NEW
YORK (AP) — Former Ambassador to Ukraine Marie Yovanovitch, the career
diplomat who during the impeachment hearings of President Donald Trump
offered a chilling account of alleged threats from Trump and his allies,
has a book deal.
Houghton
Mifflin Harcourt confirmed Friday to The Associated Press that it had
acquired Yovanovitch’s planned memoir, currently untitled. According to
the publisher, the book will trace her long career, from Mogadishu,
Somalia, to Kyiv and “finally back to Washington, D.C. — where, to her
dismay, she found a political system beset by many of the same
challenges she had spent her career combating overseas.”
“Yovanovitch’s
book will deliver pointed reflections on the issues confronting America
today, and thoughts on how we can shore up our democracy,” Houghton
Mifflin Harcourt said in an announcement.
Financial
terms were not disclosed, but two people familiar with the deal told
the AP that the agreement was worth seven figures, even though the book
is not expected until Spring 2021, months after this fall’s election.
They were not authorized to discuss negotiations and spoke on condition
of anonymity to discuss financial terms. Yovanovitch was represented by
the Javelin literary agency, where other clients include former FBI
Director James Comey and former national security adviser John Bolton.
“Ambassador
Yovanovitch has had a 30-year career of public service in many
locations, with many lessons to be drawn. This is about much more than
just the recent controversy,” said Houghton Mifflin Senior Vice
President and Publisher Bruce Nichols, in response to a question about
why her book wasn’t coming out this year.
Yovanovitch
told House investigators last year that Ukrainian officials had warned
her in advance that Rudy Giuliani and other Trump insiders were planning
to “do things, including to me” and were “looking to hurt” her. Pushed
out of her job earlier in 2019 on Trump’s orders, she testified that a
senior Ukrainian official told her that “I really needed to watch my
back.”
Yovanovitch
was recalled from Kyiv as Giuliani pressed Ukrainian officials to
investigate baseless corruption allegations against Democrat Joe Biden
and his son Hunter, who was involved with Burisma, a gas company there.
Biden, the former vice president, is a contender for the 2020 Democratic
presidential nomination.
According
to a rough transcript released by the White House, Trump told Ukrainian
leader Volodymyr Zelenskiy last summer that Yovanovitch “was bad news
and the people she was dealing with in the Ukraine were bad news.”
The
allegations that Trump pressured Ukraine to investigate a political
opponent led to his impeachment in December on two counts by the
Democratic-run House. Earlier this month, the Republican-run Senate
acquitted him on both counts.
Yovanovitch,
61, was appointed ambassador to Ukraine in 2016 by President Barack
Obama. She recently was given the Trainor Award, an honor for
international diplomacy presented by Georgetown University, and
currently is a non-resident fellow at Georgetown’s Institute for the
Study of Diplomacy.
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