Return to Transcripts main page

The Lead with Jake Tapper

U.S. Intelligence Contradicts Trump, Says North Korea Maintaining Nuclear Program; Cohen Turning on Trump?. Aired 4:30-5p ET

Aired July 02, 2018 - 16:30   ET

THIS IS A RUSH TRANSCRIPT. THIS COPY MAY NOT BE IN ITS FINAL FORM AND MAY BE UPDATED.


[16:30:03]

(CROSSTALK)

QUESTION: ... the former prime minister of Canada was here today, Sarah? Can you tell us what Stephen Harper was here for?

QUESTION: Two part-question. (OFF-MIKE) a quick comment.

Sarah, you are most welcome at any Indian restaurant across the U.S., including especially this (INAUDIBLE)

SARAH HUCKABEE SANDERS, WHITE HOUSE PRESS SECRETARY: Thank you.

QUESTION: My question is two-part question.

One, when the president is going to make history by visiting India, because 1.2 billion Indians are waiting for him, because he's very famous in India.

HUCKABEE SANDERS: I will keep you posted. I don't think we have a trip planned, but once we do, we will certainly make the announce.

We will take one last question.

(CROSSTALK)

HUCKABEE SANDERS: Oh, sorry. Go ahead.

QUESTION: As far as legal immigration is concerned, people who came here legally and people who are living legally, they are waiting at least 15 years to get green card.

And if this trend continues (INAUDIBLE) green cards are backlogged. Then it will take about 70 years for them to (INAUDIBLE)

So, any presidential message as far as cleaning these backlogs for the legal immigrants who are going across the U.S. demonstrating and asking the U.S. of presidential help?

HUCKABEE SANDERS: Certainly, the president's talked many times about the fixing the overall system, both illegal and legal immigration.

We want to certainly address illegal immigration in securing our borders and protecting American communities. However, at the same time, there is a process that people should follow, and we want the look for ways to fix that process as well and expedite that.

I will come back here for the last question.

QUESTION: Thanks, Sarah.

Just continuing on immigration, Vice President Pence was just in Central America telling leaders that they need to do more to control immigration. President Trump has threatened to cut foreign aid to Central American nations if they don't do more to address the outflow of immigrants.

Can you tell me what specific steps the White House has taken to carry out this threat? Has there been any meetings with USAID, State Department to outline what could be cut?

HUCKABEE SANDERS: We -- frankly, we would like to see that not happen because we would like to see them step up and do more to stop illegal immigration into the United States. We would like their help and their participation in making that happen.

Thanks so much, guys. Have a great day.

QUESTION: What's the administration doing to...

ERICA HILL, CNN ANCHOR: Sarah Sanders speaking with reporters there, the first we have heard in about a week or so, saying the president is not asking potential Supreme Court justices how they feel about specific cases.

This after the president revealed this afternoon he's met with four candidates. She also would not budge at all in terms of who those candidates were, even when asked if any of them were women.

Sanders also announcing Secretary of State Mike Pompeo will be returning to North Korea, leaving on Thursday. He will go there to meet with Kim Jong-un and his team. When asked specifically though whether President Trump still trusts Kim Jong-un, Sanders would not say.

Let's go straight now to Kaitlan Collins, who was there in the briefing.

A lot of things she wouldn't weight in on, including there's so much talk about, of course, Roe vs. Wade today and whether the president feels it should be overturned. She was not budging.

KAITLAN COLLINS, CNN WHITE HOUSE CORRESPONDENT: No, she wasn't, Erica.

And she was asked three times I believe, to be exact, whether or not the president believes that Roe vs. Wade should be overturned. She didn't give a clear answer, repeating the president was not going to ask the candidates about it when he did interview them, but, of course, repeating that the president is pro-life. This is a president who as a candidate promised to put pro-life judges

on the court and his vice president, Mike Pence, when they were still on the campaign trail said if President Trump won we would see Roe vs. Wade overturned and a quote about it belonging in the trash heap of history.

We had have them on the record saying that, what they believed about that. And the president saying just in recent days that there was a chance that it could go back to the state if the decision was made. She did -- would not say if the president interviewed any women.

We know that CNN reporting shows the president is increasingly interested in picking a woman to take Anthony Kennedy's spot on the Supreme Court. Of course, that comes after we have Senator Susan Collins, someone who is going to be a crucial vote in this nomination process, saying that she would not vote for a candidate that shows hostility of Roe vs. Wade.

I asked Sarah Sanders if she -- if the president thought that Senator John McCain of Arizona should step down and resign from his seat so the governor picks another senator to take that spot to vote on that Supreme Court nominee, since John McCain has not been in the Capitol in almost a year now, I believe.

She did not answer that question, saying she hadn't spoken to the president about it on that front. So a lot of news there on the Supreme Court front saying that the president did meet with four people today, those four potential nominees.

Sarah Sanders said he spoke with them about 45 minutes each during that process. Not giving a lot more details on who exactly it is that the president is thinking.

But, Erica, made news on several other fronts. A lot of questions about those reports that North Korea is in fact not doing what they believed they had accomplished during that summit in Singapore with the White House and declared it a victory, only saying she believed there was momentum going forward and that they were continuing to make progress.

[16:35:05]

She didn't know any progress that has been made since that summit in Singapore when the president sat down with Kim Jong-un.

One more thing, Erica, I would like to note, she also said that the United States has not recognized Russia invading Crimea and annexation, something that had been a key question leading up to this briefing, whether or not the president would say that after there were some reports that the president did consider Crimea to be part of Russia.

She did say that those sanctions will remain in place on Russia for invading Crimea, but she didn't rule out recognizing it in the future. That is a key point there, Erica.

HILL: We will be watching for more of that.

A lot coming out of the briefing, as you mentioned. Kaitlan, thank you.

Sarah Sanders was also asked about President Trump's longtime personal attorney Michael Cohen and an interview he gave that was aired earlier today. As President Trump's fixer, he apparently now wants to focus on fixing problems of his own.

Cohen speaking out for the first time since the raids on his home and office since back in April, with a very clear message about loyalty, telling ABC -- quote -- "To be crystal clear, my wife, my daughter and my son and this country have my first loyalty."

A message, too, about Cohen's willingness to cooperate with federal authorities, and, as CNN's Brynn Gingras reports, breaking from President Trump on the Russia investigation.

(BEGIN VIDEOTAPE)

QUESTION: How are you with the new lawyers? Are you happy?

BRYNN GINGRAS, CNN CORRESPONDENT (voice-over): Michael Cohen breaking his silence. In an interview with ABC, Trump's self-proclaimed fixer, a man who has said he'd -- quote -- "take a bullet for Donald Trump"...

MICHAEL COHEN, FORMER SPECIAL COUNSEL TO DONALD TRUMP: I will do anything to protect Mr. Trump.

GINGRAS: ... is now making clear who his allegiance is to.

"To be crystal clear, my wife, my daughter and my son and this country have my first loyalty."

In a 45-minute off-camera interview, ABC says not once did Cohen praise his former boss and disagreed with Trump's criticism of the investigation as a witch-hunt. Instead, he signaled that if he faces federal criminal charges, he would cooperate, possibly offering information on the president, something Trump told reporters he wasn't worried about just weeks ago.

QUESTION: Want to know if you're worried if he is going to cooperate with federal...

(CROSSTALK)

DONALD TRUMP, PRESIDENT OF THE UNITED STATES: No, I'm not worried, because I did nothing wrong.

GINGRAS: After an FBI raid earlier this year which seized more than four million documents from Cohen, CNN has learned that U.S. attorneys in Manhattan are interested in his $130,000 payment to porn star Stormy Daniels before the 2016 election.

Daniels claims she had an affair with the president, which Trump denies. In the past, Cohen says he facilitated the hush money alone.

QUESTION: Mr. President, did you know about the $130,000 payment to Stormy Daniels?

TRUMP: No.

GINGRAS: But when asked directly in this interview about what the president knew about the payment, Cohen declined to answer -- quote -- "I want to answer. One day, I will answer. But for now, I can't comment further, on advice of my counsel."

That new counsel is Guy Petrillo, a former Criminal Division chief for the Southern District of New York. He's expected to take the reins as Cohen's lead attorney by the end of this week.

It's a shift in legal strategy that could signal Cohen's willingness to cooperate with investigators. And, according to ABC, that means a joint defense agreement between Cohen and the president which allows both sides to share information could end.

This strikingly similar to actions former National Security Adviser Flynn took shortly before he flipped. When asked if Cohen worries he may be on the brink of an adversarial relationship with the president, he firmly said -- quote -- "I will not be a punching bag as part of anyone's defense strategy. I am not a villain of this story and I will not allow others to try to depict me that way. I want do regain my name and my reputation and my life back," he said.

(END VIDEOTAPE)

GINGRAS: And Cohen making that declaration as a review of millions of documents over privilege concerns is really nearing completion.

Just today, the special master assigned in the case handing over one million pieces of evidence taken in that April raid to the government and come Thursday the Trump Organization needs to have its review finished.

Remember, Cohen has not been charged with a crime here, but this is all signaling if he is going to be charged, Erica, it could happen in the very near future.

HILL: All right, and we will be watching for that.

Brynn, appreciate it, as always. Thank you.

Here now, my panel of experts join me to discuss.

So, as we're looking at all of this, if Michael Cohen, in fact, decides to cooperate in some way here, Sarah Sanders was asked at the briefing whether there was concern at the White House. She was not touching that, obviously referring to outside counsel.

But what are you hearing about in terms of behind the scenes? Just how much concern is there that he could in fact flip? SARA MURRAY, CNN NATIONAL POLITICAL CORRESPONDENT: Well, yes, you're

seeing the White House.

They obviously don't want to comment on this today, and the president's outside counsel has also declined to comment on this today.

But what we do know is the president was very vocal publicly, but also to the advisers around him when there were the raids on Michael Cohen's home, office and hotel room. He was very opposed to that. He was very concerned about this at the outset.

[16:40:08]

And there's really no reason to believe that that's changed, even the White House is being silent on this publicly. You're talking about someone who has worked alongside the president for a very long time as his lawyer, but also as a fixer.

So while some of these interactions, some of these agreements could be covered by attorney-client privilege, that certainly won't extend to all of the business they have done together and you can understand anyone in a position of power whose personal lawyer is suddenly raising a possibility of flipping would be pretty concerned at this moment.

HILL: There's also the question about timing here, Evan.

ABC also reporting that this joint defense agreement the Cohen shared with the president is actually ending. What would that change?

EVAN PEREZ, CNN JUSTICE CORRESPONDENT: Well, it means that Michael Cohen and his lawyers are going to go dark, Erica.

That's what I think is what he is signaling and certainly his legal team will stop sharing information with the president's legal team, with the Trump Organization legal team. And so they're not going to know exactly what is happening as far as Michael Cohen's concerned.

The question that I think a lot of us have is, you know, who is Michael Cohen really talking to with these interviews, with these public statements he is making? Is he really talking to prosecutors?

Because, you know, his lawyers can simply pick up the phone and say, I'm ready to make a deal. It appears that he has another audience. And that audience is in the White House. And so that is what makes this all so much more interesting.

HILL: In terms of that audience in the White House, an audience of one, I would imagine, Phil, when you look at the signal that this sends to President Trump, is this about, hey, get ready, this is what I'm going to going to do? Is it, hey, I would like a pardon later on?

Where does it lie for you, Phil?

PHILIP MUDD, CNN COUNTERTERRORISM ANALYST: I agree with Evan. Look, if you want the talk to prosecutors, pick up the phone. They're in Manhattan. He has hired an attorney who used to be a prosecutor. I presume he has hired the attorney to conduct negotiations with the office this attorney he's hired used to work for. So the audience can't be the government.

I think -- again, I'm with Evan. I think the audience has to be one man and the message is, look, a judge was serious enough about this to authorize searches of your lawyer's office, hotel and home. Meanwhile, you have the -- Michael Cohen himself coming off-camera, but on the record saying I'm about ready to go to the other side.

The only message I can interpret is to his former boss saying it will get ugly unless you do something about this. The only thing I can think of doing is some sort of premature pardon before you even have charges come forth. Otherwise, Michael Cohen's going to talk.

HILL: Evan, if there were a deal that was made, because we're talking here about the investigation with the Southern District of New York.

PEREZ: Right.

HILL: But if there was a deal made with those prosecutors, a deal with the federal prosecutor is a deal with federal prosecutors across the board. Correct?

PEREZ: Exactly. Here's the deal, Erica.

That really -- the president only has control over federal crimes. So if there is a deal -- and, by the way, we don't even know whether prosecutors want to offer a deal. They seem to have plenty of information that they possibly could bring charges against Michael Cohen, so they might not even be in a place where they want a cooperation agreement from Michael Cohen.

The question though for Michael Cohen is what does that solve for you as far as state crimes? A lot of things we are talking about, this is a taxi medallion alleged financial crimes that is under investigation, there is also a state jurisdiction in New York.

And so the question is whether or not this resolves all of his problems. It doesn't appear that it would. So he can get pardoned from a federal crimes standpoint, but state crimes would still be a problem for him.

HILL: Sarah, one of the other things that really stood out in this interview is the way Michael Cohen very clearly broke with the president when it comes to the Russia investigation, even using -- talking about the term witch-hunt, which we know the president definitely likes to use.

MURRAY: Yes. That's right.

It was really striking the number of ways Michael Cohen tried to create this distance between himself and the president. Remember, President Trump called these raids on Michael Cohen's home, office and hotel room an attack on our country.

When Cohen was asked about this, he said I don't agree with those who demonize or vilify the FBI. He went on to say while it was obviously unnerving and upsetting to his family and to him to go through these raids, he said the agents were professional and they were courteous.

And then when he was talking about the witch-hunt more broadly in that ABC interview, he went on to say he doesn't like the term witch-hunt and he believes Russia should be condemned for trying to interfere in the last presidential election.

He's taking a much harsher tone on sort of the issue of Russian election meddling than the president and he's taking aim at the very rhetoric the president has been using to try to demonize this entire investigation and undermine the work of Robert Mueller.

HILL: Sarah, Evan, Phil, appreciate it. Thank you, all.

The White House, meantime, just announcing Secretary of State Mike Pompeo is returning to North Korea later this week. Will he get the reassurance the United States needs?

(COMMERCIAL BREAK)

ERICA HILL, CNN NATIONAL CORRESPONDENT: In our "WORLD LEAD," moments ago the White House announcing Secretary of State Mike Pompeo will head to North Korea on Thursday. This as U.S. Intelligence Agency warns the President Kim Jong-un doesn't plan on fully dismantling his nuclear program, that's according to a White House source. CNN's Barbara Starr reports.

(BEGIN VIDEOTAPE)

DONALD TRUMP, PRESIDENT OF THE UNITED STATES: How long will it take? I think within the first minute I'll know.

BARBARA STARR, CNN PENTAGON CORRESPONDENT: Less than 60 seconds President Trump just before the Singapore summit insisted that's all the time he needed to determine if Kim Jong-un was serious about giving up his nuclear weapons.

TRUMP: Just my touch, my feel, that's what -- that's what I do. I think that very quickly I'll know whether or not something good is going to happen.

STARR: But the Pentagon's Defense Intelligence Agency believes North Korea has no intention for now of giving up its weapons and is going to hide missiles, warheads, and nuclear fuel from any inspectors.

[16:50:05] CEDRIC LEIGHTON, CNN MILITARY ANALYST: This is all about regime survival. This is all about keeping the Kim dynasty in power and they will stop at nothing in order to do that.

STARR: National Security Advisor John Bolton says the White House has its eyes wide open but it's better not to give Kim time to drag it out. JOHN BOLTON, ADVISER, NATIONAL SECURITY, WHITE HOUSE: I'm sure that

Secretary of State Mike Pompeo will be discussing this with the North Koreans in the near future about really how to dismantle all of their WMD and ballistic missile programs in a year. If they have the strategic decision already made to do that and they're cooperative, we can move very quickly.

STARR: Commercial satellite imagery may already be showing North Korea's moves. Researchers believe these images show recent expanded construction at a weapons plant known for making missile parts and these images show improvements at a massive nuclear research complex. A critical worry is whether North Korea may already be secretly making more nuclear fuel for new warheads. If the talks don't work out --

COL. ROB MANNING, SPOKESMAN, DEFENSE DEPARTMENT: The mantra there, "ready to fight tonight" does not change.

BOLTON: But there's not any starry-eyed feeling among the group doing this that were well aware of what the North Koreans have done in the past.

(END VIDEOTAPE)

STARR: Now, this next meeting with Pompeo will be crucial. He is expected to begin discussing a to-do list with the North Koreans and he's going to have to determine how serious they really are. Erica?

HILL: That is the big question, Barbara. Thank you. Kim Jong-un could also becoming to America. Axios reporting the North Korean leader could hold round two of talks with President Trump in New York in September. Let's turn back our panel now to talk more about this. When we look at what could be happening, the fact that we're learning secretary Pompeo will be going to North Korea on Thursday, what kind of assurances Phil Mudd does he actually need to come back with that would be seen as credible at this point?

PHIL MUDD, CNN COUNTERTERRORISM ANALYST: Boy, this is really the hard part. We thought that the summit that the President went through was the big deal. I think the big deal has two big components that the Secretary of State will be talking about, the first is intention. What are the North Koreans want to do? Are we clear on what we mean by that term denuclearization if you could say it? The second is complicated but let me set -- spend a second on it. Bolton, the National Security Advisor saying they could do this in a year completely unrealistic. What Pompeo is to talk about in execution is everything from where are all the scientists and engineers, we want to interview them all, where's all the documentation, where's all the nuclear material, where are the nuclear weapons, were the missile facilities, how do we dismantle them? And then you get into how you monitor over time to ensure they don't rebuild. You are not going to do that in 12 months. It's not going to happen.

HILL: And Phil, there are also significant questions not only about differing different thoughts that we're hearing to put it mildly from both John Bolton and from Mike Pompeo but also we're looking at the intelligence that we're getting. The Intelligence Community putting out this report about Kim Jong-un's intentions. Is there a sense that that's being done because they're worried about the President's approach here?

MUDD: I don't think they would be worried about the President's approach but any intelligence officer looking at this is going to say I have a responsibility both to look at what they're doing on the ground and what I think they're going to do in the future. I would take this assessment though and I'm a former Intel guy with a big grain of salt. Anytime you have an inaccessible foreign leader, think Saddam Hussein, and you're trying to determine what's going on his head, I can't figure out what I'm going to do over the July 4th holiday, Erica, I don't know how somebody's sitting back from this distance saying I know what Kim Jong-un's plans are and what his intentions will be not only today but next week. I'm a little bit skeptical.

HILL: Bill Kristol, are you concerned that Kim Jong-un has been underestimated?

BILL KRISTOL, EDITOR AT LARGE, THE WEEKLY STANDARD: Well, I think so far he's won and we haven't gained anything and I -- that seems to be the path we're going on. John Bolton has been a skeptic of Bush, Clinton, Obama, early Bush talks with North Korea. I can't believe he's very happy about this. I went through some of those leaks coming out have something to do with people in the administration who are skeptical about the path President Trump is going down. They're trying to in effect warn him off and let people know that Kim is not denuclearizing. I mean, I hope we get -- honestly as an American, I hope we get out of this without doing too much damage. But we are not going to -- we are not going to denuclearize. I do not believe Kim is going to a degree to denuclearize and the only thing that could happen therefore is us getting taken in, the Japanese losing confidence in us. The doubts in South Korea being strengthened and things that are not healthy for our foreign policy I think.

HILL: Symone, there's been -- there's been a lot of talk about not just this meeting that happened with Kim Jong-un where we stand today but of course the meeting that we know will happen in just a couple of weeks between the President and Vladimir Putin. How does this latest information about North Korea and where we stand, how do you think that impacts the meeting in Helsinki?

SYMONE SANDERS, CNN POLITICAL COMMENTATOR: I'm not sure if it impacts the President but I think it impacts folks this perception. The fact of the matter is that we went into this meeting with Kim Jong-un and we didn't get anything out of it. The President's going to go into a meeting with Vladimir Putin, I hope not by himself, and I don't think we're going to get anything out of it. I think Donald Trump is underestimating our foes here and we just don't -- I don't think the President is well equipped to go in and have these high-level conversations which is scary given that he's the President United States of America.

[16:55:20] HILL: All right, Symone, Bill, Phil, I appreciate it. Thank you all. Just ahead, a miracle in Thailand. A youth soccer team found alive after being trapped in a cave for nine days. (COMMERCIAL BREAK)

HILL: Before we go, we have a "BABY LEAD" today. We want to welcome a new member of the CNN family. Say hello to Caleb Timothy Runfola, born last night weighing in at six pounds. He is a cutie. The baby and mom, CNN Producer Rachel Streitfeld are doing great. Congratulations to Rachel and Tim. I wish you guys all the best. That is going to do it for THE LEAD today. I'm Erica Hill in for Jake Tapper. I turn you over not to Jim Acosta in "THE SITUATION ROOM."

JIM ACOSTA, CNN'S CHIEF WHITE HOUSE CORRESPONDENT: Happening now, breaking news, potential pick.