For nearly three weeks, President Donald Trump knew his national security adviser, Michael Flynn, had lied to top administration officials, including the vice president, about conversations with the Russian ambassador to the United States, but he kept Flynn on as a pivotal member of his team.
During that time, Flynn briefed Trump on global issues, sat in on phone conversations Trump held with a variety of world leaders, helped craft foreign policy as a trio of allies – the prime ministers of Britain, Japan and Canada – visited Washington, and helped formulate the response Saturday to a North Korea ballistic missile launch.
He was seated in the front row at a news conference Trump held with Canadian Prime Minister Justin Trudeau on Monday.
But between that news conference Monday afternoon and 10 o’clock that night, Trump “lost trust” in Flynn over his lying about his contacts with Russian officials and what White House press secretary Sean Spicer called “a host of other issues” and demanded Flynn’s resignation.
On Tuesday, Spicer declined to say what those other issues might have been, and he did not explain why it took the president more than two weeks to determine that Flynn was no longer worthy of being trusted.
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Trump administration putting ‘Iran on notice’
Trump’s national security adviser Michael Flynn describes the recent “provocative” actions by Iran that led the administration to officially put Iran on notice.
The White House
Trump’s national security adviser Michael Flynn describes the recent “provocative” actions by Iran that led the administration to officially put Iran on notice.
“I’m not going to get into the specifics of what the president’s thinking was, but I will just say … that it was an evolving and eroding process,” Spicer said. He did not mention that Trump’s decision to fire Flynn came less than two hours after The Washington Post published a story detailing that the Justice Department had warned the White House that Flynn had mischaracterized his conversations with the Russian ambassador, whose phones are routinely tapped.
The Justice Department warning said that contrary to Flynn’s account, the two men did discuss sanctions that President Barack Obama had imposed on Russia Dec. 29 to punish Russia for its alleged efforts to influence the outcome of November’s presidential election.
The FBI is investigating Flynn’s contacts with Russia and questioned him last month, according to news reports. Democrats in Congress, who called for a bipartisan investigation, quickly questioned why Trump delayed taking action.
“If anyone in the White House knew about Flynn’s vulnerability and chose not to act, they exercised inexcusably poor judgment that put the security of our country at enormous risk,” said Rep. Adam Smith, D-Washington, the top Democrat on the House Armed Services Committee.
Flynn defended himself in an interview with The Daily Caller. He insisted he broke no rules in his talks with the Russian ambassador, but was concerned about leaks of classified information.
“I haven’t been fighting back because I’m not that kind of guy,” the publication quoted Flynn as saying. “I’m behind the scenes. I’ve always been behind the scenes. But this is ridiculous. It’s so out of control. I’ve become an international celebrity for all the wrong reasons.”
Michael Flynn’s resignation must not be the end of the focus on this administration’s concerning ties to Russia and the Putin regime. Congress and the American people must learn the full extent of what President Trump knew about Gen. Flynn’s communications with Russian leaders, and when they knew it House Democratic Whip Steny Hoyer, D-Md.
Even Republicans acknowledged that more information was needed.
Senate Majority Leader Mitch McConnell, R-Kentucky, suggested the Senate Intelligence Committee, already examining Russian involvement in the November election, could take a look at the Flynn situation as well. “They have the broad jurisdiction to do it and any questions as to why the president did what he did ought to be directed the White House,” he said.
Sen. Roy Blunt, R-Missouri, a member of the Senate Select Committee on Intelligence, said “there are a number of unanswered questions that need to be answered.”
Trump has long been criticized for his admiring comments about Russian President Vladimir Putin and his ties to that country. The president has said he would consider lifting the sanctions imposed against Russia over its 2014 annexation of Crimea from Ukraine. Earlier this month, the White House loosened financial sanctions against Russia’s powerful security agency that the Obama administration had imposed as punishment for Russia’s meddling in November’s presidential election and for the Crimea annexation.
Tuesday, Spicer offered new information about what the White House knew and when in a raucous briefing for reporters in which nearly every question dealt with Flynn’s firing.
Spicer said that Flynn had faced tough questioning from White House officials about his conversation with Russian Ambassador Sergey Kislyak. After that, Spicer, on Jan. 13, and Vice President Mike Pence, on Jan. 15, told reporters that Flynn and the ambassador did not speak about sanctions. Spicer said that Flynn and Kislyak had exchanged text messages and phone calls on Dec. 25 and 28 in part to arrange a subsequent phone conversation between Trump and Putin.
“I talked to Gen. Flynn yesterday, and the conversations that took place at that time were not in any way related to the new U.S. sanctions against Russia or the expulsion of diplomats,” Pence said on Fox News.
The Justice Department notified the White House counsel’s office on Jan. 26 that Flynn had misled the vice president, Spicer said.
EDITORS: BEGIN OPTIONAL TRIM
Spicer tried to blame the Justice Department for waiting until after Trump was president to warn him about the discrepancies between what the FBI had overheard and what Flynn had told Pence.
“I think the first question should be, where was the Department of Justice in this? They were aware of this,” he said.
White House counsel Donald McGahn briefed Trump and a small group of his senior advisers, Spicer said. But McGahn determined that Flynn had done nothing illegal.
“When the president heard the information as presented by White House counsel, he instinctively thought that General Flynn did not do anything wrong and the White House counsel’s review corroborated that,” Spicer said.
The president must have complete and unwavering trust for the person in that position. White House Press Secretary Sean Spicer
The next several days were filled with activity.
On Jan. 27, Trump signed an executive order blocking the entry into the United States of citizens of seven Muslim nations, setting off chaos at U.S. airports, triggering a weekend of demonstrations from coast-to-coast, and sending lawyers to courthouses in a half dozen locations for restraining orders blocking the order from taking effect.
On Jan. 30, Trump fired Acting Attorney General Sally Yates after she declared that the Justice Department would not defend the travel ban executive order in court. Yates also had delivered the warning about Flynn’s conversations to the White House four days earlier, according to the Washington Post.
EDITORS: END OPTIONAL TRIM
On Tuesday, Spicer said that the White House had been “reviewing and evaluating” the issue of what to do about Flynn for weeks. But the end came breathtakingly quickly.
Late Monday afternoon, Trump counselor Kellyanne Conway had told MSNBC that “General Flynn does enjoy the full confidence of the president.”
Then shortly after 8 p.m. the Post story appeared on line, reporting that Yates had told the White House in January that Flynn’s lie about his conversations with the Russian ambassador had made him vulnerable to blackmail by the Russians. Several other news agencies followed with similar accounts in the next two hours.
Shortly after 11 p.m., the White House issued a statement saying that Flynn had resigned and that Trump had named retired Army Lt. Gen. Joseph Kellogg, Jr. as acting national security adviser.
“We got to a point not based on a legal issue, but based on a trust issue (that) the level of trust between the president and General Flynn had eroded to the point where he felt he had to make a change,” Spicer said Tuesday.
Anita Kumar: 202-383-6017, @anitakumar01
A Flynn timeline
April 17, 2012 – Obama names him to head the Defense Intelligence Agency.
pril 20, 2014, – Flynn announces he’ll retire early. His retirement is effective Aug. 7, 2014
Dec. 10, 2015 – Flynn dines with Putin in Moscow at an RT gala.
Feb. 2016 – Flynn joins Trump campaign
Nov. 18 – Trump announces Flynn will be his national security adviser.
Dec. 29 – Obama announces sanctions on Russia over election interference. Flynn calls Russian ambassador.
Jan. 13 – Flynn is questioned by Trump transition officials about the Russian contact. Two days later, Vice President Pence defends him on Fox News.
Jan. 20 – Trump is sworn in
Jan. 22 – Wall Street Journal reports Flynn is under investigation.
Jan. 26 – Acting Attorney General Sally Yates tells White House Flynn was recorded talking to Russian ambassador and that his story is untrue.
Jan. 31 – Trump fires Yates for refusing to defend his immigration executive order.
Feb. 13 – At 8:17 p.m. Washing Post reveals Yates’ warning to the White House. At 11:19 p.m. White House sends email announcing that Flynn had resigned.
Source: McClatchy research
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