Sen. Bob Corker, a
Tennessee Republican who heads the panel, told CNN Tuesday his committee
would hold open hearings and classified sessions to get to the bottom
of Russian involvement.
"We
are going to systematically walk through the entire Russia issue and
fully understand what has transpired," Corker said Tuesday.
It
will be the third Senate committee planning to dig into the issue next
year, joining the Armed Services Committee led by Arizona Sen. John
McCain and the Select Committee on Intelligence, chaired by North
Carolina Sen. Richard Burr.
But
these three reviews stop short of a separate standing committee whose
sole task is to investigate the matter -- similar to the way House
Republicans established a panel to review the 2012 Benghazi attacks.
While Senate Majority Leader Mitch McConnell and House Speaker Paul Ryan
back the inquiries in the existing committees in Congress, they have
resisted calls to establish a new stand-alone panel, something that
could grow unwieldy and amount to a political threat to Trump.
Corker
said there's no question that Russia meddled into domestic affairs, but
said he didn't know if the hackers intended to sway the election to
Trump.
"Putin remarkably and
disappointingly has ended up being front and center on the world stage,"
Corker said. "It's hard to believe for a country that has so little
going for it."
He later reiterated to CNN that he feels it's an important issue to look into.
"Any
time we have a country that is trying to discredit our democracy, it's
an important issue for us to pursue," Corker told CNN's Jake Tapper on
"The Lead" later Tuesday. "How deep it goes and whether they actually
tried to tip it toward a candidate or not it's hard for me to discern at
present."
Corker praise for Tillerson
Corker's committee will have a busy January, starting with confirmation hearings for Trump's choice of secretary of state,
Rex Tillerson, the head of oil giant ExxonMobil.
Corker,
who was a finalist for the secretary of state job and spoke to Trump
Monday night, heaped praise on Tillerson, calling him the "very best
choice" for Trump because of his "background and experience" in running a
major international corporation.
"He
has an incredible working knowledge of the world," Corker said. "If you
look at these CEOs of these global enterprises, in many ways they are
secretaries of state for these companies. He brings a tremendous amount
to the table."
Yet Corker also
conceded that he had little knowledge of Tillerson's personal views on
Russia, something that has caused concern among several key Republicans
who are uneasy about the nominee's friendship with Russian President
Vladimir Putin.
"I have no idea
what his feelings are on Russia," Corker said, referring specifically to
the country's presence in Ukraine and the Baltics. He also said he had
"zero idea" about Tillerson's views of NATO, an organization that Trump
has criticized on the campaign trail.
"I've never had a single conversation with him on any of those things," Corker said.
Tillerson
has come under criticism from Democrats and some Republicans for
opposing sanctions on Russia. Corker said that in 2014 as Congress was
moving on the issue, he had a conversation with Tillerson about the
matter. But he said it "wasn't a controversial" call and the two mainly
discussed how the sanctions would be implemented.
"I
got to believe that his approach to Russia is not going to be a great
variance of what US foreign policy has been for some time," Corker said.
"He is going to be carrying out Trump's foreign policy. What people
will want to know is what direction he will influence" Trump.
Corker
added: "I gotta believe again when you are putting the secretary of
state hat on, it's different than the CEO of Exxon hat."
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