Devin Nunes got the cold shoulder on his "curious" trip to see intelligence officials in London. [View all]
https://www.theatlantic.com/politics/archive/2018/08/devin-nuness-curious-trip-to-london/568699/
According to two people familiar with his trip across the pond who requested anonymity to discuss the chairmans travels, Devin Nunes, a California Republican, was investigating, among other things, Steeles own service record and whether British authorities had known about his repeated contact with a U.S. Justice Department official named Bruce Ohr. To that end, Nunes requested meetings with the heads of three different British agenciesMI5, MI6, and the Government Communications Headquarters, or GCHQ. (Steele was an MI6 agent until a decade ago, and GCHQ, the United Kingdoms equivalent of the National Security Agency, was the first foreign-intelligence agency to pick up contacts between Trump associates and Russian agents in 2015, according to The Guardian.)
A U.K. security official, speaking on background, said it is normal for U.K. intelligence agencies to have meetings with the chairman and members of the House Permanent Select Committee on Intelligence. But those meetings did not pan outNunes came away meeting only with the U.K.s deputy national-security adviser, Madeleine Alessandri. The people familiar with his trip told me that officials at MI6, MI5, and GCHQ were wary of entertaining Nunes out of fear that he was trying to stir up a controversy. Spokespeople for Alessandri and Nunes did not return requests for comment, and neither did the press offices for MI5 and MI6. GCHQ declined to comment.
Steele, who authored a collection of memos sourced to Kremlin and campaign insiders alleging a conspiracy between Trumps campaign and Moscow to win the 2016 election, has been a fixation for Nunes ever since the document was published slightly more than two weeks before Trumps inauguration. Last summer, two of Nuness staffers, Kash Patel and Doug Presley, traveled to Londonwithout the knowledge of the U.S. Embassy or British governmentin search of Steele, whose lawyer denied the staffers access to his client. This time, Nunes sought a work-around, Im told. His trip to London at such a precarious moment for the president, and the intelligence agencies decision to decline him a meeting, is emblematic of the political island on which Nunes finds himselfalong with a handful of other Trump allies in Congress and the mediaas he continues his search for wrongdoing by the Justice Department.