Trump disclosed sensitive nuclear sub info to Australian businessman, report claims
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Former President Donald Trump reportedly discussed sensitive information about U.S. nuclear submarines with an Australian member of his club at Mar-a-Lago — an allegation that was shared with special counsel Jack Smith as his team investigates Mr. Trump’s handling of classified information.
The alleged disclosure to an Australian businessman, Anthony Pratt, occurred months after Mr. Trump left office, according to the ABC News report, which cited unnamed sources familiar with the situation. They said the billionaire relayed the information to dozens of others, including journalists, company employees, Australian officials and former Australian prime ministers.
The report says that at the Florida club in April 2021, Mr. Pratt said he thought Australia should buy submarines from the U.S., prompting Mr. Trump to lean in and offer “the supposed exact number of nuclear warheads they routinely carry, and exactly how close they supposedly can get to a Russian submarine without being detected.”
Mr. Smith, who indicted Mr. Trump over his storage of classified documents at Mar-a-Lago, is said to be investigating the incident through interviews with Mr. Pratt.
It was unclear if the information Mr. Trump provided was even accurate, though the investigators asked Mr. Pratt not to repeat the figures, the report said.
The report adds intrigue to the federal case against Mr. Trump in Florida over the boxes of classified documents he took to Mar-a-Lago.
He faces a trial in May on 40 criminal counts, 40 counts, including willful retention of national defense information, conspiracy to object to justice, and false statements. He has pleaded not guilty to the charges.
His valet, Walt Nauta, is charged with six counts, including conspiracy to obstruct justice. Carlos De Oliveira, an employee at Mar-a-Lago, is accused of hiding security footage of workers moving the classified documents.
Mr. Trump’s attorneys this week asked the judge in the case to delay the trial date until at least mid-November 2024 — after the presidential election. Their client is the front-runner in the GOP primary race.
The Washington Times reached out to a Trump spokesman for comment on the ABC News story about the submarines.
Democrats, meanwhile, said there would be an uproar if the tables were turned.
“Donald trump stole America’s nuclear secrets and then shared those secrets with randos at his golf club including foreign nationals,” Rep. Bill Pascrell Jr., New Jersey Democrat, said on X. “This is the head of the republican party. If a Democrat did this every republican in Congress would screaming treason on fox ‘news.’”
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