sb.scorecardresearch
Advertisement

Published 18:36 IST, September 26th 2019

US Intelligence boss Joseph Maguire to testify to Congress on Ukraine

US Acting Director of National Intelligence Joseph Maguire is set to speak publicly for the first time about a secret whistleblower complaint involving Trump.

Follow: Google News Icon
  • share
Intel
null | Image: self
Advertisement

Acting Director of National Intelligence Joseph Maguire is set to speak publicly for the first time about a secret whistleblower complaint involving President Donald Trump as House Democrats who have read the document say it is “deeply disturbing.” House Democrats who are now mulling Trump’s impeachment are hoping that Maguire will explain why he withheld the intelligence community whistleblower’s complaint from Congress for weeks.

Maguire will then go behind closed doors to speak to the Senate intelligence panel. Lawmakers have been given a redacted, declassified version of the complaint that can be made public. A person familiar with the matter said that version is expected to be released September 26 morning.

Complaint made public

The person spoke on condition of anonymity because they were not authorized to publicly discuss it ahead of the release. New York Rep. Hakeem Jeffries, a member of Democratic leadership, said Wednesday evening that he expects the complaint would be made public “sooner rather than later.”

The document was made available to members of House and Senate intelligence committees Wednesday after Maguire had initially determined they couldn’t see it. The complaint is at least in part related to a July phone call between Trump and Ukrainian President Volodymyr Zelenskiy in which Trump prodded Zelenskiy to investigate Democratic political rival Joe Biden. The White House released a rough transcript of that call Wednesday morning.

Read - Donald Trump Has Committed An Impeachable Offense: Joe Biden

The Disturbing document

House Democrats emerging from a secure room would not divulge details of the classified document but described it as disturbing and urgent. House Intelligence Committee Chairman Adam Schiff, D-Calif., said it “exposed serious wrongdoing” and “certainly provides information for the committee to follow up with others.” California Rep. Eric Swalwell told CNN that the whistleblower “laid out a lot of other documents and witnesses who were subjects in this matter.”

The complaint showed the whistleblower learned details of the call from White House officials, according to one person familiar with the complaint who was granted anonymity to discuss it. Another such person said the lawmakers did not learn the identity of the whistleblower. A Democratic member of the panel, Illinois Rep. Raja Krishnamoorthi, said the whistleblower “lays out the situation very logically” and “is both acknowledging the things that he or she knows and doesn’t know, which is a hallmark of a credible document.”

Read - Donald Trump Dismisses Democratic Impeachment Inquiry As A 'joke'

Impeachment inquiry

House Speaker Nancy Pelosi — who on Tuesday fully endorsed an impeachment investigation in light of the Ukraine revelations — and Senate Democratic Leader Chuck Schumer also viewed the complaint. Schumer said he is even “more worried” now than he was before reading it and “there are huge numbers of facts crying out for investigation.” Most Republicans were quiet or defended the president as they left the secure rooms. But at least one Republican said he was concerned by what he had read.

“Republicans ought not to be rushing to circle the wagons and say ‘there’s no there’ when there’s obviously a lot that’s very troubling there,” said Nebraska Sen. Ben Sasse, a GOP member of the Senate intelligence panel who has been an occasional critic of Trump. He added that “Democrats ought not be using words like ‘impeach’ before they knew anything about the actual substance.”

Read - Hillary Clinton Backs Impeachment, Accuses Donald Trump Of 'betrayal'

Trump, whose administration had earlier balked at turning over the complaint, said Wednesday afternoon that “I fully support transparency on the so-called whistleblower information” and that he had communicated that position to House Minority Leader Kevin McCarthy, R-Calif.

The rough transcript released by the White House on Wednesday showed that Trump prodded Zelenskiy to work with the U.S. attorney general and Trump’s personal lawyer Rudy Giuliani to investigate Biden. Zelenskiy said his comments in the conversation with Trump shouldn’t have been publicly released, and he played down Ukraine’s investigation of Biden, a former vice president who’s now a 2020 presidential candidate.

Read - Furious Trump Says, 'He's Been Treated Worse Than Any Other President'
 

17:54 IST, September 26th 2019