Trump’s son-in-law loses top clearance
WASHINGTON – Agence France-Presse
Donald Trump’s son-in-law and senior aide Jared Kushner has lost his top-level security clearance, sources familiar with the matter said Feb. 27, a decision with potentially profound implications for the U.S. administration.
Two sources, who could not speak on the record because the status of security clearances is classified, confirmed U.S. media reports that the 37-year-old White House aide will no longer be able to access America’s most closely guarded secrets.
The White House -- up to and including the president himself -- refused to comment on the record, but officials insisted that the decision would not impact Kushner’s role.
Still, Kushner’s loss of access to “Top Secret/SCI (Sensitive Compartmented Information)” data casts serious doubt on his status as a powerbroker inside the White House and his ability to negotiate Middle East peace.
Kushner had been an integral part of Trump’s election campaign and, among White House advisors, is seen as something like a first among equals.
The soft-spoken aide is married to the president’s daughter Ivanka and has been a leading figure in efforts to reach a peace deal between Israelis and Palestinians.
He has also been a strong proponent of Washington’s intensified support for the government of embattled Israeli Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu.
Politico and CNN first reported that his clearance may have been rescinded late last week.
The decision comes just days before Netanyahu visits the White House.
Former U.S. negotiator Aaron David Miller said Kushner now risks losing “credibility” with interlocutors in the Middle East.
“They know you can’t be reading about them,” he said, and “you can’t possibly know what you don’t know.”
Kushner’s lawyer had earlier admitted that he has not yet completed the formal clearance procedure, despite reportedly getting access to the most secret material contained in the president’s daily briefing -- the crown jewels of U.S. intelligence.
White House Chief of Staff John Kelly ordered changes to the clearance system after a top aide -- Rob Porter -- worked for months without full clearance because of allegations he abused both his former wives.
“I will not comment on anybody’s specific security clearance,” Kelly said in a statement.
Kelly has told Kushner he had “full confidence in his ability to continue performing his duties in his foreign policy portfolio, including overseeing our Israeli-Palestinian peace effort and serving as an integral part of our relationship with Mexico.”
“Everyone in the White House is grateful for these valuable contributions to furthering the president’s agenda. There is no truth to any suggestion otherwise,” Kelly added.
Ivanka Trump’s level of security clearance has also been in question.
She recently visited South Korea and briefed that country’s president Moon Jae-in on new North Korea sanctions.
For almost any staffer other than Kushner, his future in the White House would now be under serious doubt.
He had already been forced to repeatedly revise statements to U.S. intelligence and law enforcement about his contacts with foreign officials and his business interests.
He put himself firmly in the sights of special prosecutor Robert Mueller after secretly meeting Russian ambassador Sergey Kislyak and Sergei Gorkov, a banker with ties to Vladimir Putin, as well as attending a notorious Trump Tower meeting with a Kremlin-connected lawyer.
Even before the security clearance news broke, close Kushner advisor Josh Raffel announced he was leaving the White House and Kushner was accused of breaking the “Hatch Act,” which forbids, among other things, White House aides from using their official titles in campaign statements.
Later, The Washington Post reported that at least four foreign governments -- China, Israel, Mexico and the United Arab Emirates -- had considered how to leverage Kushner’s business and political vulnerabilities.
That sparked several calls from lawmakers for Kushner to step down.
Congressman Ruben Gallego asked: “what DOES Jared have to do to get fired?”
The answer to that question remains unclear.
Kushner’s clearance downgrade “gives new meaning to the term ‘overdue,’” Senator Richard Blumenthal said on Twitter.
The move “raises questions about his entanglements with countries like China and potential conflicts of interests while he holds significant foreign policy responsibilities at the White House,” Blumenthal said.
Since the first days of this administration, Trump has hinted there was no challenge too confounding, no conflict too intractable for his son-in-law to tackle.
Beyond resolving the Israeli-Palestinian conflict, Kushner was handed a to-do list that included solving America’s opioid epidemic, prison reform and injecting the nation’s bureaucracy with entrepreneurial spirit.
In person, Kushner is polite and self-deprecating, offering little of the hubris the president has shown about his abilities.
“Jared’s done an outstanding job. I think he’s been treated very unfairly,” Trump said Feb. 23.
But Trump also indicated the decision on Kushner’s security clearance would be up to Kelly, saying: “I have no doubt he’ll make the right decision.”