Public differences have emerged between the FBI and the Trump administration over the release of a top-secret House Intelligence Committee memo alleging anti-Trump bias within the Justice Department.
The FBI, in a rare public rebuke to an administration, said on Wednesday it had "grave concerns" about the accuracy of the report, challenging President Donald Trump's pledge to release it.
White House Chief of Staff John Kelly had also predicted earlier that the memo would be made public "pretty quick."
"The FBI was provided a limited opportunity to review this memo the day before the committee voted to release it," the top law enforcement agency said in a statement on Wednesday.
"As expressed during our initial review, we have grave concerns about material omissions of fact that fundamentally impact the memo's accuracy."
The FBI declined to say if its director, Christopher Wray, approved the statement. Trump named Wray to head the agency after firing James Comey last May.
The memo has become a lightning rod in a partisan fight over investigations into alleged Russian meddling in the 2016 US election and possible collusion by Trump's campaign, which Russia and Trump have both denied.
Justice Department officials have also said releasing the memo could jeopardize classified information.
Representative Devin Nunes, the intelligence committee's Republican chairman who commissioned the document, said in a statement on Wednesday that FBI and Justice Department objections to its release were "spurious."
Although White House press secretary Sarah Sanders said Trump had not yet read the document, the president told lawmakers after his State of the Union address to Congress on Tuesday night that there was a "100 percent" chance the memo would be released.
A White House official said the four-page memo was delivered to the White House on Monday after the committee voted to release it. White House lawyers were working against a Friday deadline to determine if any of it should be redacted to protect national security, the official said.
Republicans, who blocked an effort to release a counterpoint memo by the panel's Democrats, say their document exposes anti-Trump bias by the FBI and the Justice Department in seeking a warrant to conduct an eavesdropping operation.
Democrats say the memo selectively uses highly classified materials in a misleading effort to discredit Special Counsel Robert Mueller, who is leading the Justice Department’s Russia probe, and Deputy US Attorney General Rod Rosenstein, who hired him.
Setting the stage?
In an opinion piece published on Wednesday in the Washington Post, Adam Schiff, the intelligence committee's senior Democrat, said the Republican memo was intended to set the stage for Trump to fire Mueller or Rosenstein.
Four sources familiar with the memo told Reuters it accused the FBI and Justice Department of misleading a Foreign Intelligence Surveillance Court judge in seeking an extension in March 2017 of a warrant for a secret eavesdropping operation against Carter Page, an adviser to Trump's 2016 campaign.
Testifying in November before the House of Representatives Intelligence Committee, Page said he met with Russian government officials during a July 2016 trip he took to Moscow while he was a foreign policy adviser to Trump’s campaign. He said he made the "benign" visit as a private citizen, according to the interview transcript.
The memo contends that the FBI and Justice Department failed to tell the judge that the request was based on a dossier compiled by a former British spy hired by a research firm partially financed by the Democratic National Committee and Democrat Hillary Clinton's presidential campaign, the sources said.
The sources said the memo was misleading because all the dossier excerpts used in the application had been confirmed by US or allied intelligence and law enforcement agencies. Moreover, said the sources, who requested anonymity, the application was based largely on material collected and verified by US intelligence agencies.
Under the Foreign Intelligence Surveillance Act, the government must report to the court every 90 days to show that a warrant was producing valuable foreign intelligence information to justify continuing an overseas eavesdropping operation on an American citizen.
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