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Trump calls for whistleblower's identity to be revealed

Donald Trump suggested the whistleblower could potentially be guilty of fraud
Donald Trump suggested the whistleblower could potentially be guilty of fraud

The US President, Donald Trump, has said the name of the whistleblower whose concerns prompted an impeachment inquiry should be revealed because that individual had given false information.

Without giving evidence, Mr Trump suggested the whistleblower could potentially be guilty of fraud.

"The whistleblower should be revealed because the whistleblower gave false information," Mr Trump told reporters at the White House. "He made up a story."

Mr Trump also made the same demand in a tweet, amid an intensifying effort by Republican politicians to expose the whistleblower and attack his or her credibility.

Described only as an intelligence official who once worked at the White House, the whistleblower was the first to raise concerns about Mr Trump's attempt to pressure Ukraine to investigate political rival Joe Biden.

"The Whistleblower got it sooo wrong that HE must come forward," Mr Trump said on the social media network. 

"The Fake News Media knows who he is but, being an arm of the Democrat Party, don't want to reveal him because there would be hell to pay. Reveal the Whistleblower and end the Impeachment Hoax!"

A parade of current and former diplomats and national security officials, however, have since corroborated the essence of the complaint - an apparent attempt to pressure Ukraine to investigate the president's Democratic opponents. 

At issue is whether Mr Trump ordered the withholding of nearly $400 million in crucial military aid to Ukraine to get its new president to investigate Mr Biden and his son Hunter, as well as a debunked conspiracy theory involving the Democrats in 2016.

The whistleblower's lawyer, Mark Zaid, said on Twitter that his client had made a direct offer to Republican politicians to answer their questions in writing.

The offer, made to Devin Nunes, the ranking Republican on the House Intelligence Committee, underscored the whistleblower's desire that the complaint be handled in a nonpartisan way, Mr Zaid told CBS News.

"Recent GOP messaging, led by President Trump (incl this morning), has been to highlight original #WBer & demand disclosure of identity," Mr Zaid said on Twitter.

Meanwhile, some Republicans have retweeted speculation in conservative media about the whistleblower's identity.

Steve Scalise, the number two Republican in the House, said the whistleblower would be the first person his side would call to testify in public impeachment hearings.

Republicans would have the right to call their own witnesses and propose subpoenas, under rules approved by the House for soon-to-be-held public impeachment hearings.

"This is a person who claims to be a whistleblower, but even the IG (inspector general) reported that this person has a political bias," Mr Scalise said on ABC's "This Week."

"There are many reports out there that the whistleblower actually worked for Joe Biden. That concerns a lot of people."

The inspector general of the US intelligence community, Michael Atkinson, investigated the whistleblower's claims and, while noting "some indicia of arguable political bias," found them to be "credible" and of "urgent concern."