WASHINGTON — Former CIA Director James Woolsey has accused the Trump administration’s former national security adviser, Michael Flynn, of participating in a discussion with Turkish officials about possibly subverting the U.S. extradition process to remove a Turkish cleric from the United States.

The Wall Street Journal first reported Woolsey’s comments and posted a video interview with him Friday. A Flynn spokesman said that Woolsey’s claims are “false” and that “no such discussion occurred.”

In the Journal interview, Woolsey says he walked into the middle of a discussion between Turkish officials and members of Flynn’s firm, Flynn Intel Group, Sept. 19 at Essex House hotel in New York City.

Woolsey said the discussion generally involved removing cleric Fethullah Gulen from the U.S. without going through the lengthy extradition process, though he said it stopped short of outlining a specific plan to sweep him out of the country. Turkish President Recep Tayyip Erdogan has sought Gulen’s extradition after accusing the cleric of directing a failed coup last summer. The U.S. government has rebuffed that request, and Gulen, who has a green card and lives in Pennsylvania, has denied involvement.

Woolsey described the discussion as “brainstorming, but it was brainstorming about a very serious matter that would pretty clearly be a violation of law.” Though, Woolsey noted that the discussion “did not rise to the level of being a specific plan to undertake a felonious act.”

Flynn spokesman Price Floyd said that Flynn Intel Group’s work never involved discussing removing Gulen from the United States by any means other than the extradition process.

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“The claim made by Mr. Woolsey that General Flynn or anyone else in attendance discussed physical removal of Mr. Gulen from the United States during a meeting with Turkish officials in New York is false,” Floyd said. “No such discussion occurred, nor did Mr. Woolsey ever inform General Flynn that he had any concerns whatsoever regarding the meeting, either before he chose to attend and afterward.”

The meeting was part of lobbying work Flynn’s firm was conducting on behalf of Inovo BV, which is owned by Turkish businessman Ekim Alptekin.

Earlier this month, Flynn and his firm registered with the Justice Department as foreign agents for the work for Alptekin, saying that it could have benefited the Turkish government. Flynn’s firm was paid $530,000 over the course of the contract, which ran from August through November while Flynn was a top Trump campaign adviser. Alptekin has told the AP that Flynn’s firm registered as a foreign agent under pressure from the Justice Department.

Woolsey, who served as CIA director under President Bill Clinton and briefly was a member of the Trump transition team, said he served on an advisory board for Flynn Intel Group but never did any work for the firm or received any payment from it.

Flynn as fired by Trump last month after Trump said Flynn misled Vice President Mike Pence about his conversations with Russia’s ambassador to the U.S.


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