The Daily - How Rudy Giuliani’s Ukraine Operation Backfired
Episode Date: October 3, 2019In 2018, President Trump hired Rudolph W. Giuliani, his longtime friend and the former New York City mayor, to In 2018, President Trump hired Rudolph W. Giuliani, his longtime friend and the former ma...yor of New York City, to defend him against the special counsel’s Russia investigation. So how is it that Mr. Giuliani helped get the president entangled in another investigation, this time involving Ukraine? Our colleague investigated the remarkable behind-the-scenes campaign, encouraged by Mr. Trump and executed by Mr. Giuliani, to gather and disseminate political dirt from a foreign country. Guest: Kenneth P. Vogel, a Washington correspondent for The New York Times. For more information on today’s episode, visit nytimes.com/thedaily. Background reading: The story of a shadow foreign policy in Ukraine unfolded against the backdrop of three elections — this year’s vote in Ukraine and the 2016 and 2020 presidential races in the United States.Secretary of State Mike Pompeo confirmed he listened in on the phone call at the center of the impeachment inquiry.Follow our live updates from the investigation in Washington.
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From The New York Times, I'm Michael Barbaro.
This is The Daily.
Today, Rudy Giuliani was hired to defend President Trump
against the special counsel's Russia investigation.
So how is it that Giuliani helped get Trump entangled
in another investigation involving Ukraine.
My colleague, Ken Vogel, investigates.
It's Thursday, October 3rd.
Ken, I want to start by reading from some of your reporting back in May.
Please, by all means.
You wrote a story that Rudy Giuliani,
the president's personal lawyer,
was planning a trip to Ukraine
in order to look into the Bidens.
Seems prescient.
This is the quote that Giuliani gives you
when you ask him about this work he's doing in Ukraine.
He says,
there's nothing illegal about it. Somebody could say it's
improper. And this isn't foreign policy. I'm asking them to do an investigation that they're doing
already and that other people are telling them to stop. And I'm going to give them reasons why they
shouldn't stop because that information will be very, very helpful to my client and may turn out
to be helpful to my government.
And then you write,
Mr. Giuliani's involvement raises questions about whether Mr. Trump is endorsing an effort
to push a foreign government to proceed with a case
that could hurt a political opponent at home.
So you had that story all the way back in May.
So why is it only now that these revelations are
prompting an impeachment inquiry? Yeah, that's a good question. I mean, I think we understood a lot
of the puzzle back then. But what we didn't understand was the degree to which the president
himself was personally involved in pushing the Ukrainians to investigate and provide dirt on the president's political rivals.
Some of that stuff had yet to happen when we first addressed this.
And then only more recently have we learned about the vivid details of his involvement,
and those have been really eyebrow-raising.
I wonder if you could just start at the beginning of the story.
Well, you have to go back and look at Rudy Giuliani.
He, of course, was the mayor of New York City,
including during the September 11, 2001 terrorist attacks.
I'm here on behalf of a very grateful
and very admiring city
in saying how proud we are
of the innocent men and women
who are going about their lives proud we are of the innocent men and women who were going about
their lives, seeking their part of the American dream when their lives were cut short by the act
of cowardly terrorists. And his leadership during that horrible time earned him the reputation
of America's mayor. For every single person touched by this unthinkable tragedy, there's been one man
who, above all others, has been the beacon holding this city together and leading it forward.
He's the mayor of New York City, Rudy Giuliani. And when he leaves office at the end of 2001,
he's got this great reputation and he's really riding high. He's the mayor who helped New York recover from 9-11.
Right.
And that made him a really marketable commodity as a consultant,
consulting on security issues.
But he always kind of craved the political fight.
When I was mayor, there was a sign on my desk.
It read, I'm responsible.
That's the kind of common sense accountability we need today.
That's the kind of leadership we need in Washington,
and that's why I'm running for president.
And so he takes a break from this business to run for president in 2008.
Leaders assassinated, democracy attacked,
and Osama bin Laden still making threats.
In a world where the next crisis is a moment away,
America needs a leader who's ready.
I'm Rudy Giuliani, and I approve this message.
And that didn't go so well.
Rudolph Giuliani has dropped out. America's mayor, John Q. 9-11, it's over.
For months, Giuliani was the frontrunner for the Republican nomination, and then people started voting.
And he returns to the business and starts to do a lot of business in Ukraine.
And can why Ukraine?
Ukraine is a place that has drawn a lot of Western consultants and politicians and big names.
It's a place where there's a lot of money to be made
from a handful of oligarchs and wealthy interests that are looking for legitimacy that they believe
that they can get from prominent Americans. And there was no more prominent American
than Rudy Giuliani at that time period. And what are Ukraine's security needs
when it comes to someone like
Rudy Giuliani? Ukraine has a lot of needs in this space. The most pressing concern for Ukraine is
its neighbor looming to the east, Russia. Overnight, dozens of armed pro-Russian forces
seized control of the international airport and military airport in Ukraine's Crimea region.
A day after, pro-Russian gunmen took over government buildings in the city
and raised the Russian flag.
And so what Ukrainians are looking for and what Rudy Giuliani has in spades
is both a reputation for being tough on crime, tough on terrorism,
and also being able to represent sort of a de facto endorsement from the United States of America, which is something that is coveted and so important in Ukraine to have support from the U.S. in their effort to stave off Russian aggression.
And what is Giuliani's relationship with Donald Trump around this period?
with Donald Trump around this period.
So the relationship goes back more than two decades to when Trump was actively developing real estate in New York
and Giuliani was the mayor, of course.
And then they kind of overlapped in social circles
and a little bit in political circles.
And then their relationship takes a new turn in 2016
when a lot of the more establishment Republicans
are sort of keeping their distance from Trump, who is still seen as kind of a toxic figure, even as he's closing in on the
Republican nomination, Giuliani nonetheless decides to endorse him.
That's what I don't understand.
Why don't you say, I'm Rudy Giuliani.
I mean a lot in New York politics.
I endorse Donald Trump.
Okay, I'm Rudy Giuliani.
I mean a lot in New York politics.
I endorse Donald Trump, but I'm not part of the campaign. Well, I don't understand. What is that last part?
It's kind of a lukewarm endorsement at first, but he's really one of the early establishment
Republicans to get behind Trump. And it pays off. When Trump is elected, Giuliani is seen as a power
broker. And for a time, his name was even bandied about as a potential nominee for Secretary of
State. Now, ironically, one of the reasons why he was passed over for some of these positions was that his foreign consulting work was seen as something of a liability.
And so that was seen as something of a letdown.
But nonetheless, he stayed an important figure in Trump world.
And when the Mueller investigation started, Rudy was eventually
tapped as one of President Trump's lead defense attorneys in that. There's no reason for this
investigation. There never was a good reason for in the first place. This is just plain wrong.
And is Giuliani still doing business with these overseas security clients while he's representing
the president as a lawyer? Yes. And in fact, not only is he juggling both roles, but it's arguable that his role as the
president's attorney makes him more marketable and more coveted as a consultant by some of these
foreign interests who see having someone who is close to the U.S. president on their payroll as
something that could be of enormous benefit. And how does Giuliani navigate that? As you say, it's kind of fraught, but it's also an opportunity.
Well, he does it in an interesting way, which is that he continues traveling the world,
meeting with prospective clients, even as he is representing the president. And there are cases,
including in Ukraine, where these two roles do seem to intersect.
How so? Well,
you have to back up and look at Trump's obsession with Ukraine. Plus, the Democrats colluded on the Ukraine, so they colluded. Trump has had these theories going back to 2016 that it was
actually the Ukrainians who meddled in the 2016 election. Not Russia. Right. And they meddled in it to help
Hillary Clinton and to hurt him. And turns out Rudy Giuliani was hearing some of the same stuff.
I got information about three or four months ago that a lot of the explanation for how this
whole phony investigation started will be in the Ukraine, that there were a group of people in the
Ukraine that were working to help Hillary Clinton. And so he became the perfect person to investigate these theories and use them and develop them to try to undermine the Mueller investigation.
And you know what's going to happen in the next two to three months?
We're going to find out that there is a crime that was committed.
It's called conspiracy with Ukrainians.
Total, total counterintelligence scam job.
And Ken, is there any validity to the Trump theory that has been picked up by Giuliani
that Ukraine was trying to hurt Trump in 2016 and trying to assist the Democrats?
So there's not really a simple answer to that question, Michael. There are certainly people
in Ukraine who believe that
there were Ukrainian officials who were too supportive of Hillary Clinton and that some of
those officials may have acted improperly in releasing this information about Paul Manafort
that forced his resignation from the Trump campaign. Now, that said, there are also some
theories that Trump and Giuliani have floated that are completely bogus and have been definitively debunked.
And those include the idea that it was Ukraine and not Russia that actually did the hacking of the Democratic National Committee and that Ukraine then sought to frame Russia and make it appear as if Russia was working with the Trump campaign.
We know from the Mueller investigation
that all of that is completely wrong.
So what happens with this Giuliani investigation in Ukraine
that's been blessed by the president?
So Giuliani is reaching out to people in Ukraine.
He has associates who are over there.
He's exploring some of this stuff.
And he says that in the process
of poking around, he comes across this other theory that might be equally beneficial to
President Trump. And that involves the Bidens and their activity in Ukraine.
Joe Biden was appointed the point man for Ukraine. Two to three weeks later, his son Hunter
was appointed to a position on the most corrupt
agency or the most corrupt business in Ukraine. The theory is that Joe Biden, as vice president,
in his capacity as the Obama administration's point person on Ukraine, pushed the Ukrainian
government to get rid of a prosecutor who was widely regarded as corrupt, not because this
prosecutor was corrupt and it was in the interest of the United States to help Ukraine root out
corruption, but rather because this prosecutor represented a threat to an oligarch who owned
a gas company that was paying Joe Biden's son, Hunter Biden, as a board member.
But is there anything to this Biden theory that Giuliani is cultivating? There is no evidence
that Joe Biden pushed the Ukrainian government to fire this prosecutor because it would help his son
or the company that was paying him as a board member. Now, that said, with everything in Ukraine,
it's not quite that simple. In fact, the people around that company were relieved when that
prosecutor was fired. And that's because they thought he was holding open the possibility of investigations of
this company and the oligarch in order to be able to solicit a bribe to get him to stand
down, which is, unfortunately, kind of the way that the Ukrainian prosecutorial and judicial
system work.
Ukrainian prosecutorial and judicial system work.
So what does Giuliani do next to try to actually prove these grand theories based on what feel like these teeny tiny crumbs of fact and suspicion?
So Rudy is working, including with Ukrainians,
to try to gain traction on some of this stuff.
He's working with associates of his, and they are gathering records.
They get him on the phone with some prosecutors.
And then finally, in January of this year, Rudy gets a meeting in New York with the top Ukrainian prosecutor, a guy by the name of Yuri Lutsenko.
And we understand that this meeting transpired over the course of a day or two with multiple sessions, many hours long.
And Rudy is so enthusiastic about the information that Lutsenko is providing to him that at one point Rudy actually picks up the phone and calls Trump and starts to brief him on what he's hearing.
Why? What is so exciting?
Well, Rudy thinks he's found a powerful Ukrainian partner to pursue these matters.
And when I say pursue the matters, I don't just mean to provide him dirt.
I mean, actually moving forward with investigations in Ukraine into some of these matters. Yuri Lutsenko, had actually closed investigations into the oligarch who owned the gas company that employed Hunter Biden and to the company itself.
And so it's quite a notable turnabout that this prosecutor is now willing to pursue these investigations that could be of huge benefit to President Trump.
Well, help me understand why a Ukrainian prosecutor would ever want to do this kind of favor for Giuliani and for President Trump.
Well, there are a couple of theories on that.
Both of them have at their heart Ukrainian politics that were unfolding at the time.
The president was running for reelection.
This is the president who appointed Lutsenko, was seen as a patron of Lutsenko, and he was not doing very well.
And so some of his allies thought that if he were able to throw President Trump a bone,
give President Trump something that he wanted, President Trump might reciprocate and signal
some support for the Ukrainian president.
But secondarily, if the president ended up losing,
Lutsenko was looking for some powerful allies
in the United States who might be willing
to go to bat for him with the new president
and say, hey, this guy, this prosecutor, Lutsenko, is good.
You should keep him.
And so there is some thinking that that
was motivating Lutsenko to get into bed with Rudy.
So the understanding after Giuliani meets with Lutsenko
is that Lutsenko would be pushing the investigations inside Ukraine
that President Trump wants,
and that President Trump would help Lutsenko's boss
get re-elected president of Ukraine.
So there would be, you know, something in it for everybody.
That's right. So there would be, you know, something in it for everybody. That's right.
So what ends up actually happening?
Well, Lutsenko goes back to Ukraine. And in fact, he does take some steps towards
pushing forward these investigations and issues what is known in Ukraine as a notice of suspicion
to the oligarch who owned the gas company on whose board Hunter Biden sat. And it
was enough to make Rudy feel pretty good about what was going on. And what about the other side
of the understanding that Trump would help Lutsenko's boss? Yeah, that didn't really pan
out so much as some of the allies of the president had hoped they never really got the full throated
support of President Trump
that they thought that they might get if they gave Trump and Rudy Giuliani what they were seeking in
terms of pushing forward these matters that Trump and Giuliani want to investigate it. And
Lutsenko's boss, the president, goes down to defeat in a landslide.
What does that election result mean for Trump and for Giuliani?
slide. What does that election result mean for Trump and for Giuliani? Well, it's bad news for them because they had developed this relationship with this prosecutor who was going to pursue the
matters that they wanted to see pursued. And suddenly this prosecutor's job is in jeopardy.
In fact, on election night, the president elect signals that he wants to get rid of Lutsenko.
So Giuliani and Trump are left scratching their
heads trying to figure out, is there a way for them to continue this effort? And they ultimately
end up taking a series of steps that lead us to where we are today. Which is an impeachment inquiry.
Yeah.
We'll be right back.
Ken, what did Giuliani and Trump do in the face of this pretty big setback in their efforts to get Ukraine to conduct these investigations that they want. Well, they start trying to make it pretty clear to the new president, Zelensky, and to the people
around him that this is something that they feel pretty strongly about and want to see continue.
And this starts, our reporting suggests, on election night.
We did it. Together.
On the night that Zelensky is triumphant in this huge landslide,
he gets a call from President Trump.
It's the typical congratulatory call.
But then, at the end of the call,
Trump expresses his commitment to work together with President-elect Zelensky
and the Ukrainian people to implement reforms that strengthen democracy, increase prosperity and root out corruption.
And that's a direct quote, by the way, from the White House readout of the call.
What do you make of that last line?
For people who have been following this on both sides of the Atlantic, they know that when the Trump folks say corruption, what they really mean is that they want an investigation of the Bidens and Hunter Biden's work for this gas company. And also this idea that Ukrainians acted improperly to meddle in the 2016 election on behalf of Hillary Clinton.
on behalf of Hillary Clinton.
So even just that word, corruption,
it is now widely understood when raised by the Trump folks to mean we want these investigations.
And do you think Zelensky would have understood that
to mean what you just described?
I think he would because his people have been following this
and they were in communication with Americans
who were telling them that that's what this means.
And what's your sense of what this new Ukrainian president,
Zelensky, is making of Trump
and how open he is to helping the president?
I think that once it becomes clear what Trump wants,
it becomes clear to the people around Zelensky
that he's in a horrible position,
really a no-win position.
He knows that he needs to keep in the good graces of the United States president because Ukraine is
so dependent on assistance, both military assistance and other forms of assistance and
support from the United States. And if he refuses and rebuffs President Trump and Rudy Giuliani on
what they want in terms of these investigations, he knows it will risk alienating the U.S. president and potentially undermining
that relationship. On the other hand, he knows that if he gives the president and Rudy Giuliani
what they want, it would risk alienating Democrats and most notably Joe Biden, who could be the next president of the
United States. And that would be a real bad position for Zelensky as well, if the new
president of the United States is one that he has already poisoned the well with.
So this is a very unenviable position for a brand new president of Ukraine to be in.
Yes, it is.
So what does Zelensky end up doing?
Zelensky basically tries to avoid committing either way.
He still has yet to appoint a prosecutor general to replace Lutsenko, who he has indicated that he wants to get rid of.
But he says, well, you'll just have to wait until we have this new prosecutor who's going to come in and assess these things and then they'll make the decisions.
Well, that does not satisfy Rudy, who wants some kind of signal sooner.
Rudy Giuliani is going on a fishing trip, as in an information gathering mission, in Ukraine.
And so what Rudy does, within three weeks of Zelensky's election, he plans a trip to Ukraine,
where he intends to try to meet with Zelensky to push for Zelensky to make some show of support for these investigations.
The president's personal attorney heading to Eastern Europe to encourage a foreign government
to press ahead with an investigation or two that may very well damage a political rival of his clients.
So let's ask the man himself, the president's personal lawyer, Rudy Giuliani.
Mayor, great to have you with us tonight.
How are you, Shannon?
So that, right, brings us to your reporting back in May. I want to read you something from
the New York Times. Won't surprise you that they're not fans of this idea. Oh my gosh.
That Giuliani is about to take this trip to Ukraine to push these investigations. That's right.
I mean, the reality is that I'm not, I wasn't going there to encourage them to start an
investigation. They start an investigation.
They have an investigation.
They have an investigation of how Ukrainians helped the DNC and Hillary operatives to get, in some cases, false, dirty information about the Trump campaign.
And what happens with that trip?
Well, after we reported, it generates quite a backlash. The Biden campaign claims there was no wrongdoing and Democrats pounced.
Primarily from Democrats,
but also from foreign policy experts
sort of across the spectrum.
It's an investigation designed to affect
one of the candidates they fear the most, Joe Biden.
And I think it's reprehensible.
Okay.
So I've decided, Sharon, I'm not going to go.
And Rudy Giuliani cancels it.
So in canceling the trip, it feels like Giuliani understands at this point that the path he's on is problematic. Yes and no. I think
he's conceding that it's controversial. But what we now know is that in the weeks and months after
that canceled trip, both Giuliani and Trump took several steps
to continue to pressure the Ukrainians
to take up these investigations.
First, in mid-July, we have Trump ordering the delay
and review of some assistance to the Ukrainians,
$391 million worth.
And then about a week later,
we now know about this July 25th call between Trump
and Zelensky, where Trump starts off by talking about all that the U.S. does for Ukraine and then
leads into pushing Zelensky to work with both Rudy Giuliani and the Attorney General Bill Barr
on these investigations, including the ones into the Bidens and their
activity in Ukraine. And he even goes further, just so there's no confusion, it says, and he's
upset because you had this prosecutor who was very good, who was shut down, and that's really
unfair. And he says, and a lot of people are talking about that. Well, that prosecutor he's
talking about is none other than Yuri Lutsenko, the prosecutor
with whom Rudy Giuliani had been working to push these investigations.
So what Trump seems to be saying in reference to Lutsenko is you should really keep that
guy.
He's pretty great.
Why are you being tough on him?
Right.
And at that point, Lutsenko had not yet been replaced, although
Zelensky had indicated that he intended to replace him. It feels like so much of your reporting
led right up to that phone call. Back in May, you understood Giuliani was doing this. You understood
Trump seemed to be supporting it. And then you have this call. Yeah, and we felt like we understood all the pieces here,
and we felt like we understood what was being communicated, but we thought that it was being
communicated with a lot of winks and nods in the traditional language of diplomacy. So it was
quite stark to see it laid out by President Trump, no less, in such very specific detail in this July 25th phone call.
It was to some degree mind boggling because both Trump and Zelensky are sort of familiar
with all the issues in play here.
So much of this stuff could be done more effectively and more subtly without actually coming out
and making these arguments.
And I couldn't help but think as I read through
this reconstructed transcript that like so much of what Trump was saying, I've heard Rudy Giuliani
say in almost these exact terms, the way that Trump's language evoked Rudy's was quite striking
to me. What do you make of that dynamic between these two? Well, it's sort of ironic that Rudy
was brought on as Trump's defense attorney
to help him navigate his way through the Mueller investigation. And instead, he quickly branched
out and became sort of an opposition researcher and campaign attack dog and even a quasi-diplomat
engaging with foreign governments in a way that has led Trump right into the next crisis of his presidency,
in many ways, potentially a worse crisis that is now at the center of the impeachment inquiry.
I wonder, Ken, if you think that Giuliani could have pursued all of these theories,
have pursued all of these theories, could have been digging around Ukraine just the way he was in a way that would never have led us down this path of an impeachment inquiry?
Possibly.
I think that he certainly could have pursued some of these things, making it clear that
he was acting in his personal capacity as the president's personal attorney and not acting on behalf of the president himself or the administration,
that probably would have still raised hackles back in Washington.
I think we probably still would have had congressional investigations.
But the minute that President Trump takes up this case personally and uses the power of the presidency to try to pressure an allied government to do his political bidding
at a time when this government is facing a very real and existential threat from Russia,
our common foe, is when we crossed the Rubicon and got to the point where there are legitimate
questions about abuse of office that undergird this impeachment inquiry.
Thank you, Kevin.
Thank you.
On Wednesday, during a visit to Italy, Secretary of State Mike Pompeo acknowledged he was listening
in on the telephone call, during which President Trump pressured the president of Ukraine to investigate Joe Biden and his son.
As for was I on the phone call, I was on the phone call.
The phone call was in the context of now I guess I've been the secretary of state for coming on a year and a half.
I know precisely what the American policy is with respect to Ukraine.
It's been remarkably consistent.
policy is with respect to Ukraine. It's been remarkably consistent. Pompeo had previously expressed ignorance of the call, raising questions about whether he misled the public about his role.
Soon after, during a news conference in Washington, the chairman of the House Intelligence Committee,
Adam Schiff, warned that the leaders of the impeachment inquiry would soon subpoena documents related to the Ukraine call directly from the White House, which has resisted cooperating.
So they just need to know that even as they try to undermine our ability to find the facts around the president's effort to coerce a foreign leader to create dirt that he can use against the political opponent,
that they will be strengthening the case on obstruction if they behave that way.
Later on Wednesday, speaking from the White House,
President Trump denounced Schiff, accusing him without evidence of treason,
and revived his theory that Democrats had collaborated with Ukraine to hurt him during the 2016 campaign.
What the Democrats did in 2016 was corrupt. And let's see what happens. They're more concerned
with that than they are with me and impeachment. They're trying to hide what maybe is coming.
The president said it was a matter of time before information emerged that showed Democrats
were engaged in a cover-up.
Because they know they're guilty as hell, all right? They're much more worried about that.
We'll be right back.
Here's what else you need to know today.
The Times reports that advisers to President Trump have altered the rules for choosing delegates to next year's Republican National Convention
to ensure that there are no dissenting speeches at the closely watched event.
watched event. In several states, Republican Party officials have changed the rules so that Republican challengers who lose to Trump can no longer send delegates to the convention,
where they could theoretically speak out against Trump. The advisers said that the president
prefers a convention free from political conflict. That's it for The Daily.
I'm Michael Bavaro.
See you tomorrow.