Michael Flynn Resigns as National Security Adviser
WASHINGTON
— Michael T. Flynn, the national security adviser, resigned on Monday
night after it was revealed that he had misled Vice President Mike Pence
and other top White House officials about his conversations with the
Russian ambassador to the United States.
Mr.
Flynn, who served in the job for less than a month, said he had given
“incomplete information” about a telephone call he had with the
ambassador in late December about American sanctions against Russia,
weeks before Mr. Trump’s inauguration. Mr. Flynn previously had denied
that he had any substantive conversations with Ambassador Sergey I.
Kislyak, and Mr. Pence repeated that claim in television interviews as
recently as earlier this month.
But
on Monday, a former administration official said the Justice Department
last month warned the White House that Mr. Flynn had not been fully
forthright about his conversations with the ambassador. As a result, the
Justice Department feared that Mr. Flynn could be vulnerable to
blackmail by Moscow.
In
his resignation letter, which the White House emailed to reporters, Mr.
Flynn said he had held numerous calls with foreign officials during the
transition. “Unfortunately, because of the fast pace of events, I
inadvertently briefed the Vice President Elect and others with
incomplete information regarding my phone calls with the Russian
Ambassador,” he wrote. “I have sincerely apologized to the President and
the Vice President, and they have accepted my apology.”
The
White House said in the statement that it was replacing Mr. Flynn with
retired Lt. General Joseph Keith Kellogg, Jr., a Vietnam War veteran, as
acting national security adviser.
Mr.
Flynn was an early and ardent supporter of Mr. Trump’s candidacy, and
in his resignation he sought to the praise the president. “In just three
weeks,” Mr. Flynn said, the new president “has reoriented American
foreign policy in fundamental ways to restore America’s leadership
position in the world.”
But
in doing so, he inadvertently illustrated the brevity of his tumultuous
run at the National Security Council, and the chaos that has gripped
the White House in the first weeks of the Trump administration — and
created a sense of uncertainty around the world.
Officials
said Mr. Pence has told others in the White House that he believes Mr.
Flynn lied to him by saying he had not discussed the topic of sanctions
on a call with the Russian ambassador in late December. Even the mere
discussion of policy — and the apparent attempt to assuage the concerns
of an American adversary before Mr. Trump took office — represents a remarkable breach of protocol.
The
F.B.I. has been examining Mr. Flynn’s phone calls as he has come under
growing questions about his interactions with Russian officials and his
management of the National Security Council. The blackmail risk
envisioned by the Justice Department would stem directly from Mr.
Flynn’s attempt to cover his tracks with his bosses. The Russians knew
what had been said on the call; thus, if they wanted Mr. Flynn to do
something, they could threaten to expose the lie if he refused.
The Justice Department’s warning to the White House was first reported on Monday night by The Washington Post.
In
addition, the Army has been investigating whether Mr. Flynn received
money from the Russian government during a trip he took to Moscow in
2015, according to two defense officials. Such a payment might violate
the Emoluments Clause of the Constitution, which prohibits former
military officers from receiving money from a foreign government without
consent from Congress. The defense officials said there was no record
that Mr. Flynn, a retired three-star Army general, filed the required
paperwork for the trip.
Earlier
Monday, Sean Spicer, the White House press secretary, told reporters
that “the president is evaluating the situation.” Mr. Spicer said Mr.
Trump would be talking to Mr. Pence and others about Mr. Flynn’s future.
In
a sign of the internal confusion over Mr. Flynn’s status, the statement
from Mr. Spicer came shortly after the president’s counselor, Kellyanne
Conway, said in an interview on MSNBC that Mr. Flynn had the “full
confidence of the president.”
Mr.
Trump ignored questions about Mr. Flynn’s fate that were shouted at him
by reporters during an Oval Office swearing-in ceremony on Monday night
for newly confirmed Treasury Secretary Steven T. Mnuchin.
The
White House has examined a transcript of a wiretapped conversation that
Mr. Flynn had with Sergey I. Kislyak, the Russian ambassador, in
December, according to administration officials. Mr. Flynn originally
told Mr. Pence and others that the call was limited to small talk and
holiday pleasantries.
But
the conversation, according to officials who have seen the transcript
of the wiretap, also included a discussion about sanctions imposed on
Russia after intelligence agencies determined that Mr. Putin’s
government tried to interfere with the 2016 election on Mr. Trump’s
behalf. Still, current and former administration officials familiar with
the call said the transcript was ambiguous enough that Mr. Trump could
justify both firing or retaining Mr. Flynn.
Mr.
Trump, however, has become increasingly concerned about the continued
fallout over Mr. Flynn’s behavior, according to people familiar with his
thinking, and has told aides that the media storm around Mr. Flynn
would damage the president’s image on national security issues.
White
House officials have begun discussing the possibility of replacements,
and Mr. Trump is consulting Jim Mattis, the secretary of defense and a
retired four-star general. Among the options are David H. Petraeus, the
former C.I.A. director, and Thomas P. Bossert, the head of Mr. Trump’s
domestic security council. Mr. Petraeus, also a retired four-star
general, was forced out as the director of the C.I.A. because of an
affair with his biographer, to whom he passed classified information.
Mr. Petraeus would not need confirmation by the Senate as national
security adviser.
Mr.
Petraeus is expected to be at the White House on Tuesday, said a senior
administration official who was not authorized to discuss the meeting
and spoke on the condition of anonymity.
Mr.
Flynn’s concealment of the call’s content, combined with questions
about his management of his agency and reports of a demoralized staff,
put him in a precarious position less than a month into Mr. Trump’s
presidency.
Few
members of Mr. Trump’s team were more skeptical of Mr. Flynn than the
vice president, numerous administration officials said. Mr. Pence, who
used the false information provided by Mr. Flynn to defend him in a
series of television appearances, was incensed at Mr. Flynn’s lack of
contrition for repeatedly embarrassing him by withholding the
information, according to three administration officials familiar with
the situation.
Mr.
Flynn and Mr. Pence have spoken twice in the past few days about the
matter, but administration officials said that rather than fully
apologize and accept responsibility, the national security adviser
blamed his faulty memory — which irked the typically slow-to-anger Mr.
Pence.
The
slight was compounded by an episode late last year when Mr. Pence went
on television to deny that Mr. Flynn’s son, who had posted conspiracy
theories about Hillary Clinton on social media, had been given a
security clearance by the transition team. The younger Mr. Flynn had,
indeed, been given such a clearance, even though his father had told Mr.
Pence’s team that he had not.
Officials
said classified information did not appear to have been discussed
during the conversation between Mr. Flynn and the ambassador, which
would have been a crime. The call was captured on a routine wiretap of
diplomat’s calls, the officials said.
But
current Trump administration officials and former Obama administration
officials said that Mr. Flynn did appear to be reassuring the ambassador
that Mr. Trump would adopt a more accommodating tone on Russia once in
office.
Former
and current administration officials said that Mr. Flynn urged Russia
not to retaliate against any sanctions because an overreaction would
make any future cooperation more complicated. He never explicitly
promised sanctions relief, one former official said, but he appeared to
leave the impression that it would be possible.
During
his 2015 trip to Moscow, Mr. Flynn was paid to attend the anniversary
celebration of Russia Today, a television network controlled by the
Kremlin. At the banquet, he sat next to Mr. Putin.
Mr.
Flynn had notified the Defense Intelligence Agency, which he once led,
that he was taking the trip. He received a security briefing from agency
officials before he left, which is customary for former top agency
officials when they travel overseas.
Still,
some senior agency officials were surprised when footage of the banquet
appeared on RT, and believed that Mr. Flynn should have been more
forthcoming with the agency about the nature of his trip to Russia.
The
next month, the agency’s director, Lt. Gen. Vincent Stewart, sent a
memo to agency staff members saying agency officials should not provide
briefings to former agency leaders during the presidential campaign.
James
Kudla, an agency spokesman, said the memo was not directly the result
of Mr. Flynn’s trip to Russia, but rather an effort by General Stewart
to ensure that the agency was not becoming enmeshed in politics.
“Was
the Russia trip one element of it? Yes,” he said. “But it was more
broadly to ensure that other former senior officials and D.I.A. staff
knew what the rules are to avoid the perception of taking sides.”
Defense
officials said the White House would have to determine what penalty, if
any, Mr. Flynn should face if he were found to have violated the
Emoluments Clause. Capt. Jeff Davis, a Defense Department spokesman,
declined to comment.
No comments:
Post a Comment