Afghanistan Killings: Trump Got Written Briefing on 'Russia Bounties'
The White
House is under pressure to explain how much the administration knew about
allegations Russia offered the Taliban bounties to kill US troops.
Officials
have insisted that President Donald Trump was not "personally"
informed of the alleged plot in Afghanistan in 2019.
But reports
say the president received a written briefing earlier this year.
There is
concern that Mr Trump might have had access to information about threats to US
forces but did not act.
The intelligence
reportedly arrived amid US attempts to negotiate a peace deal to end the
19-year war in Afghanistan and while Mr Trump sought to improve relations with
Russian President Vladimir Putin.
Reports by
The New York Times, Washington Post and Wall Street Journal, quoting unnamed US
officials, said a Russian military intelligence unit had offered Taliban-linked
militants bounties to kill US troops in Afghanistan.
Twenty
American troops died in Afghanistan in 2019, but the New York Times said it was
not clear which deaths were under suspicion.
Russia
denied the initial reports, while the Taliban said it had not done any deal
with Russian intelligence.
The
allegations come as Mr Trump seeks re-election in the November poll.
Moscow
maintains close links with the Taliban, as it sees the US involvement in
Afghanistan winding down, the BBC's diplomatic correspondent Jonathan Marcus
says.
He says Russia
is also waging a "grey" or undeclared war against the West. Under
President Vladimir Putin, the Kremlin has smarted from every perceived
indignity suffered since the fall of the Soviet Union. It was US support for
Afghan irregular fighters that contributed to Moscow's forced withdrawal from
Afghanistan in the 1980s.
On
Monday, the New York Times, citing two unnamed US officials, said the
intelligence assessment had been included in the President's Daily Brief report -
a written document with key government intelligence - in late February.
CNN and the
Associated Press have also reported that the president received the
intelligence in a written briefing earlier this year, without specifying when.
Mr Trump is said to largely ignore the President's Daily Brief, relying more on
oral briefings by intelligence officials a few times a week.
White House
Press Secretary Kayleigh McEnany did not answer when asked by reporters whether
the information had been included in the president's written briefing, saying
only that Mr Trump had not been "personally briefed".
Ms McEnany
also said there was "no consensus within the intelligence community"
about the assessment. But former intelligence officials told US media that, in
previous administrations, claims of such importance would be reported to the
president, even if the evidence had not been fully established.
Eight
Republican Congress members attended a White House briefing led by Director of
National Intelligence John Ratcliffe, White House Chief of Staff Mark Meadows
and National Security Adviser Robert O'Brien on Monday.
Some
expressed alarm about the claims, calling for action against Russia and President
Putin to be taken if the intelligence reports, currently under review, were
confirmed.
Representatives
Adam Kinzinger and Michael McCaul, the ranking member of the House Foreign
Affairs Committee, said in a statement: "If the intelligence review process
verifies the reports, we strongly encourage the Administration to take
swift and serious action to hold the Putin regime accountable."
In a
separate statement, Representatives Liz Cheney and Mac Thornberry, who is the
top Republican on the House Armed Services Committee, said: "We believe it
is important to vigorously pursue any information related to Russia or any
other country targeting our forces."
Democrats
were not included in the initial meeting, and they have been scheduled to take
part in a briefing with White House officials on Tuesday.
Late on
Monday, the Associated Press reported that top officials in the White
House were aware in early 2019 of the classified intelligence on the
topic, and that the assessment had been included in at least one of President
Trump's written daily briefings at the time.
Separately,
journalist Carl Bernstein reported that officials close to Mr Trump were
convinced the president himself "posed a danger to the national
security" given how "consistently unprepared" he was in
dealing with foreign leaders.
Writing on
CNN, Bernstein - one of the journalists who investigated the Watergate scandal
in the 1970s - said there were special concerns over "[Mr] Trump's
deference to [Mr] Putin", with the US president "inordinately
solicitous of [Mr] Putin's admiration" while ignoring important matters on
the bilateral agenda.
His report,
based on unnamed sources with knowledge of hundreds of highly classified calls
with foreign heads of state, echoes remarks made by former members of the Trump
administration, including John Bolton, who served as national security adviser
and said Mr Trump
"remained stunningly uninformed on how to run the White House".
In an
interview to promote his book, Mr Bolton said of Mr Trump: "I think Putin
thinks he can play him like a fiddle."
The unnamed
officials cited by the New York Times' initial report said US intelligence
agencies had concluded months ago that a unit of Russia's GRU military
intelligence agency had sought to destabilise its adversaries by covertly
offering bounties for successful attacks on coalition forces.
Islamist
militants, or armed criminal elements closely associated with them, were
believed to have collected some money, the newspaper said.
The
officials quoted by the New York Times said the White House's National Security
Council had considered how to respond, including imposing an escalating raft of
sanctions against Russia.
According to
the Times story on Friday, President Trump was briefed on the reports in March.
Mr Trump denied having been briefed, writing on Twitter on Sunday that neither
he nor Vice-President Mike Pence had been told "about the so-called
attacks on our troops in Afghanistan by Russians".
Sergei
Zhirnov, a former agent of Russia's Foreign Intelligence Service (SVR), told
BBC Russian that the GRU's actions could be a part of a larger game between Mr
Putin and Mr Trump unfolding in the global arena.
"The
GRU is a massive machine, which works towards making war. Putin likes to flex
his muscles when there is no chance of retribution," said Mr Zhirnov.
FROM .bbc.com/news/world-us-canada
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