http://timesofindia.indiatimes.com/world/us/not-only-jeff-sessions-russia-taint-on-other-presidents-aides-too/articleshow/57458053.cms

Not only Jeff Sessions, Russia taint on other President's aides too

TNN | Mar 4, 2017, 03.44 AM IST

President Trump's attorney general, Jeff Sessions, on Thursday recused
himself from a looming investigation into Moscow's meddling in the
2016 US election, as more disclosures of sustained pre-election
engagements with Russia by Trump surrogates continued to haunt the new
administration.

Trump's son Donald Trump Jr and his son-in-law and adviser Jared
Kushner were also drawn into the Russian maelstrom that has already
claimed the president's national security adviser Michael Flynn. The
spotlight also fell on several other associates for their close links
and engagement with Russia during the election campaign, which US
intelligence officials suggest was manipulated by Moscow.

Among them are Paul Manafort, J D Gordon, Carter Page, and Walid
Phares, all of whom assisted the Trump campaign.

Trump administration officials have acknowledged that Kushner and
Flynn met the Russian ambassador to US Sergey Kislyak in December at
Trump Towers, but characterised the meetings as "introductory" and
"kind of an inconsequential hello" that lasted only 10 minutes,
according to CNN. Gordon and Page too acknowledged their meetings in
TV interviews while suggesting it was not unusual for presidential
candidate advisers and transition teams to engage with foreign envoys.

Trump stepped in to back Sessions, one of the first senators to back
his presidential bid, calling him an "honest man" and describing the
hoopla over his meeting with Russians as a "witchhunt".

"Jeff Sessions... did not say anything wrong. He could have stated his
response more accurately, but it was clearly not intentional," the
President said about the attorney general's ambiguous testimony at his
confirmation hearing. "This whole narrative is a way of saving face
for Democrats losing an election that everyone thought they were
supposed to win. The Democrats are overplaying their hand. They lost
the election and now, they have lost their grip on reality." "The real
story is of all the illegal leaks of classified and other information.
It is a total witch hunt!" he added.

However, Sessions had to announce his recusal - withdrawal from a
probe due to conflict of interest - hours after support from the White
House (whose spokesman Sean Spicer said "there's nothing to recuse
himself from") because his version of his meeting with Kislyak fell
apart under scrutiny.

Primarily, Sessions maintained that as a senator and a member of the
armed services committee, it was well within the ambit of his work to
meet the Russian envoy.

But it turned out that a meeting with Kislyak in Cleveland on the
margins of the Republican National Convention was bankrolled by
campaign money, not by Congress, effectively making it a political
meeting. Compounding the trouble over Trump's own alleged Russian
sympathies, the Wall Street Journal reported on Thursday that the
President's son, Donald Trump Jr, was paid $50,000 to deliver a speech
last year at a think tank in Paris that is closely associated with
Russia.

The fact that sections of the media have characterised Kislyak as a
Russian spymaster — amid strong protests from Moscow at the slandering
of its envoy — has also put the Trump administration on the defensive.

Trump supporters have hit back on social media by posting stories and
photos showing leading Democrats such as New York Senator Charles
Schumer and Nancy Pelosi also consorting with Russian leaders
(Vladimir Putin and Dmitri Medvedev), although those meetings predated
the election campaign. On Friday, the Trump White House was battling a
new fire.

A local paper in Indiana, Vice-President Mike Pence's home state,
reported that as governor, Pence used a personal AOL email address for
official business and had been hacked. A similar charge had dogged
Hillary Clinton throughout her campaign.

Top Comment

more sekeletons on the cup board
Saranathan Lakshminarasimhan

The non-stop drip of leaks in the media that is torturing the Trump
administration has led to calls in the conservative alt-right media
for a purge in Washington DC of government officials perceived as
being sympathetic to former President Obama or those appointed by him.
One radio host has asked for an investigation into Obama's "silent
coup" against Trump, even as conspiratorial Trump supporters are
alleging that the operation to undermine Trump is being run out of
Obama's house in Washington DC.

Trump supporters are also rattled by the oblique criticism coming from
former President George Bush. "I don't like the racism and I don't
like the name-calling and I don't like people feeling alienated," Bush
said in a recent interview. He has subsequently rejected the notion
that he is criticising Trump.

-- 
Peace Is Doable

-- 
You received this message because you are subscribed to the Google Groups 
"Green Youth Movement" group.
To unsubscribe from this group and stop receiving emails from it, send an email 
to [email protected].
To post to this group, send an email to [email protected].
Visit this group at https://groups.google.com/group/greenyouth.
For more options, visit https://groups.google.com/d/optout.

Reply via email to