Trump hid his calls with Putin. Now, Biden has
access to them.
What was said between the two leaders is a great
mystery, one that advisers to the current president say is imperative to find
out.
By NATASHA
BERTRAND and DANIEL LIPPMAN
02/09/2021
07:55 PM EST
https://www.politico.com/news/2021/02/09/biden-can-access-trump-putin-calls-468100
Few
Trump-era mysteries are as intriguing as what the 45th president said to
Vladimir Putin in at least a dozen rambling, off-the-cuff calls and meetings
over four years. Understanding what was said between the two could help
illuminate whether Trump ever revealed sensitive information or struck any
deals with the Kremlin leader that could take the new administration by
surprise.
Now that
President Joe Biden is in the White House, he can see for himself.
“They don’t
need our approval to see those [records],” a former Trump White House official
said, referring to the new Biden national security team. “Biden owns all the
call materials. There is only one president at a time.”
The Biden
White House did not comment on whether it had seen the content of the calls.
But so far, at least, the National Security Council has not registered any
complaints with their ability to access relevant call records from the previous
administration.
“It is a
national security priority to find out what Trump said to Putin” over his four
years in office, said one former national security official who is close to the
new president. “Some things, like what happened in some face-to-face meetings
where no American translator or note-taker was present, may never be fully
known. But I would be very surprised if the new national security team were not
trying to access” the call records.
Donald
Trump talked with Vladimir Putin on the phone at least a dozen times during his
presidency. Now, Biden’s team is trying to piece together whether those
conversations could come back to haunt them.
Trump
closely guarded his private conversations with foreign leaders while in office,
going as far as to have some hidden in the NSC’s top-secret codeword system to
limit staffers’ and even cabinet members’ access and prevent leaks. Readouts of
Trump's calls with Putin would often come from the Kremlin first, or through
Trump’s Twitter feed. But while the calls were not recorded, aides were
typically still on the line and taking notes of what was said. The resulting
loose transcripts are known as “memcons,” or memorandums of conversation.
Trump went
to particularly great lengths to keep his in-person conversations with the
Russian leader private, from confiscating his interpreter’s notes to forgoing
American translators and notetakers altogether in their meetings. That desire
for secrecy has extended even past his time in office. One former Trump
official argued last week that records of Trump’s conversations with Putin,
which often lasted an hour or more, should not be made available to his
successor.
“There are
certain things a president and his immediate staff should be able to hold
privileged to do the work of government, without being subject to constant
partisan gamesmanship,” said a second former Trump White House official.
Memcons,
including Trump’s calls with Putin, are considered presidential records, and
were not expunged before the 45th president left office, one former Trump White
House official said. They were transferred to the National Archives and Records
Administration at the end of Trump’s term, as is customary.
“Of course
we didn’t delete anything and they would be in NARA and accessible,” the
official said.
Kel
McClanahan, executive director of the law firm National Security Counselors,
agreed as a legal matter: “The only person who can claim executive privilege
anywhere is the sitting president,” he said. “So there is literally no
situation, nor could there be, where a former president could keep a sitting
president from seeing something.”
Trump’s
interactions with Putin and other Russian officials were certainly far from the
normally carefully choreographed talks between world leaders — Trump early on
in his tenure went as far as to disclose classified information to Russian
diplomats in the Oval Office.
But former
senior Trump advisers said it was rare that Trump would say anything to the
Russian leader that he had not already said publicly (or would simply blurt out
later while complaining about “the Russia hoax”). Marina Gross, who interpreted
many of Trump’s calls and meetings with Putin, told associates that listening
to their conversations often felt like eavesdropping on two friends chatting in
a bar, according to one former official.
Still, the
shadow diplomatic campaigns that flourished during the Trump administration are
also top of mind for the Biden team as it works to understand the often
disjointed policies of the last four years. Trump’s ill-fated call with
Ukrainian President Volodymyr Zelensky, which led to his impeachment, was also
hidden in the NSC codeword system, as were Trump’s calls with the Saudi royal
family.
“This is
much bigger than just Russia and Putin,” said another former Trump
administration official. “It’s a problem across the board for the new team —
basically, trying to find out, what did [Trump] promise people left right and
center?”
John
Eisenberg, the former top lawyer on Trump’s NSC who was involved in placing the
president’s calls in the top-secret server, will now be one of Trump’s
representatives handling some records requests from the Biden White House,
according to a person familiar with the matter.
The Biden
NSC’s Russia review is being led in part by the council’s acting senior
director for Russia and Central Asia, Eric Green, a veteran foreign service
officer who for years specialized in Russia at the State Department. Green
recently replaced Andrea Kendall-Taylor who left for personal reasons.
The Biden
and Trump NSC staff consulted on a range of issues, including Russia, during
the transition. And officials said it was generally thorough. In the days and
weeks leading up to Biden’s inauguration, Trump’s outgoing NSC staff turned
over binders full of material — including intelligence reports, strategy
documents and information about ongoing operations — to facilitate a smooth
transition.
The
incoming national security team likewise grilled their predecessors on the
obligations and commitments the Trump administration had made to both allies
and adversaries, including to Russia. Some Trump staffers — primarily detailees
from other federal agencies — remained on the NSC after Jan. 20 for the sake of
continuity of government and have been helpful in answering the new NSC’s
questions.
“We really
tried hard to do it well,” said the second former Trump official, who
participated in the process.


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