Retired
Lt. Gen. Michael Flynn talks to media as he arrives at Trump Tower,
Nov. 17, 2016, in New York. (Photo: Carolyn Kaster/AP)
Retired Lt. Gen. Michael Flynn, who has reportedly been offered the role
of national security adviser in Donald Trump’s White House, began
receiving classified national security briefings last summer while he
was also running a private consulting firm that offered “all-source
intelligence support” to international clients.
Flynn’s
relationship with his overseas clients is coming in for new scrutiny
amid recent disclosures that two months ago, during the height of the
presidential campaign, his consulting firm, the Flynn Intel Group,
registered to lobby for a Dutch company owned by a wealthy Turkish
businessman close to President Recep Tayyip Erdogan of Turkey.
Robert
Kelley, the chief counsel to the Flynn Intel Group, read a statement
from Flynn to Yahoo News on Thursday, promising that “if I return to
government service, my relationship with my company will be severed, in
accordance with the policy announced by President-elect Trump.”
But
critics today dismissed Flynn’s pledge as “Too little, too late,” given
that he began sitting in on U.S. intelligence briefings for Trump in
August while working for foreign clients. Classified national security
briefings are by tradition provided to the major presidential candidates
and their top aides.
“This
is profoundly troubling and should be disqualifying,” said Norm Eisen,
who served as President Obama’s ethics adviser and later as an
ambassador to the Czech Republic. He predicted that if Flynn is named as
Trump’s national security adviser, “there will be
wholesale resignations of national security professionals, and I believe
some have already drafted their resignation letters.”
On Wednesday, the White House press secretary, Josh Earnest, said
that President Obama had authorized that the President’s Daily Brief
(PDB) materials also be provided to Trump, Vice President-elect Mike
Pence and “designated” members of Trump’s transition team. The PDB
comprises some of the most sensitive intelligence in the U.S.
government, beyond the national security briefings Trump received as the
Republican nominee.
But
White House officials declined to say Thursday whether Flynn — an
“executive” member of the Trump transition team and his chief foreign
policy adviser during the campaign — was among those so designated.
Flynn was not in attendance on Tuesday when Trump received his first PDB
briefing at Trump Tower, according to a source familiar with the
matter. Trump transition officials did not respond to requests for
comment.
Michael Flynn, Trump's reported pick for national security advisor, sat in on intel briefings — while advising foreign clients
Retired
Lt. Gen. Michael Flynn talks to media as he arrives at Trump Tower,
Nov. 17, 2016, in New York. (Photo: Carolyn Kaster/AP)
Retired Lt. Gen. Michael Flynn, who has reportedly been offered the role
of national security adviser in Donald Trump’s White House, began
receiving classified national security briefings last summer while he
was also running a private consulting firm that offered “all-source
intelligence support” to international clients.
Flynn’s
relationship with his overseas clients is coming in for new scrutiny
amid recent disclosures that two months ago, during the height of the
presidential campaign, his consulting firm, the Flynn Intel Group,
registered to lobby for a Dutch company owned by a wealthy Turkish
businessman close to President Recep Tayyip Erdogan of Turkey.
Robert
Kelley, the chief counsel to the Flynn Intel Group, read a statement
from Flynn to Yahoo News on Thursday, promising that “if I return to
government service, my relationship with my company will be severed, in
accordance with the policy announced by President-elect Trump.”
But
critics today dismissed Flynn’s pledge as “Too little, too late,” given
that he began sitting in on U.S. intelligence briefings for Trump in
August while working for foreign clients. Classified national security
briefings are by tradition provided to the major presidential candidates
and their top aides.
“This
is profoundly troubling and should be disqualifying,” said Norm Eisen,
who served as President Obama’s ethics adviser and later as an
ambassador to the Czech Republic. He predicted that if Flynn is named as
Trump’s national security adviser, “there will be
wholesale resignations of national security professionals, and I believe
some have already drafted their resignation letters.”
On Wednesday, the White House press secretary, Josh Earnest, said
that President Obama had authorized that the President’s Daily Brief
(PDB) materials also be provided to Trump, Vice President-elect Mike
Pence and “designated” members of Trump’s transition team. The PDB
comprises some of the most sensitive intelligence in the U.S.
government, beyond the national security briefings Trump received as the
Republican nominee.
But
White House officials declined to say Thursday whether Flynn — an
“executive” member of the Trump transition team and his chief foreign
policy adviser during the campaign — was among those so designated.
Flynn was not in attendance on Tuesday when Trump received his first PDB
briefing at Trump Tower, according to a source familiar with the
matter. Trump transition officials did not respond to requests for
comment.
Donald
Trump, left, jokes with retired Gen. Michael Flynn at a rally at Grand
Junction Regional Airport on Oct. 18, 2016, in Grand Junction, Colo.
(Photo: George Frey/Getty Images)
The
criticism of Flynn over his overseas clients came on a day that the
Trump transition team announced a sweeping new conflict-of-interest
policy that will require all members of the transition team to sever
their relationships with lobbying clients and, if they join the
administration, forswear lobbying for five years after ending their
government service. It does not apply to past lobbying contracts. A
transition official said that “instead of looking backward,” the new
policy “looks forward.”
But
according to a copy of a Memorandum of Understanding signed on Election
Day, and released today by House Democrats, the Trump transition team,
as a condition of receiving government briefing materials, was required
to provide a statement to White House chief of staff Denis McDonough
last week that all designated members of the transition team had
disclosed their financial interests and did not have any conflicts of
interest.
A
Trump transition spokesman did not respond to questions about whether
Flynn had made such disclosures. But Rep. Elijah Cummings, the ranking
Democrat on the House Oversight and Government Reform Committee, said
the terms of the memorandum raise questions about whether Flynn is even
eligible to continue to receive national security briefings at this
point.
The
full extent of Flynn’s overseas business is unclear. In the statement
released by his lawyer, Flynn said only that his firm — which he
described as a “private business intelligence company” — has unnamed
“international and domestic clients.” In a brief telephone interview,
Kelley, a former Capitol Hill staffer, declined to specify the issues
for which the firm was hired to lobby Congress on behalf of Innova BV, a
firm based in Holland and owned by the Turkish businessman, Ekim
Alptekin. The lobbying disclosure statement filed with the secretary of
the Senate on Sept. 30 states only that Flynn’s firm “will advise client
on U.S. domestic and foreign policy” and congressional appropriations
bills for the State Department.
Alptekin,
according to his LinkedIn profile, serves as chairman of the Turkish
American Business Council, is the founder and president of EA Havacilik,
an aerospace firm based in Istanbul, and is “commercially active in the real estate and defense industries”
through multiple other companies. He also serves as a member of
Turkey’s Foreign Economic Relations Board and, in that role, helped
coordinate Erdogan’s visit to the United States earlier this year,
according to the Daily Caller, which first reported Flynn’s lobbying contract.
Russian
President Vladimir Putin, center right, with retired U.S. Lt. Gen.
Michael T. Flynn, center left, and Serbian filmmaker Emir Kusturica,
obscured, second right, attend an exhibition marking the 10th
anniversary of RT (Russia Today), the 24-hour English-language TV news
channel in Moscow, on Dec. 10, 2015. (Photo: Mikhail Klimentyev/Sputnik,
Kremlin Pool Photo via AP)
Without disclosing his lobbying relationship with the Turkish-owned firm, Flynn published an op-ed
in the newspaper the Hill on Election Day, in which he advanced the No.
1 cause of Erdogan’s government: advocating the extradition of
Fethullah Gülen, a Turkish exile living in Pennsylvania whom Erdogan has
blamed for instigating the failed military coup against his government
last summer.
In
the op-ed, which ran under the headline “Our ally Turkey is in crisis
and needs our support,” Flynn described Gülen as a “shady Islamic
mullah,” who runs a “vast global network [that] has all the right
markings to fit the description of a dangerous sleeper network. From
Turkey’s point of view, Washington is harboring Turkey’s Osama bin
Laden.”
This
is the not the first time questions have been raised about Flynn’s
overseas ties. Last December, Flynn, who served as director of the
Defense Intelligence Agency from 2012 until 2014, flew to Moscow to
participate in the 10th anniversary of RT, the Russian government
propaganda network. He gave an interview to one of its anchors and
attended a gala dinner where he sat at the same table as Russian
President Vladimir Putin.
In a testy exchange with Yahoo News
during the Republican Convention in Cleveland in July, Flynn
acknowledged that he was paid through his speakers bureau to attend the
RT event, but he declined to say how much.
What
was striking, according to ethics experts, is that given his overseas
consulting business, Flynn began sitting in on classified intelligence
briefings with Trump last summer. Flynn was reportedly so assertive during
the initial briefing in August, peppering the briefers with rapid-fire
questions, that Trump’s adviser Gov. Chris Christie of New Jersey, who
also attended the briefing, was prompted to try to calm him down by
placing a hand on his arm.
Danielle
Brian, executive director of the Project on Government Oversight, an
outside watchdog group, said that she finds it “deeply disturbing” that
Flynn attended these briefings at a time that he was representing
foreign clients with interests before the U.S. government. “It’s exactly
the kind of foreign entanglements our laws are designed to prevent,”
she said.
One
retired military officer who has advised both Republican and Democratic
presidents said of the allegations about Flynn: “If this is true, it’s a
disqualifying conflict of interest — if not by ethics laws, certainly
in the spirit of conflict of interest, not to mention security
regulations. We should be deeply concerned about his ethical judgment,
but more specifically how can he possibly provide unbiased advice to the
POTUS about Turkey and Russia, when he’s taken money from both.”
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