Former Director of National Intelligence James Clapper. (photo: T.J. Kirkpatrick/Getty)
By Katharine Murphy, Guardian UK
07 June 17
Former US spy chief attacks the sharing of intelligence with Putin and says firing of James Comey ‘inexcusable’
he former US director of national intelligence James Clapper
says events in Washington now are more serious than the Watergate
scandal of the 1970s, and that it is imperative investigators get to the
bottom of the Trump administration’s links with the Putin regime.
Clapper used a speech to Australia’s National Press
Club on Wednesday to launch a critique of the US president, Donald
Trump, describing his decision to cultivate Russia and share intelligence with the Putin regime as “very problematic”. He described Trump’s firing of the FBI chief Jim Comey as “egregious and inexcusable”.
The former intelligence director was asked how current
events compared to Watergate and he said the behaviour under scrutiny
now was more serious. “I think you compare the two, that Watergate
pales, really, in my view, compared to what we’re confronting now.”
Clapper’s appearance in Canberra comes before highly anticipated testimony later this week
by Comey before the Senate intelligence committee. The committee is
examining whether Trump’s campaign colluded with Russian officials who
interfered in the US presidential election.
Comey is expected to face questions about whether Trump tried to persuade him to stop an investigation
into improper contacts between one of his top backroom advisers and
Russian officials, and whether the former FBI director was sacked by the
president because he refused to comply.
Clapper told the National Press Club in Canberra it
was “absolutely crucial for the United States, and for that matter for
the world, for this presidency, for the Republicans, for the Democrats
and for our nation at large, that we get to the bottom of this”.
“Is there a smoking gun with all the smoke? I don’t know the answer to that. I think it’s vital, though, we find that out.”
Clapper insisted that, whatever Trump’s intentions, there was no way the US and Russia could be allies, because Russia
was “opposed to our democracy and values and see us, particularly the
United States, as the cause of all their problems and frustrations”.
He said he had a “real hard time reconciling the
threat the Russians pose to the United States and, by extension, western
democracies in general” with the solicitousness of the Trump
administration towards Moscow. “The Russians are not our friends,” he
said.
Clapper said Trump, then president-elect, had remarked
to him “during my one and only, first and last ever, I’m sure, sojourn
to Trump Tower” that it would be “a good thing if we could get along
with the Russians”.
Clapper said he told Trump: “Sure, whenever our
interests converge, and they do occasionally, fine, but as far as our
being intimate allies, trusting buds, with the Russians? That is just
not gonna happen”.
He told the Canberra press club the two countries
could not be allies because they had irreconcilable differences. It was
in Russia’s “genes to be opposed, diametrically opposed, to the United
States and western democracies”.
Clapper said he had attempted in the middle of January
to dissuade Trump, during a private phone conversation, from attacking
the intelligence establishment in Washington but he said the
intervention fell on deaf ears.
The president’s team, he said, was motivated by
“extreme paranoia” about any material that cast doubt on the legitimacy
of Trump’s election.
Clapper was asked how Australia should approach its
most important foreign policy relationship given the challenges posed by
the Trump administration. He said the question was somewhat
“imponderable.”
He observed there were people in the administration
who could be trusted – nominating Jim Mattis, the defence secretary,
John Kelly, the homeland security chief, and HR McMaster, the national
security adviser. “They have understanding and respect for our
institutions,” he said.
He said he was reluctant to give Australia public
advice about its foreign policy relationships but he said: “I just think
Australia has to keep on and make decisions based on Australia’s best
national interests.
“I have to say that I think prime minister Turnbull
has found the balance between being very tactful with our president but
at the same time not compromising Australia’s interests and its
sovereignty.”
Clapper was asked whether Trump’s decision to share
Israeli intelligence with Russia should prompt a rethink of intelligence
sharing arrangements under the Five Eyes partnership.
He said individual countries would have to make their
own judgments. Clapper said that, at the institutional level, agencies
would be concerned if intelligence sharing was discontinued.
“But, to some extent, you know, it reaches a certain
level where it’s out of our control,” Clapper said. “I hope it doesn’t
happen but I could certainly understand if it did and that’s a judgment
that each and every national government will have to make.”
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