CBS’s “60 Minutes” aired its interview with former FBI Deputy Director Andrew McCabe last night, and as expected, he covered quite a bit of interesting ground, including shedding light on the 2017 conversation about Donald Trump and the 25th Amendment.
It was also of great interest to hear McCabe tell CBS’s Scott Pelley that he wrote contemporaneous memos about his conversations with the president — and those materials are now “in the custody of the special counsel’s team.”
But perhaps the most memorable element of the interview came when McCabe described what transpired after an FBI official briefed him on a meeting with Trump
MCCABE: The president — launched into — several unrelated diatribes. One of those was commenting on the recent missile launches by the government of North Korea. And, essentially, the president said he did not believe that the North Koreans had the capability to hit us here with ballistic missiles in the United States. And he did not believe that because President Putin had told him they did not. President Putin had told him that the North Koreans don’t actually have those missiles.
PELLEY: And U.S. intelligence was telling the president what?
MCCABE: Intelligence officials in the briefing responded that that was not consistent with any of the intelligence our government possesses, to which the president replied, “I don’t care. I believe Putin.”
In fairness, it’s worth emphasizing that McCabe apparently didn’t hear this directly from the president, but rather, was told about Trump’s comments from an FBI official who’d just briefed the president.









