The president, according to people familiar with testimony in the House impeachment investigation, sees the Eastern European ally, not
Russia, as responsible for the interference in the 2016
election that was investigated by special counsel Robert Mueller.
It's a view denied by the intelligence community, at odds with U.S. foreign policy and dismissed by many of Trump's fellow
Republicans but part of a broader skepticism of
Ukraine being shared with Trump by
Russian President
Vladimir Putin and his key regional ally Viktor Orban of Hungary.
Trump's embrace of an alternative view of Ukraine suggests the extent to which his approach to Kyiv — including his request, now central to the impeachment inquiry, that the Ukraine president do him a "favor" and investigate
Democrats — was colored by a long-running, unproven conspiracy theory that has circulated online and in some corners of conservative media.