Secretary of State Mike Pompeo was on Capitol Hill yesterday and testified that Donald Trump’s upcoming summit with Russian President Vladimir Putin will include a stern warning from the American leader.

“I’m confident that when the president meets with Vladimir Putin, he will make clear that meddling in our elections is completely unacceptable,” Pompeo told senators.

Close video Trump seen as threat to Western alliance, likely delighting Putin Rachel Maddow reviews reporting on how Donald Trump’s deference to Vladimir Putin and disdain for western democratic allies has caused a rift that threatens to shatter the Western alliance, a prospect that would please Vladimir Putin. Rachel Maddow reviews reporting on how Donald Trump’s deference to Vladimir Putin and disdain for western democratic allies has caused a rift that threatens to shatter the Western alliance, a prospect that would please Vladimir Putin. share tweet email Embed

Before details of the meeting were announced Thursday, the president tweeted about the investigation, writing that “Russia continues to say they had nothing to do with meddling in our election!”

The cabinet secretary probably ought to check in with his boss about this. Officials confirmed this morning that Trump and Putin will hold their first dedicated summit in Helsinki on July 16, but just ahead of the announcement, the Republican had something he wanted to get off his chest

Well, yes, Russia hasn’t yet confessed to launching an intelligence operation intended to install the Kremlin’s preferred presidential candidate in the White House, but Trump’s own intelligence and national security officials have told him for quite a while that Putin is responsible for the attack.

The question is why Trump continues, even now, to suggest officials in Moscow are more reliable than officials in his administration.

Almost exactly a year ago, Nikki Haley, Trump’s ambassador to the United Nations, said that “everybody knows that Russia meddled in our elections.” Everybody, that is, except the principal beneficiary of Putin’s attack.

Several months later, in January, Sen. Lindsey Graham (R-S.C.) appeared on “Meet the Press” and declared that the president “does now finally believe” that Russia intervened in the 2016 election.

NBC News’ Chuck Todd, echoing the question viewers everywhere were thinking, responded, “He does?” The Republican senator answered, “The president does believe his intel agencies.”

There’s some pretty compelling evidence to the contrary.