When Donald Trump’s Ukraine scandal first started coming into focus, Sen. Robert Menendez (D-N.J.), the ranking member of the Senate Foreign Relations Committee, reached out to Secretary of State Mike Pompeo with some pointed questions. The New Jersey Democrat wanted to know, for example, all about Pompeo’s knowledge of and role in Donald Trump’s schemes vis a vis Ukraine.
It looks like Menendez can now add to his lines of inquiry. NBC News reported overnight that Pompeo was on the call when Trump pressed Ukrainian President Volodymyr Zelensky to participate in the Republican’s campaign scheme.
Pompeo’s involvement in the call — during which Trump told Zelenskiy that [former Vice President Joe] Biden’s conduct sounded “horrible” to him — was first reported by the Wall Street Journal. It’s not unusual for the nation’s top diplomat to be on a president’s call with a foreign leader, but Pompeo has not acknowledged his involvement.
Pompeo dodged questions about the phone call and the complaint during an interview with ABC’s “This Week” on Sept. 22, days before the White House released a summary of the call which showed Trump asking about the Bidens’ dealings in Ukraine.
When ABC News’ Martha Raddatz asked the secretary of State about Trump’s call with Zelensky, Pompeo acted as if he didn’t know relevant details. “You just gave me information about [an intelligence community] report, none of which we’ve seen,” he said.
After on-air comments like these, if the secretary of State believes his credibility is intact, he’s mistaken.
What’s more, as Rachel noted on the show last night, unless Pompeo is the whistleblower — an extraordinarily unlikely scenario — it means Pompeo was in a rather unique position. He knew his own State Department had signed off on U.S. military assistance to Ukraine; he knew that Trump was effectively making that aid dependent on a partisan electoral scheme; and he said nothing.









