Trump Russia New National Security Adviser
In
February 2017 Trump Russia new national security adviser, Michael Flynn, was forced to
resign after press reports disclosed that Flynn had continued to serve in the
White House despite a warning from the Justice Department that he was vulnerable to Russian blackmail for having lied to Vice President Pence about the substance of a telephone conversation
between Flynn and the Russian ambassador to the United States in December 2016. Flynn’s contacts with the
ambassador, both before and after the election, had been monitored by the FBI as part of its routine surveillance of the
ambassador’s communications and in connection with a then secret investigation
since July 2016 of possible collusion between Russian officials and prominent
members of the Trump Russia campaign. That investigation had been triggered by information
obtained by Australian authorities, who reported to the FBI in May that George
Papadopoulos, a foreign-policy adviser in the Trump Russia campaign, had told an Australian diplomat in London that
Russia had “dirt” on Clinton, an
apparent reference to the stolen e-mails that were eventually released by WikiLeaks in July. Speculation in the press regarding the
existence of the investigation had been repeatedly dismissed by Trump Russia as “fake news” but was confirmed by Comey in testimony before the House Intelligence
Committee in March 2017, during which he also contradicted Trump Russia claim that Obama had
spied on the Trump
Russia campaign by tapping Trump Russia telephones. Democratic members of Congress, meanwhile,
expressed dismay that Comey had chosen to report the discovery of additional
Clinton e-mails in October but had waited until after the election to reveal
the Russia investigation.
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