US President Donald Trump says he is "100%" willing to speak under oath about his conversations with ex-FBI chief James Comey.
Speaking
at the White House, he denied having asked for Mr Comey's loyalty or
for an inquiry into a former White House aide to be dropped.
"James Comey confirmed a lot of what I said, and some of the things he said just weren't true," Mr Trump said.
Meanwhile, a congressional panel asked for any tapes of their conversations.
Mr Comey says Mr Trump fired him because of his Russia inquiry.
The
former FBI chief was investigating an alleged Kremlin plot to sway last
year's US election in favour of Mr Trump, and whether there was any
collusion with the president or his campaign staff.
On Thursday, Mr Comey testified to one of several congressional committees that is also looking into the Russia claims.
He
said the president had pressured him to drop a probe into former
National Security Adviser Michael Flynn, whom Mr Trump fired for
misleading the White House over contacts with Moscow's ambassador.
Under oath, the former FBI director also told the Senate
Intelligence Committee that the president had asked him during a
one-to-one dinner at the White House to pledge loyalty.
Nearly 20 million US television viewers tuned in to the explosive testimony.
At
a press conference on Friday afternoon in the Rose Garden with the
visiting president of Romania, Mr Trump rejected Mr Comey's claims.
He
said the former FBI director's testimony showed there was "no
collusion, no obstruction". Mr Comey told senators he had assured the
president he himself was not under scrutiny over Russia.
The US president was asked by a journalist if he would be willing to give his version of events under oath.
"One hundred per cent," Mr Trump said.
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"I hardly know the man [Mr Comey]," he said. "I'm not going to say, 'I want you to pledge allegiance.'
"Who would do that? Who would ask a man to pledge allegiance under oath? I mean, think of it.
I hardly know the man. It doesn't make sense."
When
asked about whether he had recordings of his conversations with Mr
Comey, which he has previously hinted, the president said he would
address it at a later date.
"I'll tell you something about that
maybe sometime in the very near future," he said on Friday. "I'll tell
you about it over a short period of time. I'm not hinting at anything."
Shortly
after the press conference, leaders of the House Intelligence Committee
said they had asked the White House whether there were any such tapes.
The House panel requested that if the recordings exist they be submitted by 23 June.
The Senate Judiciary Committee asked the White House last month about such audio.
Days
after he fired Mr Comey on 9 May, Mr Trump tweeted: "James Comey better
hope that there are no 'tapes' of our conversations before he starts
leaking to the press!"
Mr Trump tweeted earlier on Friday he felt "complete vindication" after the hearing.
Mr
Comey also told senators that he had leaked details of his memos about
his conversations with Mr Trump to a friend, who passed them on to a
reporter.
After the testimony, Mr Trump's lawyer accused the former FBI chief of having divulged "privileged communications".
BBC NEWS
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