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?????????????????????????????????????????????????Saturday, April 28, 2018
House Intelligence Committee Republicans release final Russia report
President
Trump said April 27 he was “very honored” by a report by House
Intelligence Committee Republicans from a probe into Russia’s influence
campaign. (The Washington Post)
By Karoun Demirjian, Greg Miller, Devlin Barrett, Rosalind S. Helderman and Matt ZapotoskyApril 27 at 12:35 PM
House Intelligence Committee Republicans released a redacted version of their final report from a year-long probe into Russia’s “multifaceted” influence operation, generally clearing President Trump and his associates of wrongdoing while accusing the intelligence community and the FBI of failures in how they assessed and responded to the Kremlin’s interference in the 2016 election.
By Karoun Demirjian, Greg Miller, Devlin Barrett, Rosalind S. Helderman and Matt ZapotoskyApril 27 at 12:35 PM
House Intelligence Committee Republicans released a redacted version of their final report from a year-long probe into Russia’s “multifaceted” influence operation, generally clearing President Trump and his associates of wrongdoing while accusing the intelligence community and the FBI of failures in how they assessed and responded to the Kremlin’s interference in the 2016 election.
The report accuses the intelligence community of “significant intelligence tradecraft failings,”
suggesting that Russia’s main goal was to sow discord in the United States and not to help Trump win the election. It says investigators found “no evidence that the Trump campaign colluded, coordinated, or conspired with the Russian government” — even as it details contacts between Trump campaign officials and Russians or Russian intermediaries.
suggesting that Russia’s main goal was to sow discord in the United States and not to help Trump win the election. It says investigators found “no evidence that the Trump campaign colluded, coordinated, or conspired with the Russian government” — even as it details contacts between Trump campaign officials and Russians or Russian intermediaries.
Trump seized on the report to call for an end to special counsel Robert
S. Mueller III’s criminal investigation into whether his campaign
coordinated with Russia.
“Just Out: House Intelligence Committee Report released. ‘No evidence’
that the Trump Campaign ‘colluded, coordinated or conspired with
Russia,’ ” Trump wrote. “Clinton Campaign paid for Opposition Research obtained from Russia- Wow! A total Witch Hunt! MUST END NOW!”
But committee Democrats quickly charged that their Republican colleagues
had rushed to end their work prematurely in a “a systematic effort to
muddy the waters and to deflect attention away from the President.”
They released nearly 100 pages of their own findings, asserting that
Russian intelligence “used intermediaries and cutouts to probe,
establish contact, and possibly glean valuable information from a
diverse set of actors associated with President Trump and his campaign,”
though more work needed to be done to determine whether and to what
extent they were aware of or helped that effort.
Rep. Adam B. Schiff (D-Calif.), the ranking Democrat on the House
Intelligence Committee, said the GOP document demonstrates “the
Majority’s fundamentally flawed approach to the investigation and the
superficial and political nature of its conclusions.”
Collectively, the reports offered little in the way of new information
but gave each political party ammunition to support their long held
arguments about how Russia interfered in the 2016 election.
Mueller’s probe, which is still ongoing, is thought to be far more
revelatory, as he has law enforcement powers and far more investigative
resources. The Senate Intelligence Committee is also pursuing its own
investigation, which has been marked by far less partisanship than the
one in the House.
The House Intelligence Committee’s Russia probe took on the character of
a boxing ring over the past year, as Republicans and Democrats
repeatedly came to blows over whether GOP leaders were trying to end the
investigation to paint the president in the most flattering possible
light. The committee is led by Rep. Devin Nunes (R-Calif.), one of
Trump’s staunchest allies in Congress and a former adviser to Trump’s
transition team. Nunes was forced to step down from involvement in large
portions of the investigation while he was under an ethics probe that
cleared him of wrongdoing.
The Republican report criticizes both the Trump and Clinton campaigns
for “poor judgment and ill-considered actions,” such as Trump campaign
officials’ decision to meet with a Russian lawyer offering compromising
information on Hillary Clinton in Trump Tower in June 2016. It also
criticizes the Obama administration for a “slow and inconsistent”
response to mounting Russian threats.
The report takes particular aim at the FBI and intelligence community,
for failing to appropriately assess Russia’s intent and failing to
notify the Trump campaign of possible threats in their midst.
The report asserts that while intelligence officials had concerns about
Trump campaign adviser Carter Page in early 2016, the FBI did not give
campaign officials a defensive briefing to alert them their worries.
“The FBI did not provide any such warning about Page, although it was
again discussed by the administration’s most senior policymakers after
[then-FBI] Director [James] Comey briefed the National Security Council
principals about the Page information in ‘late spring’ 2016,” the report
says, citing an interview with former attorney general Loretta E.
Lynch.
The report says the intelligence community also did not warn the
campaign of the Russian ties of other aides, including George
Papadopoulos, who has admitted to lying to the FBI about his campaign
outreach to the Kremlin.
The report makes an extensive case that allegations of collusion between
the Trump campaign and the Kremlin are unfounded. It devotes an entire
chapter to alleged campaign links with Russia, and attempts to knock
down many of the most damaging claims against the campaign or minimize
the significance of the well-established interactions.
For instance, the report says that a meeting the candidate’s son, Donald
Trump Jr., organized with a Russian lawyer and other key campaign
advisers in June 2016 showed that he was “open to discussing derogatory
information” about Democrat Hillary Clinton, including material
potentially provided by the Russian government.
But the report concludes that there is no evidence any such material was
provided, and says that a music promoter testified that he made up the
claim about having damaging Clinton information to get the meeting.
The report concludes that the Russians found “willing interlocutors” in
Page and Papadopoulos, two previously unknown aides named to the
campaign because Trump had trouble recruiting from the Republican
national security establishment, the committee found. But the report
asserts that the two were “peripheral figures” and neither was “in a
position to influence Trump or his campaign.”
The report also says there is no evidence that Trump confidante Roger
Stone and others who publicly suggested advanced knowledge of
WikiLeaks’s releases of hacked emails before the election actually had
such knowledge.
However, the Republicans released a previously undisclosed email from
former Trump national security adviser Michael Flynn on July 15, 2016,
in which he wrote, “There are a number of things happening (and will
happen) this election via cyber operations (by both hacktivists, nation
states and the DNC).”
The email came after news the DNC had been hacked and had been made
public but before WikiLeaks had released those emails publicly on July
22. Committee Republicans concluded the email did “not necessarily
indicate non-public knowledge.”
The report says that there is no evidence that Trump’s pre-campaign
business dealings paved the way for election help from Russia, even
though Trump’s financial dealings appear to remain under investigation
by the special counsel. It also asserts that apparent efforts by the
campaign and Russia to set up a “back channel” after the election were,
counterintuitively, evidence that there was not earlier collusion.
The report disparages the infamous “dossier” compiled by a former
British spy as full of “second and third-hand” information, and claims
that the file was then used to justify putting Trump campaign associates
under surveillance — an assertion vehemently disputed by the FBI. And
it all but accuses intelligence officials of deliberately leaking
damaging information about Trump to the media before and after the
election. It devotes little attention to Trump’s often inconstant
explanations of events, while accusing then-Director of National
Intelligence James R. Clapper Jr. of providing inconsistent testimony to
the committee about his contacts with the media.
Much of the report’s section on intelligence leaks is redacted, so it is
unclear exactly how they reached those conclusions, but the committee
does single out reports by The Washington Post, New York Times, NBC and
CNN as among those that raised concerns.
“Continued leaks of classified information have damaged national
security and potentially endangered lives,” the report says, followed by
several redacted paragraphs.
The Republican report also urges Congress to consider rescinding the
Logan Act, the law that prohibits American citizens from undercutting
the U.S. government by engaging in unauthorized negotiations with
foreign leaders. It is the law that Flynn was suspected of possibly
violating in his interactions with the Russian ambassador before Trump
took office. Flynn has pleaded guilty to lying to the FBI about his
contacts with the Russian ambassador, though the report curiously
asserts agents “did not detect any deception during Flynn’s interview.”
The Democrats rebuttal, meanwhile, excoriates “a majority” of the GOP
report’s conclusions as “misleading and unsupported by the facts and the
investigative record.”
The GOP’s findings, Democrats charged, “have been crafted to advance a
political narrative that exonerates the President, downplays Russia’s
preference and support for then-candidate Trump, explains away repeated
contacts by Trump associates with Russia-aligned actors, and seeks to
shift suspicion towards President Trump’s political opponents and the
prior administration.” They said they intended to continue their own
work, exploring, among other things, financial dealings and efforts by
Trump to interfere with the special counsel investigation.
“Congress has an obligation to find out the truth and inform the
American people,” the Democrats said in their report. “To the best of
our ability, we will continue to do so, until such time as the full
Congress once again lives up to its oversight responsibilities.”