Ex-Obama administration officials to testify in Trump-Russia probe

The probe being led by Graham and Whitehouse is one of three main congressional investigations of Russia


Reuters May 08, 2017
FILE PHOTO: James Clapper testifies before a Senate Armed Services Committee hearing on foreign cyber threats, on Capitol Hill in Washington, U.S. PHOTO: REUTERS

WASHINGTON: Two officials in former President Barack Obama's administration will testify on Monday in a Senate investigation into allegations of Russian meddling in the 2016 US election and possible collusion between
President Donald Trump's campaign and Moscow.

James Clapper, the Director of National Intelligence under
Obama, and Sally Yates, who was Deputy Attorney General, will
testify to the Senate Judiciary subcommittee on crime and
terrorism, the first such public testimony by former officials
from the Democratic administration in one of congressional
probes on Russia. Congressional committees began investigating after US intelligence agencies concluded that Russian President Vladimir
Putin had ordered hacking of Democratic political groups to
discredit the election and sway the voting toward Republican
Trump, who won an upset victory in November.

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Moscow has denied any such meddling. Trump also has
dismissed the allegations, suggesting instead that Obama might
have wiretapped his Trump Tower in New York or that China may
have been behind the cyber attacks. No evidence has been found
to support either allegation. The public hearing will be the first featuring testimony by Obama administration officials who have left government. Trump fired Yates from the Department of Justice in January, and Clapper retired on Jan. 20, when Trump was inaugurated.

Senator Lindsey Graham, the subcommittee's chairman who
called the hearing is a Russia hawk and sometime critic of Trump
who has been one of the leading Republican voices calling for a
thorough investigation of Russia and the election. Yates is expected to tell the senators that on Jan. 26, when she was acting Attorney General, she had warned White House Counsel Don McGahn that then-National Security Adviser Michael Flynn had not told the truth about conversations he had with Sergei Kislyak, Moscow's Ambassador to Washington, about US economic sanctions on Russia. Flynn resigned after less than a month in office.

The congressional hearings have been shadowed by
allegations, mostly from Democrats, that lawmakers are too
partisan to investigate effectively. In the lead-up to Monday's hearing, Susan Rice, who was Obama's national security adviser, declined an invitation to testify because it had come only from the Republican Grahamand not Senator Sheldon Whitehouse, the subcommittee's ranking Democrat.

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Her refusal was first reported by CNN. Rice's name was linked to the Russia investigation when Trump suggested she might have broken the law by asking intelligence analysts to reveal the name of a Trump associate mentioned in an intelligence report. She denied doing anything inappropriate, and there is no evidence to substantiate Trump's allegation. Trump tweeted on Thursday that it was "Not good!" that Rice had not agreed to testify.

The probe being led by Graham and Whitehouse is one of three
main congressional investigations of Russia and the 2016 U.S.
election. The FBI and US intelligence agencies are conducting
separate investigations. Clapper, Yates and another official who served under Obama, former CIA Director John Brennan, had been scheduled to testify to the House of Representatives intelligence committee in March, but that hearing was canceled by the panel's chairman, Republican Devin Nunes. Nunes, a Trump ally, has since recused himself from the Russia investigation amid concerns that he was too close to the White House to lead a credible probe.

Yates, Clapper and Brennan are now due to appear at a public
hearing of the House committee that has not been scheduled.

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