As more and more details spring forth regarding President Trump’s troubling conversation with the president of Ukraine, a new report suggests he made damning comments to other foreign leaders, too. Per the Washington Post, Trump’s infamous 2017 meeting with Russian Foreign Minister Sergei Lavrov and Russian Ambassador Sergey Kislyak—the very same in which he gloated over James Comey’s firing—also featured the president waving off Russian meddling in the 2016 election.

A memorandum featuring Trump’s broader comments about U.S.-Russia relations was reportedly limited to an unusually small group of people with high security clearances, according to the Post. Details of the memorandum were uncovered during the investigation of White House meetings deemed too politically sensitive for broader public view, as with the emerging record of Trump’s July phone call with Ukrainian president Volodymyr Zelensky.

According to three former officials with knowledge of the 2017 meeting, Trump told Lavrov and Kislyak he was “unconcerned” about Moscow’s interference in the 2016 election, given the United States “did the same in other countries.” Unnamed White House officials were reportedly aware of the nature of the comment, which came in the context of the president downplaying reports of election interference for fear they would harm his legitimacy. Steps were reportedly then taken to limit circulation of Trump’s comments to an unusually select group, though it’s unclear if the meeting’s memorandum was stored in the same “code-word” classified system that later housed the record of Trump’s call with Zelensky, and potentially other Trump communications that featured politically sensitive information.

The meeting itself took place on May 10, just one day after Trump fired Comey, inadvertently kicking off the special investigation into possible collusion with the Russian government, as well as Trump’s alleged obstruction of justice. It had previously been reported that Trump told Lavrov and Kislyak that firing Comey relieved “great pressure” on him with regard to the Russia investigation. He also reportedly shared classified information that exposed a source of intelligence from the Islamic State. White House aides were reportedly “worried about the political ramifications if Trump’s comments to the Russian officials became public,” according to the Post.

A fourth unnamed official did not recall Trump’s dismissal of Russian interference efforts in the meeting, but noted of the memorandum that—in light of Trump’s previously-scrutinized calls with leaders of Mexico and Australia—“It was more about learning how can we restrict this in a way that still informs the policy process and the principals who need to engage with these heads of state.” The same official also recalled Trump complaining about “all this Russia stuff” to Lavrov, as well that he remarked, “I could have a great relationship with you guys, but you know, our press.”