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Top NSC Official Tim Morrison Says Nothing Improper Occurred During Trump-Zelensky Call

Chinese Soldiers Make First Appearance Amid Hong Kong Protests, Clear Debris From Street

Chinese state media outlets have portrayed the ongoing protests as “riots,” and have repeatedly threatened that the PLA could be sent in to crush the movement. Late afternoon, locals were cleaning up bricks and barricades on a road near Hong Kong Baptist University in Kowloon Tong, when around 50 PLA soldiers from the nearby barrack arrived with buckets and brooms to clear the remaining debris, according to Hong Kong Free Press. A cameraperson, who accompanied the soldiers, filmed the exercise, the outlet reported. Chinese troops have appeared on Hong Kong streets only once since the 1997 handover to help clear up after a typhoon in 2018. Pro-democracy lawmakers have condemned the incident, saying the PLA troops’ actions could have violated the city’s laws restricting Chinese military involvement in Hong Kong. In a…

(L): Ukrainian President Volodymyr Zelensky in Warsaw, Poland on Aug. 31, 2019. (Sean Gallup/Getty Images); President Donald Trump at a press conference in the East Room of the White House in Washington on Sept. 20, 2019. (Charlotte Cuthbertson/The Epoch Times)

Tim Morrison, a former top national security adviser to the president, said last month that he believed nothing unusual occurred during the July 25 phone call between Ukrainian President Volodymyr Zelensky and President Donald Trump, according to a transcript released over the weekend, while he also stated that  Gordon Sondland, the U.S. ambassador of the European Union, was involved in an effort to foster Ukraine to open an investigation into Joe Biden.

He was uncertain of Trump’s involvement in Sondland’s efforts. “I’m still not completely certain that this was coming from the President,” Morrison testified to House Democrats. “I’m only getting this from Ambassador Sondland.”

During a closed-door deposition as part of the House impeachment inquiry, Morrison was asked, “In your view, there was nothing improper that occurred during the call?”

“Correct,” he answered as he was testifying under oath.

Morrison, the top U.S. official at the National Security Council on Russia and Europe, was promoted to his position after Fiona Hill resigned July 19. He listened to the July 25 phone call as it happened.

Former top national security adviser to President Donald Trump, Tim Morrison, arrives for a closed door meeting to testify as part of the House impeachment inquiry into President Donald Trump on Capitol Hill in Washington, Thursday, Oct. 31, 2019. (AP Photo/Andrew Harnik)

Elaborating further, he said the word “Burisma” never came up in the phone call, referring to Ukrainian energy giant Burisma Holdings. Former Vice President Joe Biden’s son, Hunter, sat on the board of Burisma when his father was in office.

Biden last year bragged that in 2016 he threatened to withhold $1 billion in loan guarantees from Ukraine if the president at the time, Petro Poroshenko, didn’t fire the country’s top anti-corruption prosecutor, Victor Shokin, who at the time was investigating Burisma.

In the phone call, Trump asked his counterpart to look into the Bidens and other matters related to 2016 election interference. Democratic lawmakers have claimed that Trump misused his power by withholding hundreds of millions of dollars in military aid to Ukraine in exchange for investigations into Biden, who is a 2020 presidential candidate.

Morrison said that while the aid was withheld, he thought it was because of Trump’s skepticism toward foreign aid in general.

His view, according to his testimonial, is that Trump has a “general antipathy to foreign aid” and also had a “concern that the Ukrainians were not paying their fair share, as well as his concern [that] our aid would be misused because of the view that Ukraine has a significant corruption problem.”

Morrison was asked more about the phone call.

“You were on the call. Do you remember whether the name Burisma came up on the call?” “No, I don’t believe it did,” he said.

The answer is significant, as a junior NSC official, Lt. Col. Alexander Vindman, testified to the House Intelligence Committee that Zelensky brought up the word “Burisma.” However, Morrison said that he has the “final clearing authority” on the July 25 call transcript.

“Do you remember whether anyone suggested edits adding the word Burisma to the [memorandum of conversation]?” Morrison was asked. “I do not,” he responded. Vindman testified that he suggested to edit in the word “Burisma.”

But when asked about Vindman’s suggestions, Morrison said he approved all of them.

alexander vindman Lt. Col. Alexander Vindman, center, director for European Affairs at the National Security Council, arrives at the U.S. Capitol in Washington on Oct. 29, 2019. (Photo by Mark Wilson/Getty Images)

“Had I recalled or had it in my notes that was mentioned, yes, I would have agreed to the edit,” he said of the word “Burisma.”

Judgment?

Meanwhile, Morrison told the Intelligence Committee he questioned the judgment of Vindman and didn’t tell him about other details. Other NSC officials shared Morrison’s concerns.

“I had concerns about Lieutenant Colonel Vindman’s judgment. Among the discussions I had with Dr. Hill in the transition [period] was our team, my team, its strengths and its weaknesses. And Fiona and others had raised concerns about Alex’s judgment,” Morrison recalled.

When questioned further, he responded, “I had concerns that he did not exercise appropriate judgment as to whom he would say what.”

Morrison also said other NSC officials had concerns that Vindman might be leaking information to the press.

“Yes,” he said when asked if someone brought concerns to him about Vindman’s supposed leaks. “It was brought to my attention that some had—some of my personnel had concerns that he did [have access to things he was not supposed to see].”

He also testified that he went to NSC counsel John Eisenberg about concerns the July 25 call would be leaked.

“I was concerned about how the contents would be used in Washington’s political process. I was concerned about how it could be used,” he remarked. “I didn’t necessarily fully understand how everybody could use it, but I was concerned that it would wind up politicizing Ukraine. I was concerned that that would, in turn, cost bipartisan support. And I was concerned about how the Ukrainians would internalize that.”

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