Donald Trump responded
angrily to revelations he is under criminal investigation Thursday, deriding a
"witch hunt" against him led by some "very bad" people.
AFP
report continues:
Trump
responded to reports he is personally being investigated for obstruction of
justice with a characteristic scorched earth defense: claiming mistreatment of
historic proportions and calling into question the probity of his accusers.
"You
are witnessing the single greatest WITCH HUNT in American political history -
led by some very bad and conflicted people!" Trump said, in an early
morning tweet.
Trump
did not directly address the allegations he obstructed justice -- a potentially
impeachable offense -- neither did he deny he has entered the miniscule ranks
of sitting presidents who have become the subject of a criminal investigation.
"They
made up a phony collusion with the Russians story, found zero proof, so now
they go for obstruction of justice on the phony story. Nice" he wrote.
Trump's
young presidency has been battered by allegations -- under investigation both
by Congress and the FBI -- that Russia interfered to sway the 2016 election in
his favor, in possible collusion with Trump's campaign team.
The
FBI probe, now in the hands of special prosecutor Robert Mueller, shifted its
focus to allegations of obstruction in the days after Trump fired the agency's
former director James Comey on May 9, the Washington Post said.
The
new allegations against Trump center on his own admission that he fired Comey
because of the Russia investigation, and suggestions he asked several top
intelligence officials for their help altering the direction of the inquiry.
The
widened Russia probe could have far-reaching repercussions for Trump's
presidency, transforming his closest aides into witnesses and sucking yet more
political oxygen out of the West Wing.
The
latest White House crisis struck on the evening of Trump's 71st birthday, after
a day in which he had won plaudits for his handling of the shooting of
Republican Congressman Steve Scalise.
In
an address to the country, Trump struck a notably less partisan tone in
response to his first major domestic crisis.
Ditching
derogatory rhetoric about the Washington "swamp", Trump rallied in
support of his fellow politicians and called on the country to pull together.
"We
may have our differences, but we do well, in times like these, to remember that
everyone who serves in our nation's capital is here because, above all, they
love our country," Trump said.
Trump's
tweets virtually ensure that the political focus swings back to the Russia
scandal.
-
'Inexcusable and illegal' -
The
president has long vehemently denied any collusion with Moscow, either by
himself or his associates.
But
as the legal rope has tightened, Trump's allies have gone on the offensive,
questioning the credibility of the special investigator Mueller, a respected
former FBI director who served under Republican president George W. Bush.
Allies
have even floated the idea that Mueller may be fired.
On
Wednesday, Trump's lawyer Marc Kasowitz suggested -- without providing evidence
-- that the FBI had leaked details of the criminal probe.
"The
FBI leak of information regarding the President is outrageous, inexcusable and
illegal," Kasowitz said via a spokesman.
Several
top intelligence officials have agreed to be interviewed by Mueller's team,
according to reports in both The Washington Post and New York Times.
The
Post quoted five people briefed on the requests, saying those who agreed to be
interviewed include national intelligence director Daniel Coats, Admiral Mike
Rogers who heads the NSA, and his recently departed deputy, Richard Ledgett.
Comey told Congress last week that before being sacked, Trump pressured him to drop an investigation into his former national security advisor, Mike Flynn, who was forced to quit for lying about his links to Moscow.
No comments:
Post a Comment