor Michael Flynn may have misled colleagues about his Kremlin contacts.


The retired three-star general and former head of US defense intelligence initially denied discussing sanctions strategy with Russia’s ambassador Sergey Kislyak before taking office.


That could have breached US law on negotiating with foreign powers, and at minimum was a significant break with the norm that incoming administrations accept the US has “one government at a time.”


Flynn was asked to resign on Monday, after what the White House said were weeks of internal investigation that turned up no evidence of wrongdoing but “eroded” trust.


The White House had painted Trump’s final decision as based on Flynn having misled Vice President Mike Pence.


But it emerged Tuesday that Trump kept his deputy, who publicly defended Flynn and repeated his claims, in the dark for two weeks.


“The Vice President became aware of incomplete information that he had received on February 9, last Thursday night, based on media accounts,” said spokesman Marc Lotter.


Flynn is the third Trump aide to step back amid questions about his ties to Russia since the mogul began his improbable White House bid.


His departure follows those of election campaign manager Paul Manafort and Carter Page, an early foreign policy advisor to the candidate.


The unprecedented early resignation of a key member of staff has rocked an administration already buffeted by leaks, infighting and legal defeats.


Amid the tumult, the White House denied that Trump had instructed Flynn to discuss the possibility that Obama-era sanctions would be rolled back.


“No, absolutely not. No, no, no,” said White House spokesman Sean Spicer, when asked whether such a conversation took place.


Eroding trust


When first informed, on January 26, that Flynn may have made misleading statements about his talks with Russia’s envoy, Spicer said the president “instinctively thought that General Flynn did not do anything wrong.”


“The White House counsel’s review corroborated that,” Spicer said, and “determined that there is not an illegal issue, but rather a trust issue.”


“The evolving and eroding level of trust as a result of this situation and a series of other questionable instances is what led the president to ask for General Flynn’s resignation.”


Trump took to Twitter to insist that “The real story here is why are there so many illegal leaks coming out of Washington?”


The White House also insisted that Trump — despite repeatedly professing admiration for Vladimir Putin and suggesting sanctions could be lifted — “has been incredibly tough on Russia.”


In a new hardening of the US line on Russia, Spicer added that “President Trump has made it very clear he expects the Russian government to de-escalate violence in the Ukraine and return Crimea.”


The State Department meanwhile expressed concern that Russia is in breach of the Intermediate-Range Nuclear Forces Treaty, after reports that Moscow had deployed an operational ground-launched cruise missile unit.


Inquiries and missteps


The White House’s efforts are likely to do little to assuage concerns on Capitol Hill about Russia’s influence in US politics.


Republicans and Democrats in Congress have now called for an investigation into what occurred, although they differ sharply on the scope and powers.


“This. Is. Not. Normal.” said Democratic Senator Elizabeth Warren, insisting “Trump owes Americans a full account” of his administration’s dealings with Moscow before and after the 2016 election.


The US Senate’s top Republican Mitch McConnell said it was “highly likely” that Flynn would have to testify before an intelligence panel, potentially heaping pressure on Trump.


The New York Times also reported that the FBI had interviewed Flynn on his calls with the Russian diplomat days into his job.


The CIA, FBI and other intelligence agencies have already investigated Moscow’s influence over the 2016 vote, concluding the Kremlin tried to sway it in Trump’s favor.


Various committees in the Republican-controlled Congress are looking into Russia’s election-related hacking and the Trump campaign’s links to Moscow.


Possible replacements


Until quitting, Flynn had been instrumental in Trump’s inner circle.


He was an early supporter of his improbable bid for the presidency and had encouraged tougher policies on Iran and a softer line on Russia.


That was a sharp break from the Obama administration, which introduced sanctions over Moscow’s annexation of Ukraine’s Crimea, support for separatists in eastern Ukraine, and what US intelligence says were its attempts to sway last year’s election in Trump’s favor.


Washington and Moscow had also clashed over alleged war crimes in Syria, where Russia is accused of aiding the bombing of hospitals and other civilian targets. Despite this, Flynn had argued for rapprochement.


After Flynn quit, the White House said Trump had named retired lieutenant general Keith Kellogg, a decorated Vietnam war veteran and a director on the Joint Chiefs of Staff, to be interim national security advisor.


Potential permanent replacements reportedly include three retired military brass: Kellogg; retired general and former CIA director David Petraeus; and former vice admiral Robert Harward.


Spicer said Trump hoped to make the new appointment by the end of the week.

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