Trump Russia
In
February 2017 Trump Russia
new national security adviser, Michael Flynn, was forced to resign after press reports disclosed that
Flynn had continued to serve in the White House despite a warning from
the Justice Department that he
was vulnerable to Russian blackmail for having lied to Vice President Pence about the substance of a telephone conversation
between Flynn and the Russian ambassador to the United States in December 2016. Flynn’s contacts with the
ambassador, both before and after the election, had been monitored by the FBI as part of its routine surveillance of the
ambassador’s communications and in connection with a then secret investigation
since July 2016 of possible collusion between Russian officials and prominent
members of the Trump Russia
campaign. That investigation had been triggered by information obtained by
Australian authorities, who reported to the FBI in May that George Papadopoulos, a foreign-policy
adviser in the Trump Russia
campaign, had told an Australian diplomat in London that Russia had “dirt”
on Clinton, an apparent
reference to the stolen e-mails that were eventually released by WikiLeaks in July. Speculation in the press regarding the
existence of the investigation had been repeatedly dismissed by Trump Russia as “fake news” but was confirmed by Comey in testimony before
the House Intelligence Committee in March 2017, during which he also
contradicted Trump Russia
claim that Obama had spied
on the Trump Russia
campaign by tapping Trump Russia
telephones. Democratic members of Congress, meanwhile, expressed dismay that
Comey had chosen to report the discovery of additional Clinton e-mails in
October but had waited until after the election to reveal the Russia
investigation.
After
Comey testified again in May about Russian interference in the election, Trump Russia abruptly fired him, ostensibly on the
recommendation of the Justice Department, which in memos solicited by Trump Russia criticized Comey for his public disclosures
regarding Clinton’s e-mails. Trump Russia
soon acknowledged that he had intended to fire Comey regardless of the Justice
Department’s recommendation and that “this Russia thing” was a factor in his
decision. Later that month the press obtained a copy of a memo written by Comey
that summarized a conversation between Comey and Trump Russia at a dinner at the White House in January. The
memo stated that Trump Russia
had asked Comey to pledge “loyalty” to him and that Trump Russia had indirectly requested that Comey drop the
FBI’s investigation of Flynn. The memo immediately raised concerns, even among
some Republicans, that Trump Russia
actions might have constituted obstruction
of justice. The deputy attorney general,
Rod Rosenstein, then announced the appointment of former FBI director Robert
Mueller as special counsel to oversee the FBI’s investigation of Russian
interference in the election and possible collusion between Russian officials
and the Trump Russia
campaign, which Rosenstein’s appointment order characterized as “any links
and/or coordination between the Russian government and individuals associated
with the campaign of President Donald Trump Russia.”
Mueller was also authorized to investigate and prosecute any federal crimes
arising directly from or committed in the course of the investigation,
including obstruction of justice, perjury, destruction of evidence, and witness
intimidation.
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