ADDS SPICER COMMENTS, UPDATES SUBHEAD
By Michael Hernandez
WASHINGTON (AA) - Just hours after former National Security Adviser Michael Flynn's abrupt resignation, one of President Donald Trump's top aides said Tuesday that he left the post because he recognized he had become a potent source of controversy.
Speaking on the Today Show, Kellyanne Conway said Flynn resigned because "he knew he'd become a lightning rod."
"By night's end, Mike Flynn had decided it was best to resign," she said.
At issue, Conway said, was Flynn's misleading of Vice President Mike Pence over calls he made with Russian officials regarding U.S. sanctions before President Trump assumed office.
"It was misleading the vice president that made the situation unsustainable," Conway said.
The Justice Department informed the White House last month that Flynn was at risk of being blackmailed by Moscow due to the discrepancies between the events of the call and Flynn's version.
But Conway said just hours before Flynn's resignation was made public that the former national security adviser continued to enjoy Trump's "full confidence".
When pressed by Today Show host Matt Lauer on why the issue was not addressed sooner, Conway said, "obviously the situation became unsustainable".
And later Tuesday, White House spokesman Sean Spicer said Trump asked Flynn for his resignation because of an "erosion of" trust - a statement at odds with Conway's claim that Flynn's resignation was his decision.
In his resignation later, Flynn said he provided Pence with "incomplete information" during the transition in administrations "because of the fast pace of events".
Flynn said he was tendering his resignation "honored to have served our nation and the American people in such a distinguished way," despite only having been Trump's national security adviser for 24 days -- a potential record for the shortest time served by such a high-ranking official.
Following news of his departure, Republican Sen. John McCain called the move "a troubling indication of the dysfunction of the current national security apparatus".
"General Flynn’s resignation also raises further questions about the Trump administration’s intentions toward Vladimir Putin’s Russia," said McCain, who serves as the chairman of the Senate Armed Services committee.
Flynn’s resignation marks a surprisingly early reshuffle in Trump’s inner circle of advisers after the president’s first three weeks in office, which has been marred by controversial executive actions and highly contentious Cabinet-level confirmations.
On Monday morning, Trump took to Twitter, his preferred vehicle to communicate with the public, to lambast leaks from within his administration.
"The real story here is why are there so many illegal leaks coming out of Washington? Will these leaks be happening as I deal on N.Korea etc?" he asked.
The American president is currently considering a handful of potential candidates to replace Flynn. Reportedly among them are former CIA Director retired Gen. David Petraeus, and retired Vice Admiral Robert Harward.
In the interim, Trump has named Lt. General Joseph Keith Kellogg as acting national security adviser.