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Monday, 20 March 2017
Ex-UK ambassador calls White House wiretap claims 'gratuitously damaging'
Donald Trump’s ‘famous reluctance to admit mistakes’ is behind his
refusal to correct his unsubstantiated allegations, writes Sir Peter
Westmacott in an unrestrained putdown.
Photograph: Alex Brandon/AP
The former British ambassador to Washington, Sir Peter Westmacott, has issued a withering criticism of Donald Trump and his inner circle, accusing them of making absurd, unthinkable and nonsensical claims about the UK’s involvement in alleged wiretapping of Trump Tower that he warns could damage close ties between the two countries.
Writing in the Guardian, Westmacott accuses the White House of not
only “peddling falsehoods” that the British intelligence agency GCHQ assisted then president Barack Obama in tapping Trump’s New York phones, but of potentially harming intelligence cooperation across the Atlantic.
His comments come as the Republican chair of the House of Representatives
intelligence committee has said he has seen no evidence to back Trump’s
claims, and as a Republican member of that panel said the president
should apologise to Britain.
“This is a dangerous game,” Westmacott writes. “The intelligence
relationship between Britain and America is unique and precious. It is
critical to our shared efforts to counter terrorism.”
Westmacott adds that “gratuitously damaging it by peddling falsehoods
and then doing nothing to set the record straight would be a gift to
our enemies they could only dream of”.
The former ambassador’s excoriating remarks are all the more remarkable given that he stepped down from his role as the UK’s representative in Washington as recently as January 2016.
His unrestrained putdown of Trump’s refusal to correct the
unsubstantiated wiretapping allegations – which Westmacott ascribes
acerbically to the president’s “famous reluctance to admit mistakes” –
is a clear indication of the intensity of British anger at having been
dragged into what is seen as a controversy entirely of Trump’s own
making.
Such a searing attack from a senior former UK diplomat adds
to the heat on Trump and his team as the wiretapping furore enters its
third and possibly decisive week. The president dropped the bombshell on
4 March, claiming in a tweet
that Obama had tapped his phones during the presidential election, and
has engaged in an increasingly desperate effort to stand by the charge
ever since.
On Monday the powerful intelligence committee of the House will hear
testimony from the FBI director, James Comey, and Admiral Mike Rogers,
head of GCHQ’s equivalent in the US, the National Security Agency. Both
are certain to come under heavy questioning as to whether there is any
evidence of wiretapping, or surveillance of any kind, at Trump Tower
under Obama’s instruction.
In advance of the key hearing, Trump came under a barrage of fresh
criticism on the Sunday political talkshows from members of the House
intelligence committee, including those from the president’s own party.
Sir Peter Westmacott: ‘The intelligence relationship
between Britain and America is unique and precious.’ Photograph: Peter
Westmacott
The chairman of the House committee, Republican Devin Nunes, made
clear that having read a Department of Justice report into the affair
that was delivered to him on Friday, there was no evidence of a physical
wiretap on Trump Tower, nor any evidence that the Fisa court that
oversees the intelligence agencies had approved any surveillance.
“There was no Fisa warrant that I’m aware of to tap Trump Tower,”
Nunes told Fox News Sunday, adding: “I don’t think there is anyone in
the White House today that is under any type of surveillance at all.”
Another Republican, Will Hurd, went further and said it was time for
Trump to apologise to the UK. The representative, who had a nine-year
career as a CIA agent, said it was important to say sorry “for the
intimation that the UK was involved in this as well”.
“We need to make sure we are all working together,” he said. “We live in a very dangerous world and we can’t do this alone.”
The incendiary claim that GCHQ
conspired with Obama to secretly monitor Trump during the election
period may come up in discussions on Tuesday between the British foreign
secretary, Boris Johnson, and senior Trump aides. Johnson is due in
Washington to attend a global meeting on defeating Islamic State.
In his Guardian column, Westmacott exhorts Johnson to seize the
moment and make British displeasure known. “He needs to make very clear
that this is not a game,” the former ambassador writes.
The British row erupted last Thursday when the White House press
secretary, Sean Spicer, cited an unsubstantiated report by Fox News
commentator Andrew Napolitano that claimed Obama had used GCHQ to spy on
Trump. Fox News later dissociated itself from the allegations, saying there was no evidence for them.
In a highly unusual public intervention from GCHQ, the spy agency’s spokesman called the claims “utterly ridiculous”.
Westmacott, who served as British ambassador to Turkey and France
before moving to the US between 2012 and January 2016, underlines the
sense of shock in the UK at the wiretapping claims.
“Anyone with any knowledge of the intelligence world knew the
suggestion was absurd,” he writes. “First, the president of the United
States does not have the power to order the tapping of anyone’s phone.
Second, the idea of the British foreign secretary signing a warrant
authorising such an intrusion into domestic US politics was
unthinkable.”
Sean Spicer: Trump stands by ‘wiretap’ claimHe goes on to stress that the relationship between Britain and the US
has been taken for granted since the second world war, based on
“unquestioned mutual trust”. He warns that any move to damage it could
harm shared efforts to “counter terrorism, Russian aggression, the
cyber-attacks of China, the nuclear threat from North Korea and much
else”.
Despite the almost universal ridicule and censure Trump has faced,
the president continues to stick doggedly to his wiretapping
allegations, showing no willingness to apologise to Obama or the British
government.
His only concession so far saw Spicer say that the president used
“wiretapping” in quotation marks, to signify wider surveillance rather
than literal phone taps.
In the course of a press conference with the German chancellor, Angela Merkel, on Friday, Trump praised the Fox News contributor who started the dispute, calling Napolitano a “very talented lawyer”.
He also elicited an expression
of bemused pain from Merkel when he tried to joke that “at least we
have something in common” – an allusion to his claim that they have both
been the victims of US government wiretapping.
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