From the BBC:
“Trump impeachment: Memo confirms
president urged Biden inquiry”
The Trump administration has
released details of a phone conversation in July that has triggered a US
impeachment inquiry against the president. According to the notes, Donald Trump
asked the Ukrainian leader to look into corruption claims involving the son of
Joe Biden, Mr Trump's possible rival in next year's presidential election. Concerns about the call were initially raised
by a whistleblower. The Democrats accused Mr Trump of seeking foreign help to
smear a rival. Under the US constitution, a president can be impeached for
"treason, bribery, or other high crimes and misdemeanours" - a
procedure that can lead to removal from office. In July, Mr Trump froze
military aid to Ukraine but he has insisted that this was not used to put
pressure on the new government in Kiev.
What does Trump say about Biden
in the call?
Mr Trump discusses with his newly
elected Ukrainian counterpart, Volodymyr Zelensky, the 2016 removal of a
prosecutor, Viktor Shokin, according to notes of their 25 July telephone
conversation released by the White House. The US president is quoted as saying
in the half-hour call: "I heard you had a prosecutor who was very good and
he was shut down and that's really unfair. "A lot of people are talking about that,
the way they shut your very good prosecutor down and you had some very bad
people involved." He continues: "The other thing, there's a lot of
talk about Biden's son, that Biden stopped the prosecution [of Mr Biden's son]
and a lot of people want to find out about that so whatever you can do with the
[US] Attorney General would be great. Trump:
'It was going to be the call from hell. It turned out to be a nothing call' "Biden
went around bragging that he stopped the prosecution so if you can look into
it... It sounds horrible to me." Mr Zelensky says in response: "We
will take care of that and we will work on the investigation of the case."
Thanking Mr Trump, Mr Zelensky says he
stayed in Trump Tower in New York City during a previous visit to the US. On the call, the US president also asks Mr
Zelensky to work with US Attorney General William Barr and Mr Trump's personal
lawyer, Rudolph Giuliani, to look into the matter, according to the notes. The
Department of Justice said on Wednesday that Mr Trump had not spoken with the
attorney general about having Ukraine investigate Mr Biden, and Mr Barr had not
communicated with Ukraine.
What is the claim against Joe
Biden?
Mr Trump and his conservative
allies have focused on how Mr Biden, as US vice-president in 2016, lobbied
Ukraine to fire Mr Shokin. Mr Shokin's office had opened an investigation into
Burisma, a natural gas company on which Mr Biden's son, Hunter Biden, was a
board member. Other Western officials
had called for Mr Shokin to be fired because of the perception that he was soft
on corruption. Mr Biden last year told a foreign policy event how he threatened
to withhold $1bn in aid to Ukraine unless Mr Shokin was removed. No evidence
has come to light so far of wrongdoing by the Bidens.
How the controversy unfolded
18 July - President Trump orders
White House aide to hold back almost $400m in military aid to Ukraine, report
US media
25 July - President Trump speaks
with Ukraine's leader in a 30-minute phone call
9 September - Congress learns of
a whistleblower's complaint about the call, but is blocked by the Trump
administration from viewing it
11 September - Military aid for
Ukraine is cleared for release by the Pentagon and US Department of State
23 September - Trump confirms he
withheld Ukrainian aid, saying it was due to concerns about "corruption"
24 September - Trump says the aid
was withheld so that other countries would pay more
What is the background of the
call?
Mr Trump had promised that a
"complete, fully declassified and unredacted transcript" of the 25
July call would be released. But the details disclosed by the White House on
Wednesday morning were notes of the conversation taken by US officials who
listened in. The July call occurred days after Mr Trump directed the US
government to withhold about $391m (£316m) in military aid to Ukraine. In the
summary of the call, Mr Trump does not tell the Ukrainian president that US aid
hinges upon him investigating Mr Biden. But Mr Trump stresses the importance of
US financial support, before pressing Mr Zelensky for action on the Democratic
candidate. "I will say that we do a lot for Ukraine," Mr Trump says.
What's the reference to
'CrowdStrike'?
In one of the most cryptic
passages from the call, Mr Trump mentions a "server" and CrowdStrike.
He asks Mr Zelensky to "do us a favour" adding: "I would like
you to find out what happened with this whole situation with Ukraine, they say
CrowdStrike... I guess you have one of your wealthy people... The server, they
say Ukraine has it." CrowdStrike is
a cyber-security firm that was hired by the Democratic National Committee (DNC)
to investigate the 2016 hack of the party's email server. That cyber-breach led
to the leak of numerous emails that embarrassed Hillary Clinton's presidential
campaign. CrowdStrike determined a pair of hacking groups with suspected
Russian ties was responsible for the hack. Mr Trump has previously questioned
why the DNC did not turn over the hacked email server to the FBI, instead of
asking CrowdStrike to investigate. The US president told the Associated Press
news agency in April 2017 that he had "heard" CrowdStrike was
"owned by a very rich Ukranian". In the phone call with Mr Zelensky,
Mr Trump appears to suggest the DNC server is stored somewhere in Ukraine.
What's the reaction?
On Wednesday morning at the
United Nations General Assembly in New York City, Mr Trump said it was the
"single greatest witch hunt in American history". "The way you had that built up that call,
it was going to be the call from hell," said Mr Trump, who is up for
re-election in November 2020. "It turned out to be a nothing call." Speaking alongside Mr Trump at the event, Mr
Zelensky told reporters: "You heard that we had a, I think, good phone
call. "It was normal. We spoke
about many things, so I think you read it that nobody pushed me." "In
other words, no pressure," interjected Mr Trump. But California Democrat
Adam Schiff, the Democratic chairman of the House Intelligence Committee, told
reporters the phone call shows "a classic, mafia-like shakedown of a
foreign leader".
What's happening with the
impeachment inquiry?
The Democratic leader of the
House of Representatives, Speaker Nancy Pelosi, on Tuesday threw her weight
behind an official impeachment inquiry into the president's actions. A House
vote to impeach the president could trigger a trial in the Senate on whether to
remove Mr Trump from office. Congress' probe focuses partly on whether Trump abused
his presidential powers and sought to help his own re-election by seeking the
aid of a foreign government to undermine Mr Biden. Mrs Pelosi said such actions
would mark a "betrayal of his oath of office" and declared: "No
one is above the law."
How did the controversy arise?
The inspector general for the
intelligence community wrote to the Director of National Intelligence in August
about the Trump-Zelenksy call. A whistleblower from within the US intelligence
community had filed a complaint about the matter. Federal law requires such complaints to be
disclosed to Congress, but the Trump administration has so far refused to do
so. The US Department of Justice says the whistleblower had heard the
information from "White House officials", and did not have first-hand
knowledge of the call. The department's spokeswoman, Kerri Kupec, said on
Wednesday it had reviewed a record of the phone call, and determined
"there was no campaign finance violation and that no further action was
required".
^ The more I learn about all of
this the more I believe Trump did something illegal. It would be one thing if his
call was to an American (while it would still be wrong I don’t know if it would
be illegal), but the fact that it was to a foreigner and the leader of another
country at that makes it much worse. With that said I think the Democrat-controlled
House will impeach Trump over this and that the Republican-controlled Senate
will vote to keep Trump in office. It will be a very long and drawn-out process
that will distract us from other issues (like the wars in Afghanistan and Iraq,
veterans dying at VA-run places, etc.) and in the end Trump will declare
victory and will most likely be re-elected. Like I already said I do think he
is guilty of making this call and threat to the Ukrainian President (and with-holding
already approved aid until he got what he wanted) but I’m just not sure if giving
him an even more God-like complex when he eventually wins is better than doing
nothing until he is out of office. ^
https://www.bbc.com/news/world-us-canada-49830588
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