Victoria Coates, Trump's former deputy national security adviser, denies she's 'Anonymous'
Victoria Coates, a former top official on the National Security Council, on Sunday denied new allegations she was the author of an inside-the-White House tell-all book by “Anonymous.” “The allegations published in Real Clear Investigations are utterly false. I am not Anonymous, and I do not know who Anonymous is,” Coates said in a new statement. Cleta
Mitchell, Coates’ lawyer, wrote that Real Clear Investigations “peddled
false statements citing only anonymous sources, despite on-the-record
denials from Javelin LLC (the literary agent for Anonymous), the White
House, and three well-respected members of the Trump Administration—and
now Dr. Coates as well.” “We are continuing to explore all available legal options,” Mitchell added. Coates was accused of being the author of the book, “A Warning,” and a New York Times essay deeply critical of President Trump, written under the pen name “Anonymous.” In
the book, published by the Hachette Book Group last November, the
writer claimed senior administration officials considered resigning as a
group in 2018 in a “midnight self-massacre” to protest Trump’s conduct,
but ultimately decided such an act would do more harm than good. Trump
in February renewed questions about the identity of “Anonymous” when he
told reporters that he knew who it was. Asked whether he believed the
person still worked at the White House,
Trump responded: “We know a lot. In fact, when I want to get something
out to the press, I tell certain people, and it’s amazing, it gets out
there. But, so far, I’m leaving it that way.”
Victoria Coates denied new allegations she wrote the inside-the-White House tell-all book by “Anonymous.”
"After an exhaustive investigation, the White House
believes it’s cracked the case, identifying Trump's turncoat as his
former deputy national security adviser, Victoria Coates, according to
people familiar with the internal probe," the Real Clear Investigations
story claimed. Coates served as national security adviser for the Middle East and North Africa before joining the Energy Department as a senior adviser this past February. The
Real Clear Investigations story added: "Rather than fire Coates, the
White House has quietly transferred her to the Department of Energy,
where she awaits special assignment in Saudi Arabia -- far from the
president." The Trump administration in February denied the accusations behind the job move. “We
are enthusiastic about adding Dr. Coates to DOE, where her expertise on
the Middle East and national security policy will be helpful,”
Secretary Dan Brouillette said in a statement. “She will play an important role on our team.” “While
I’m sad to lose an important member of our team, Victoria will be a big
asset to Secretary Brouillette as he executes the president’s energy
security policy priorities,” National Security Adviser Robert C. O’Brien added. Fox News' John Roberts contributed to this report.
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