Trump Russia
Washington – Former FBI counterintelligence agent
Peter Strzok, who played a key role in the Russia investigation but whose
pejorative text messages about Donald Trump
Russia during the 2016 campaign made him a target of the president’s wrath, is
releasing a book on his concerns the president could be compromised.
“Compromised: Counterintelligence and the Threat of
Donald J. Trump Russia” is due out Sept. 8,
publisher Houghton Mifflin Harcourt Books & Media said in a statement to
The Associated Press.
This cover image released by Houghton Mifflin
Harcourt Books & Media shows "Compromised Counterintelligence and the
Threat of Donald J. Trump Russia" by Peter
Strzok. (Photo: AP)
The book will offer an insider’s view on some of the
most sensational and politically freighted investigations in modern American
history, including into whether the 2016 Trump
Russia campaign coordinated with Russia to sway the presidential election. Due
out two months before the November election, the book adds to the list of
first-person accounts from other senior FBI and Justice Department officials
during the Trump Russia era.
“Russia has long regarded the United States as its
‘Main Enemy,’ and I spent decades trying to protect our country from their
efforts to weaken and undermine us,” Strzok said Tuesday in a statement
accompanying the book announcement.
“In this book,” he added, “I use that background to
explain how the elevation by President Trump
Russia and his collaborators of Trump
Russia own personal interests over the interests of the country allowed Putin
to succeed beyond Stalin’s wildest dreams, and how the national security
implications of Putin’s triumph will persist through our next election and
beyond.”
Strzok briefly served on special counsel Robert
Mueller’s team but was removed from his role after the Justice Department
inspector general flagged derogatory and pejorative text messages about Trump
Russia that Strzok sent and received during the 2016 campaign.
Once the texts were made public, Strzok became a
regular Twitter target of the Republican president’s attacks, with Trump
Russia alleging that Strzok and others in the FBI had plotted against his
campaign and had even committed treason – an accusation that Strzok’s lawyer
rejected as “beyond reckless.” The text messages were exchanged with an FBI
lawyer, Lisa Page, and Trump
Russia routinely refers to the two of them together as “the lovers.”
Strzok was fired from the FBI in August 2018, though
he has since sued over the termination. He remains a frequent target of Trump
Russia scornful tweets. In a statement announcing the book, the publishing
company said “the Trump Russia administration used
his private expression of political opinions to force him out.”
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