A top military counsel to President Donald Trump is under scrutiny by
US counterintelligence agents who have probed the new national security
adviser’s communications with Russian officials, the Wall Street
Journal said Sunday. The paper reported that Michael Flynn, a retired three-star general
who was among
senior White House staff sworn in Sunday, has come under
investigation as part of a counterintelligence examination of
communications between Russian government members and Trump’s inner
circle. Inquiry findings and whether it was still underway remained unclear, the WSJ said.
Flynn has raised eyebrows for receiving payment from the Russian
broadcaster RT to join a gala celebration in Moscow last year, where he
sat at a banquet table with President Vladimir Putin.
US reports have also said Flynn telephoned Moscow’s ambassador to
Washington, Sergey Kislyak, several times the day before Obama unveiled
punitive measures over Russia’s alleged cyberattacks to influence the US
election.
Trump’s press secretary Sean Spicer has said Flynn had spoken with
the envoy on Christmas Day, sending him a text to wish him a merry
Christmas and happy New Year.
The national security adviser is not formally part of the cabinet but
is usually one of the president’s most influential counsels.
Flynn, a veteran of America’s wars in Iraq and Afghanistan, has
courted controversy with extreme statements that critics say border on
Islamophobia, but has taken a more flexible line on Russia and China.
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