National security experts: Trump's sharing classified info with Russia 'may breach his oath of office'
"This story is nauseating," Benjamin Wittes, a senior fellow in Governance Studies at The Brookings Institution, posted on Twitter along with a link to The Washington Post's bombshell story. "You might have to work with [national security] people to understand how bad it is, but it's horrible. Really really bad."
The Post reported on Monday night that Trump's disclosures to Russian foreign minister Sergei Lavrov and Russian ambassador Sergei Kislyak "jeopardized a critical source of intelligence on the Islamic State," and "had been provided by a U.S. partner through an intelligence-sharing arrangement considered so sensitive that details have been withheld from allies and tightly restricted even within the U.S. government."
Many have noted that Trump, as president, is technically allowed to disclose classified information to whoever he wants. But the fact that the information he shared was not a US secret, but that of an American ally, may complicate his authority to declassify information at will. Matthew Rosenberg of The New York Times told CNN on Monday that the intel came from a close "Middle Eastern ally."
"This is appalling," said Eliot Cohen, a professor at Johns Hopkins University's School of Advanced International Studies and former counsel to Secretary of State Condoleeza Rice. "If accidental, it would be a firing offense for anyone else. If deliberate, it would be treason."
"It's so mind-boggling, I don't even know what to say," Eric Edelman, a former undersecretary of defense during the George W. Bush administration, told The Wall Street Journal. "I'm completely gobsmacked. It's jeopardizing a human source. It's the one thing you're trained to never do. If what Post is reporting is true, it's a stunning indication of his unfitness for office."
"This is the most serious charge ever made against a sitting president of the United States," said Harvard professor and constitutional law scholar Alan Dershowitz.
'This is not a garden variety breach'
Lawfare blog, a website founded and managed by national security experts and former members of the US intelligence community, published its initial reaction to The Post's story shortly after it broke.
"This is perhaps the gravest allegation of presidential misconduct in the scandal-ridden four months of the Trump administration," the authors, including former National Security Agency lawyer Susan Hennessey, wrote on Monday.
"This is not a garden variety breach, and outrage over it is not partisan hypocrisy about protecting classified information," they continued. "The information allegedly disclosed here appears to be of an extremely sensitive nature," as evidenced by top White House officials' reported attempts to "contain the potential fallout" from Trump's misstep by quickly contacting the directors of the CIA and the NSA.
Thomson ReutersTrump "revealed more information to the Russian ambassador than we have shared with our own allies," one official told The Post. The incident happened last Wednesday, one day after Trump fired FBI Director James Comey amid an FBI investigation into potential collusion between the Trump campaign and Russian officials to undermine Hillary Clinton in the 2016 election.
Trump's national security adviser, H.R. McMaster, told reporters on Monday night that the Post's reporting was "false," and that Trump did not disclose the "methods and sources" of US intelligence with the Russians during their meeting. As many have noted, however, The Post did not report that Trump revealed "methods and sources" - only that Trump revealed information that was classified.
In any case, Lawfare alleged, Trump's reported actions "may well be a violation of the President's oath of office."
They explained:
Former US ambassador Jim Jeffrey, who served as deputy national security advisor in the George W. Bush administration, told Business Insider that the report would be more concerning if Trump had shared those intelligence sources and methods with the Russians. But he cautioned that "the ally who provided the info will have to be told, and that could restrict future reporting" of sensitive intelligence between the partners.
Jeremy Bash, the former Pentagon chief of staff under President Obama, echoed that sentiment: "Giving the Russians intelligence that our counterterrorism partners have asked us to protect is incredibly dangerous," he told The Wall Street Journal. "It will ensure that those partners don't share with us the information we need to protect ourselves."
Additionally, Jeffrey noted, "whatever the president shared with the Russians beyond the absolute minimum raises the specter that he doesn't get how justifiably outraged Americans are at the hacking of the 2016 election. That's the most troubling."
More from Natasha Bertrand:
- National security experts: Trump's sharing classified info with Russia 'may breach his oath of office'
- An FBI director has been fired only once before - and it was under dramatically different circumstances
- We now know more about the final straw that drove Trump to fire Comey
- FBI's acting director disputes White House claim that the FBI 'lost confidence' in Comey
- White House: Comey committed 'atrocities' during his time as FBI director