Trump fired investigator in Saudi arms scandal

A U.S. State Department inspector general fired by President Donald Trump told lawmakers the department discouraged him from investigating arms sales to Saudi Arabia before he was dismissed last month, according to a transcript released Wednesday.

The inspector general, Steve Linick, was fired on May 15, the latest in a series of government watchdogs dismissed by the president. Members of Congress, including some of Trump’s fellow Republicans as well as Democrats, are concerned that the dismissals will prevent adequate oversight of the government.

House of Representatives Speaker Nancy Pelosi has said Linick’s dismissal might have been illegal.

Democrats launched an investigation, including an interview of Linick on June 3 by members and staff of three House and Senate committees.

In the congressional interview, Linick said Secretary of State Mike Pompeo declined to sit down for an interview in the investigation of the administration’s decision to declare a “national emergency” to justify $8 billion in military sales to Saudi Arabia despite congressional objections.

He also said a department official had argued the probe was outside Linick’s jurisdiction.

“I told him that, under the Foreign Service Act of 1980, it was within the IG purview to review how policy is implemented,” Linick said.

When he was fired, Linick also was investigating allegations that Pompeo and his wife used a taxpayer-funded employee for personal errands. Linick said in the interview that his office was engaged in more investigations when he was fired, including an audit of the Special Immigrant Visa process.

Pompeo has insisted Linick’s dismissal was not retaliation. On Wednesday, Pompeo called Linick a “bad actor.”

In a letter sent on Monday and seen by Reuters, a top department official criticized standards in Linick’s office and said he should be investigated for leaking information.

Linick was cleared in a previous probe of alleged leaks.

Source: Reuters

 

The Liberum

The subtitle of The Liberum ("the voice of the people is the voice of God") reflects the concept that the collective opinions and will of the people carry divine importance. They embody truth and wisdom, particularly in a non-partisan arena that profiles itself as a marketplace of free ideas and thoughts.
See full bio >
The Liberum runs on your donation. Fight with us for a free society.
Donation Form (#6)

More articles you might like

EU study highlights Azerbaijan’s strategic importance in the energy sector

The European Commission’s 2026 meta-study on energy connectivity across the Eastern Partnership, the South Caucasus, […]
- by Nadia Ahmad on 17/02/2026

Why Arab monarchies thrive, and Arab republics fail

The 20th century was a period of political fragmentation between monarchies and republics in the […]
- by Arthur Blok on 16/02/2026

Will there be accountability for the Epstein files, or is it going to be the biggest cover-up in American history?

The release of the latest batch of the Epstein files has sparked a firestorm of […]

Love as a retention technology in the military economy

There is a familiar liberal story about the military as a national instrument that occasionally […]

Pandemic™️: A charitable business model

A virus is contagious.Influence is too. When the world shut down, he appeared everywhere: on […]

Mars on my Mind – Exploring Egypt’s still interior spaces

If you’re a fan, you’ll know my first published SF story was about the red […]