Trump Urges Investigation of FBI Actions

President
Donald Trump says he has spoken to the US attorney general about tracing the
origins of the inquiry that cleared him of colluding with Russia.
Mr Trump
described the investigation by former FBI director Robert Mueller as "an
attempted coup".
Attorney
General William Barr meanwhile told lawmakers he believes the Trump campaign
was spied on by the FBI.
US
intelligence officials have previously said they were spying on the Russians,
not the Trump campaign.
Speaking to
reporters at the White House on Wednesday morning, the Republican president
railed against the Department of Justice inquiry into whether the Trump
campaign had conspired with the Kremlin to sway the 2016 election.
The
investigation cleared him and his aides of collusion, making no determination
on whether they had tried to obstruct justice.
Mr Trump
said: "This was an attempted coup. This was an attempted take-down of a
president. And we beat them. We beat them.
"So the
Mueller report, when they talk about obstruction we fight back. And do you know
why we fight back?
"Because
I knew how illegal this whole thing was. It was a scam.
"What
I'm most interested in is getting started, hopefully the attorney general, he
mentioned it yesterday.
"He's
doing a great job, getting started on going back to the origins of exactly
where this all started.
"Because
this was an illegal witch hunt, and everybody knew it. And they knew it too.
And they got caught. And what they did was treason."
While Mr
Trump was flying off to Texas, America's top law official was appearing before
the Senate Appropriations Committee.
William Barr
was asked whether spying occurred on the Trump campaign during the 2016 White
House race.
"I
think spying did occur," said the attorney general. "The question is
whether it was
adequately predicated.
"I'm
not suggesting it was not adequately predicated, but I need to explore
that."
Mr Barr
praised the "outstanding" FBI as a whole, but told the panel: "I
think there was probably a failure among the group of leaders."
He added:
"I feel I have an obligation to make sure government power is not
abused."
President
Trump and his conservative allies have repeatedly suggested the Obama
administration planted a mole in his presidential campaign to undercut his
candidacy.
The former
Director of National Intelligence James Clapper was asked on ABC in May last
year if the FBI had indeed snooped on the Trump team.
He replied:
"No, they were not. They were spying on - a term I don't particularly like
- but on what the Russians were doing.
"Trying
to understand were the Russians infiltrating, trying to gain access, trying to
gain leverage and influence which is what they do."
The same day
in an interview with CNN, Mr Clapper said: "The objective here was
actually to protect the campaign by determining whether the Russians were
infiltrating it and attempting to exert influence."
According to
the New York Times last year, the FBI sent an informant, an unnamed US
academic who teaches in the UK, to speak to two low-level Trump aides, George
Papadopoulos and Carter Page, after the agency became suspicious of the pair's
Russian contacts.
FROM bbc.com/news/world-us-canada-
No comments