Flynn Told Former Business Associate That Russia Sanctions Would Be ‘Ripped Up’.
As
President Trump delivered his inaugural address on the steps of the U.S.
Capitol in January, his new national security adviser, Michael Flynn, sent a
text to a former business associate telling him that a plan to build nuclear
power plants in the Middle East in partnership with Russian interests was “good
to go,” according to a witness who spoke with congressional investigators.
Flynn
had assured his former associate that U.S. sanctions against Russia would
immediately be “ripped up” by the Trump administration, a move that would help
facilitate the deal, the associate told the witness.
The
witness provided the account to Rep. Elijah E. Cummings (Md.), the ranking Democrat
on the House Oversight and Government Reform Committee, who detailed the
allegations in a letter Wednesday to the panel’s chairman, Rep. Trey Gowdy
(R-S.C.).
Cummings
did not identify the witness, whom he described as a whistleblower. But he
asked Gowdy to issue a subpoena to the White House for documents related to
Flynn, saying the committee has “credible allegations” that Flynn “sought to
manipulate the course of international nuclear policy for the financial gain of
his former business partners.”
Robert Kelner, an attorney representing Flynn,
declined to comment. White House lawyer Ty Cobb said, “I respectfully decline
to comment on anonymous information which impacts the Special Counsel
investigation.” He was referring to the ongoing inquiry on Russian interference
in the 2016 presidential campaign.
Gowdy said Wednesday afternoon that “criminal matters are
investigated by the special counsel,” adding that he had pledged to Robert S.
Mueller III that he would not do anything to interfere with his probe.
“Congress
doesn’t investigate a crime, and I’ve had that conversation with Mr. Cummings,
and we had it privately,” he added. “And if he wants to write me letters so you
can ask me about it, and write a story, that’s his prerogative, but the answer
won’t change.”
The episode indicates that Trump officials had planned to
jettison sanctions that the Obama administration had imposed on Russia.
Congress later passed a bipartisan measure that placed new sanctions on Russia,
a bill that Trump reluctantly signed in August.
Last
Friday, Flynn pleaded guilty to lying to FBI agents about
conversations he had in December 2016 with the Russian ambassador to the United
States about the sanctions, among other topics.
According
to Cummings’s letter, the witness said he met Alex Copson, Flynn’s former
business associate, at an inaugural event. Copson is the managing director of
ACU Strategic Partners, a Washington-based company that Flynn said he
advised from April 2015 through June 2016, according to a financial
disclosure he filed this August.
The
witness told Cummings and committee investigators that Copson shared a text
message he had just received from Flynn, who was on stage at the Capitol during
Trump’s speech.
As the president spoke, Flynn reportedly texted Copson that the
nuclear project was “good to go,” the witness said Copson told him.
“Mike
has been putting everything in place for us,” Copson said, according to the
witness, adding: “This is going to make a lot of very wealthy people.”
Copson showed the witness the text on his phone. The witness
could not read the text, but he saw that the time stamp was 12:11 p.m.,
according to Cummings’s letter.
“Mr.
Copson explained that General Flynn was making sure that sanctions would be
‘ripped up’ as one of his first orders of business and that this would allow
money to start flowing into the project,” Cummings wrote.
The
witness told congressional investigators that he was “extremely uncomfortable”
with the conversation, Cummings wrote, and took brief notes about the
discussion during the inaugural event.
Neither
Copson nor an attorney for ACU responded to a request for comment.
Cummings
told Gowdy in his letter that he found the witness “authentic, credible and
reliable.”
“Although
this individual was extremely hesitant to come forward and still fears
retaliation the whistleblower has decided to do so now because this individual
feels duty bound as a citizen to make this disclosure,” he wrote.
Mueller’s
office was aware of the witness’s account and asked Cummings not to release the
information until the special counsel had taken “certain investigative steps,”
which are now complete, Cummings wrote.
Flynn was involved
in the Middle Eastern nuclear project from spring 2015 to the end of 2016,
according to recent financial disclosure filings, a period that overlapped with
his role as a prominent adviser to Trump’s campaign and transition.
Flynn had served as an adviser to two Washington-based companies
pursuing efforts to build nuclear power plants in the Middle East: Copson’s
company, ACU Strategic Partners, which proposed a partnership with Russian
interests, and IP3/IronBridge, which later began a separate endeavor that
initially proposed working with China to build the infrastructure, according to
federal documents and company officials.
In
various filings in 2016 and 2017, Flynn did not initially disclose his
connection to ACU and foreign contacts he made while advising the firm.
After
joining the White House, Flynn forwarded a memo written by a co-founder of IP3
to develop a “Marshall Plan” of investment in the Middle East and told his
staff to fashion it into a policy for Trump’s approval, The Washington Post reported last
month.
FROM The
Washington Post. com
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