Report: The Senate's investigation into Trump's Russia ties has descended into a 'standoff'

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Richard Burr Mark Warner

AP Photo/Susan Walsh

Senate Intelligence Committee Chairman Sen. Richard Burr, R-N.C., right, and the committee's Vice Chairman Sen. Mark Warner, D-Va. meet with reporters on Capitol Hill in Washington, Wednesday, March 29, 2017.

The Senate Intelligence Committee's investigation into Russia's interference in the 2016 election, and whether President Donald Trump's campaign team played any role in it, has stalled amid partisan bickering and staffing problems, according to two new reports.

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Sens. Richard Burr and Mark Warner, the committee's top-ranking Republican and Democrat, respectively, told reporters last month that the panel would "look at any campaign contacts with the Russian government ... that might have influenced, in any way, shape, or form, the election process."

Burr, the chairman of the committee, said the investigation "overrides any personal beliefs that I have or loyalties I might have.

"Mark and I might look at politics differently - we don't look at the responsibilities we have on the committee differently," he said then.

But more than three months into the committee's investigation, however, it has descended into a "standoff," according to Yahoo's Michael Isikoff. The committee hasn't issued any subpoenas or requested any key documents such as emails, memos, and phone records from the Trump campaign, in part because Burr "has so far failed to respond to requests from the panel's Democrats to sign letters doing so," Isikoff reported.

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Democrats and Republicans also can't agree on who should be able to view the raw intelligence compiled by the US intelligence community about Russia's interference. The CIA, FBI, NSA and 14 other intelligence agencies released a declassified version of their report about Russia's election-related meddling in January.

U.S. Senator Ron Wyden (D-OR) speaks with reporters as he arrives for the weekly Democratic Caucus policy luncheon at the U.S. Capitol in Washington June 2, 2015. REUTERS/Jonathan Ernst - RTR4YK2C

Thomson Reuters

Wyden speaks with reporters as he arrives for the weekly Democratic Caucus policy luncheon at the U.S. Capitol in Washington

Democratic Sen. Ron Wyden "demanded" that all intelligence committee aides, rather than just a select few staffers, be allowed to review the raw intelligence, according to Yahoo. Burr, however, "who has long feuded with Wyden, refused to go along, resulting in a standoff that has badly divided the committee."

The partisan feud was foreshadowed in February when Burr, who said he voted for Trump, acknowledged that he had called reporters at the White House's request to dispute damaging reports in the New York Times and CNN about the Trump campaign's contacts with Russia during the election.

Spokespeople for Burr, Warner, and Wyden did not respond to requests for comment.

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The committee's Russia investigation is also severely understaffed. The approximately seven staffers that are working on it are doing so part-time, both Yahoo and The Daily Beast reported, and none have relevant legal or investigative experience.

"The biggest obstacle now for a serious investigation into Trump-Russia ties is dedicated resources for staffing," a source with ties to the committee told The Daily Beast.

A brand new approach?

The partisan bickering and lack of resources - problems that have plagued both the House and Senate intelligence committees - have fueled calls from legal and intelligence experts to establish an independent select committee to look into Russia's election interference and Trump campaign associates' possible roles in it.

The Senate Intelligence Committee "already has a full time oversight role" as well as "major ongoing legislative projects" and is "simply not staffed at the level or in the manner necessary to also conduct a highly complex and time-consuming investigation" like the Russia probe, former National Security Agency lawyer Susan Hennessey and Brookings national security expert Benjamin Wittes have written.

Congress "has a duty to publicly address major questions the political system is struggling with now in a fashion the public can absorb and process," Hennessey and Wittes wrote for Lawfare in February.

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"What is the President's relationship with Russia? And is there reason to be concerned about it? The essential problem is that there is no current congressional mechanism with the investigative scope, staffing, and will to answer these questions in a serious fashion," they said.

A bipartisan commission would not require Trump's consent, they added, and the congressional committees' investigations would not need to be disbanded. Warner has said he would "support empowering whoever can do it right" if it became clear that his committee was not able to "properly conduct an independent investigation."

The membership of a select committee, according to Hennessey and Wittes, "should reflect an even partisan split-or as close to it as is politically doable. It is essential that the committee be chaired by a person whose commitment to a serious investigation is not subject to reasonable question. (Our nominee: Lindsey Graham.)"

Graham, a Republican senator from South Carolina who sits on the Senate Armed Services Committee, has said he would be open to forming a select committee to examine reports that US intelligence officials intercepted calls between Trump associates and Russian nationals during the campaign.

"I want to make sure myself that these intercepts exist, that the communications are outside the norm," Graham told "Good Morning America" in February. "If that's the case, it's time for Congress - in my view, the Senate - to do a joint select committee where we can look at it holistically."

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