our president trump
our president trump

By Gregg Re | Fox News

President Trump tore into House Democrats’ ongoing impeachment inquiry Wednesday during a press conference with Turkey President Recep Tayyip Erdogan, decrying the hearsay-laden “witch hunt” and saying he hadn’t watched that day’s public hearing “for one minute.”

“This is a sham, and shouldn’t be allowed — it was a situation that as caused by people who couldn’t have allowed it to happen. I want to find out who’s the whistleblower,” the president said, claiming that the whistleblower’s information wasn’t accurate.

“I’m going to be releasing, I think on Thursday, [another] transcript, which actually was the first of the two [phone calls],” he said.

The White House has already released a transcript of Trump’s July 25 call with Ukraine’s leader, in which the two discussed past U.S. “support” for Ukraine, as well as Ukraine’s issues with corruption. On the call, Trump asked Ukraine to investigate reports that Ukraine was involved in 2016 election interference. The president also mentioned Joe Biden’s push to have Ukraine’s chief prosecutor fired, and suggested the country look into the matter.

Asked at the press conference about acting ambassador to Ukraine Bill Taylor’s testimony about an alleged July 26 phone call between the president and U.S. envoy to the European Union Gordon Sondland, Trump said: “I know nothing about that — first time I’ve heard it.”

Taylor testified that a member of his staff recently told Taylor that he heard Sondland on the phone with Trump asking about “investigations.” Sondland, Taylor testified, allegedly replied that the Ukrainians were ready to move forward.

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The president continued: “The one thing I’ve seen that Sondland said, he did speak to me for a brief moment, he did speak to me for a brief moment — [he testified previously that] I said, no ‘quid pro quo,’ under any circumstances. And that’s true. In any event, it’s more second-hand information. … The only thing, and I guess Sondland has stayed with his testimony, that there was no quid-pro-quo, pure and simple.”

Trump added that witnesses summoned by Democrats during the impeachment hearings had produced “all third-hand information” and unreliable hearsay. “This statement that I made, the whole call that I made with the president of Ukraine, was a perfect one. … I’d much rather focus on peace in the Middle East.”

Despite a BBC report that Erdogan had recently thrown a letter from Trump in the trash, Erdogan began the news conference by telling reporters Trump was a “good friend.” Trump reciprocated, calling the autocrat a “great president” and claiming that Turkey had a “great relationship with the Kurds.”

“This is a sham, and shouldn’t be allowed.”— President Trump

Erdogan announced that between six months to two years from now, Turkey could repatriate about one million refugees into a safe zone established in northern Syria. Outside the White House, dozens of Kurds and their supporters waved Kurdish and American flags in protest.

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The press conference came after the two leaders met in the White House, and followed a meeting with five Republican senators, including Ted Cruz of Texas and Lindsey Graham of South Carolina. (After Trump urged his Erdogan to call on “a friendly reporter from Turkey,” Graham reportedly turned to an ABC News reporter to remark, “There aren’t any others left.” The president joked afterward that the Turkish reporter Erdogan called on appeared to work for the Turkish government.)

Trump and Erdogan in the Oval Office. (AP Photo/ Evan Vucci)

Erdogan and Trump had a difficult agenda for their talks, which included Turkey’s decision to buy a Russian air defense system despite Ankara’s membership in NATO and its incursion into neighboring Syria to attack Kurdish forces that have fought with the U.S. against the Islamic State (ISIS) group.

Despite those disputes, Trump said the two countries were poised to agree to increase U.S. goods and services trade with Turkey, which totaled about $24 billion in 2017.

Trump defended his decision to invite Erdogan despite Turkey’s widely denounced advance into Syria. He said that he and Turkey’s president have been “very good friends” for a long time and understand each other’s country.

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“We’re going to be expanding,” Trump said. “We think we can bring trade up very quickly to about $100 billion between our countries.”

The president was “pleased” that Turkey was increasing spending on its own defense, and noted that other NATO allies have been lagging behind.

“I know that the ceasefire, while complicated, is moving forward — and moving forward at a very rapid clip,” Trump said, later adding that Turkey’s acquisition of advanced Russian military equipment presents “serious challenges.”

Demonstrators hold Kurdistan flags in front of the White House as thy protest Erdogan’s visit Wednesday. (AP Photo/Steve Helber)

Republican lawmakers have pressed Erdogan about why Turkey bought the S-400 Russian air defense missile system. The U.S. and fellow NATO nations say the S-400 would aid Russian intelligence and compromise a U.S.-led fighter jet program.

The U.S. has since kicked Erdogan out of a multinational program producing components of America’s high-tech F-35 fighter jet. In response, Erdogan attended an air show this summer in Moscow and expressed interest in buying the latest Russian Su-35 fighter jets.

“We have a lot of trade with Turkey, but it could be many times higher … We intend to bring it up to about $100 billion, which would be about four times what it is now,” Trump said.

Trump also said Turkey has been helping the U.S. “a lot” in fighting ISIS.

Meanwhile, in the Senate, two Democrats introduced legislation denouncing Turkey’s targeting of journalists, political opponents, dissidents, minorities and others. They said the Turkish government has imprisoned more than 80,000 Turkish citizens, closed more than 1,500 nongovernmental organizations on terrorism-related grounds and dismissed or suspended more than 130,000 civil servants from their jobs.

In October, Trump moved U.S. forces out of the way of invading Turkish troops, a decision that critics said amounted to abandoning America’s Kurdish allies, but that Trump defended as an important end to an otherwise “endless” military engagement in the Middle East.

Trump administration officials have said Trump told Turkey not to invade Syria. But when Erdogan insisted, they say, Trump decided to move 28 Green Berets operating on the Turkey-Syria border so they wouldn’t be caught in a crossfire between Turkish-backed forces and the Kurds.

“I think a tremendous amount of progress is being made,” Trump said.

Fox News’ Chad Pergram and The Associated Press contributed to this report. Gregg Re is a lawyer and editor based in Los Angeles.

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