In
the early weeks of the Trump administration, former Obama
administration officials and State Department staffers fought an
intense, behind-the-scenes battle to head off efforts by incoming
officials to normalize relations with Russia, according to multiple
sources familiar with the events.
Unknown
to the public at the time, top Trump administration officials, almost
as soon as they took office, tasked State Department staffers with
developing proposals for the lifting of economic sanctions, the return
of diplomatic compounds and other steps to relieve tensions with Moscow.
These
efforts to relax or remove punitive measures imposed by President Obama
in retaliation for Russia’s intervention in Ukraine and meddling in the
2016 election alarmed some State Department officials, who immediately
began lobbying congressional leaders to quickly pass legislation to
block the move, the sources said.
“There
was serious consideration by the White House to unilaterally rescind
the sanctions,” said Dan Fried, a veteran State Department official who
served as chief U.S. coordinator for sanctions policy until he retired
in late February. He said in the first few weeks of the administration,
he received several “panicky” calls from U.S. government officials who
told him they had been directed to develop a sanctions-lifting package
and imploring him, “Please, my God, can’t you stop this?”
Fried
said he grew so concerned that he contacted Capitol Hill allies —
including Sen. Ben Cardin, D-Md., the ranking minority member on the
Senate Foreign Relations Committee — to urge them to move quickly to
pass legislation that would “codify” the sanctions in place, making it
difficult for President Trump to remove them.
Tom
Malinowski, who had just stepped down as President Obama’s assistant
secretary of state for human rights, told Yahoo News he too joined the
effort to lobby Congress after learning from former colleagues that the
administration was developing a plan to lift sanctions — and possibly
arrange a summit between Trump and Russian president Vladimir Putin — as
part of an effort to achieve a “grand bargain” with Moscow. “It would
have been a win-win for Moscow,” said Malinowski, who only days before
he left office announced his own round of sanctions against senior Russian officials for human rights abuses under a law known as the Magnitsky Act.
The
previously unreported efforts by Fried and others to check the Trump
administration’s policy moves cast new light on the unseen tensions over
Russia policy during the early days of the new administration.
It
also potentially takes on new significance for congressional and
Justice Department investigators in light of reports that before the
administration took office Trump’s son-in-law, Jared Kushner, and his
chief foreign policy adviser, Michael Flynn, discussed setting up a
private channel of communications with Russian ambassador Sergey Kislyak
— talks that appear to have laid the groundwork for the proposals that
began circulating right after the inauguration.
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