Washington Corruption Is Unparalleled
In History
Washington
Corruption Is Unparalleled In History
Paul Craig
Roberts
Dr. George
Szamuely, a distinguished member of the Global Policy Institute of London
Metropolitan University, is a British citizen and not a partisan of US
politics. He has carefully investigated the so-called Russian dossier and
reports that it was entirely the work of the Hillary Democrats.
This fact
was known at the beginning both to former CIA director John Brennan and to
former FBI director James Comey. Yet both went along with the DNC-invented
story of Russian election hacking and Christopher Steele’s fake “dossier” on
Trump’s imagined relations with Russians.
The
presstitute media told the lies that they were supposed to tell. The
consequence of this plot has been to waste the first year of Trump’s presidency
and to prevent President Trump from reducing the dangerously high tensions with
nuclear power Russia. This is a disservice not only to President Trump but also
to the American people and the planet itself.
Dr.
Szamuely delivers the sordid details of the plot by a corrupt American
establishment to destroy a president selected by the people and not by the
ruling interest groups.
The arrest
of Paul Manafort by former FBI director Robert Mueller is a further indication
of the corrupt character of Washington and the “law” that it utilizes as a
weapon. Mueller is supposed to be investigating “Russiagate.” His arrest of
Manafort has nothing whatsoever to do with Russiagate. Mueller arrested
Manafort on the basis of allegations that in 2006, a decade prior to
“Russiagate,” Manafort did not report as income payments he received as an
unregistered agent for the Ukrainian government.
According
to newspaper reports at the time, Zionist Neoconservative Richard Perle, a
former member of the Defense Policy Board and an Assistant Secretary of
Defense, served as an unregistered agent for Turkey and was not arrested for
his violation of the registration act.
But
Manafort is different. By arresting Manafort, who served for a time as Trump’s
presidential campaign manager, Mueller can pile on false charges until Manafort
buys his way out by providing Mueller with false charges against Trump.
In US
federal courts today, charges no longer have to be proven, just asserted. If
Trump’s surrender to the military/security complex and abandonment of his
intention to normalize relations with Russia do not suffice to make Trump
acceptable to the military/security complex, Mueller can squeeze Manafort until
Manafort agrees to whatever story Mueller hands him. The last thing Manafort or
Trump can count on is justice. There has been no justice in the US “Justice”
system for decades.
How Obama
and Hillary Clinton Weaponized the ‘Dossier’
The
disclosure that the Clinton campaign, using white-shoe law firm Perkins Coie as
a cutout, financed the so-called Steele dossier confirms what we have known all
along.
by
October 31, 2017,
The
Trump-Russia collusion story was a joint invention of the Obama administration
and the Clinton campaign. It enabled the Obama administration to make use of
the nation’s security and intelligence services to spy on Trump and his
associates and to use whatever information they thereby gleaned to try to get
Hillary into the White House. The failure of the scheme didn’t stop either
Obama or the Clintons. Following the election debacle, an enraged Obama
administration sought vengeance by disseminating the dossier as widely as
possible with a view to undermining the incoming Trump administration and to
ensuring that no rapprochement with Russia would be possible. In doing so,
Obama and Clinton have thrown American politics into turmoil and have perhaps
pushed the United States and Russia toward armed confrontation.
We have
known the basic outlines of the Steele dossier story since January. The Steele
dossier, we have been told, started off as a piece of opposition research
prepared by Fusion GPS and financed by a Republican rival of Trump’s or perhaps
a GOP NeverTrumper. Following Trump’s victory in the GOP primaries, the
Democrats took over its funding. Fusion hired Christopher Steele, a former head
of the Russia desk at MI6 who now ran his own corporate intelligence firm,
Orbis Business Intelligence. Using the leads Steele had developed during his
years at MI6, he reported back to his paymasters his shocking discovery: The
Russians had been cultivating Trump for years in preparation for his run for
the presidency. So shocked was Steele by this that he rushed to alert the FBI,
MI6 and even select reporters.
Most of
this story is pure fiction. Neither the GOP nor a primary rival of Trump’s had
any involvement with the dossier. To be sure, in October 2015, the Washington
Free Beacon, a neo-conservative Web site funded by hedge fund billionaire Paul
Singer, did hire Fusion to undertake opposition research on Trump. However,
money for this undertaking dried up by May 2016.
The
Steele-crafted Trump-Russia collusion story was from start to finish a
Democratic Party operation. Its origins can be traced back to April 2016 and
the leak of the Democratic National Committee e-mails. The DNC announced that
it had been “hacked.” However, instead of reporting the matter to the proper
authorities, the DNC turned to attorney Michael Sussmann, a partner at the Perkins Coie law firm.
Sussmann got in touch with cybersecurity firm CrowdStrike Inc. Now, CrowdStrike
is no geeky, techno-gee-whiz firm. Its founder is Russian-born Dmitri
Alperovitch, a senior fellow at the NATO-funded, intensely Russophobic Atlantic
Council. “Within a day, CrowdStrike confirmed that the intrusion had originated
in Russia,” the New York Times wrote. On June 14, CrowdStrike
announced that the DNC hack perpetrators were two separate hacker groups
employed by the Russian government.
Even though
no one other than CrowdStrike had examined the DNC servers, U.S. intelligence
agencies immediately declared that they were in agreement and that they
had “high confidence” that the “Russian government was
behind the theft of emails and documents” from the DNC.
It was at
this moment that the Clinton people made the strategic decision to tie Trump to
Putin and to make the centerpiece of its campaign the idea that a vote for
Trump was a vote for the Kremlin. Perkins Coie—yet again—got in touch with
Fusion, which, in turn, got in touch with Christopher Steele. Steele had
contacts at MI6 and, perhaps more important, contacts at the FBI. He had
allegedly worked with the FBI in the takedown of FIFA.
Steele, who
had many contacts at the FBI, understood what was required of him. On June 20,
six days after CrowdStrike’s announcement, he filed his first report. It was
exactly what the Clinton campaign was looking for: lurid, unsubstantiated but
nonetheless juicy allegations. Russia had supposedly been “cultivating,
supporting and assisting Trump for at least 5 years.” Trump had had hired prostitutes
to “perform a ‘golden showers’ show in front of him” at Moscow’s Ritz Carlton
Hotel. “Trump’s unorthodox behavior in Russia over the years had provided the
authorities…with enough embarrassing material…to be able to blackmail him.”
Steele’s
first memo enticed the Clinton people and they eagerly turned on the money
spigots. Steele followed up with a memo revealing that the Russians were behind
the DNC leak, that Putin “hated and feared” Hillary Clinton and that there
existed a “well-developed conspiracy of co-operation” between Trump and the
Russians. The recently-indicted Paul Manafort, Trump’s campaign chairman at the
time, managed this co-operation on behalf of Trump by using “foreign policy
advisor” Carter Page as an intermediary. “In return the Trump team had agreed
to sideline Russian intervention in Ukraine as a campaign issue and to raise
U.S./NATO defense commitments in the Baltics and eastern Europe to deflect
attention away from Ukraine.”
Carter
Page, whom no one had ever heard of and who had never even met Trump, featured
prominently in the Steele memos and in subsequent U.S. media coverage of the
campaign. A July 19 memo from Steele had Page holding a “secret meeting” with
Igor Sechin, executive chairman of Rosneft, the Russian state oil company, in
which the two men discussed future bilateral energy cooperation and “an
associated move to lift Ukraine-related” sanctions against Russia.
The Clinton
campaign theme was set. By July 23, 2016, Clinton’s campaign manager, Robby
Mook, was telling ABC News on Sunday that “experts are
telling us that Russian state actors broke in to the DNC, took all these emails
and now are leaking them out through these Web sites. . . . It’s troubling that some experts are now telling us
that this was done by the Russians for the purpose of helping Donald Trump.” A
couple of days later, Rep. Adam Schiff (D-Calif.), who was to lead the
post-election “Trump-Russia collusion” charge in Congress, declared:
Given
Donald Trump’s well-known admiration for Putin and his belittling of NATO, the
Russians have both the means and the motive to engage in a hack of the D.N.C.
and the dump of its emails prior to the Democratic Convention. That
foreign actors may be trying to influence our election—let alone a powerful
adversary like Russia—should concern all Americans of any party.
In
August, it was reported, Senate Minority Leader Harry Reid wrote to
FBI Director James Comey demanding disclosure of the contents of the dossier:
“In my communications with you and other top officials in the national security
community, it has become clear that you possess explosive information about
close ties and coordination between Donald Trump, his top advisors, and the
Russian government…The public has a right to know this information.” And, of
course, Hillary Clinton famously accused Trump of being “Putin’s puppet” during
their third presidential debate.
The Steele
dossier was now driving the Obama administration’s scrutiny of Trump’s people
as well as media coverage of the campaign. Steele, the BBC
reported, “flew to Rome in August to talk to the FBI. Then in early
October, he came to the US and was extensively debriefed by them, over a week.
He gave the FBI the names of some of his informants, the so-called ‘key’ to the
dossier.” The FBI went to the Foreign Intelligence Surveillance Act (FISA)
court and obtained an order to “monitor the communications” of Carter Page, as “part
of an investigation into possible links between Russia and the campaign.”
According to the Guardian, the FISA court turned down its first application
(an unusual event, if true), asking the agency to narrow its focus. Eventually,
the FBI managed to convince the court that “there was probable cause to believe
Page was acting as an agent of a foreign power.” What was the basis of this
probable cause? CNN reported that the FBI based its application on the
claims made in the Steele dossier. That’s very serious business. If the FBI was
presenting the FISA court unverified material from the dossier as if it were
verified then it was clearly deceiving the court in order to obtain a
politically-motivated warrant.
By
September 2016, U.S. media were reporting that Carter Page had become
a person of interests for the U.S. government: “U.S. intelligence officials are
seeking to determine whether an American businessman identified by Donald Trump
as one of his foreign policy advisers has opened up private communications with
senior Russian officials—including talks about the possible lifting of economic
sanctions if the Republican nominee becomes president.” Words straight from the
dossier. The same media report had “U.S. intelligence agencies” receiving reports
that Page met one Igor Diveykin, who “serves as deputy chief for internal
policy and is believed by U.S. officials to have responsibility for
intelligence collected by Russian agencies about the U.S. election.” This too
is almost verbatim from Steele’s July 19 memo.
The U.S.
government has actually made very little pretense that it didn’t make use of
the dossier. FBI Director James Comey admitted to Congress that the dossier had
been “one of the sources of information the bureau has used to bolster its
investigation.” Then, on Jan. 11, 2017, following Director of National
Intelligence James Clapper’s meeting with Trump during which he and Comey
presented the president-elect a summary of the dossier, Clapper issued a
strange statement: The intelligence community “has not made any
judgment that the information in this document is reliable, and we did not rely
upon it in any way for our conclusions. However, part of our obligation is to
ensure that policymakers are provided with the fullest possible picture of any
matters that might affect national security.” This was a classic non-denial
denial. That he and his friends did not “rely” on the dossier doesn’t mean that
they didn’t make full use of it.
Federal
investigators also wiretapped Paul Manafort, both before and after the election
and indeed right through to the last days of the Obama administration.
According to CNN, the FBI launched an investigation of Manafort in 2014
shortly after the Feb. 22, 2014, coup d’etat in Ukraine. Manafort had worked as
a political consultant work for former Ukraine President Viktor Yanukovych’s
Party of Regions. However, the “surveillance was discontinued at some point
last year for lack of evidence.” In other words, by the time Manafort went to
work for the Trump campaign in May 2016, he was no longer under FBI
surveillance. The FBI resumed its surveillance at just about the time the first
of Steele’s memos started arriving in Washington.
The
wiretaps had nothing to do with the charges Special Counsel Robert Mueller has
just brought against Manafort. Mueller’s charges involve activities that took
place long before Manafort joined the Trump campaign. What the FBI was looking
for was evidence that Manafort was a conduit between the Kremlin and Trump.
Former
Trump National Security Adviser Michael Flynn also featured prominently in the
dossier. He too came under Obama administration surveillance. Indeed, Obama’s
people used the wiretaps in order to get him ousted from his newly-appointed
position. Obama administration holdover, Acting Attorney General Sally Yates,
listened in on a conversation Flynn had had with Russia’s ambassador to the
United States, Sergei Kislyak, on Dec. 29, 2016, and decided that the incoming
national security adviser was susceptible to blackmail from the Russians. She
never really explained on what grounds the Russians could or would blackmail
Flynn. Her argument seemed to be that because Flynn had discussed the possible
lifting of sanctions—a policy that would run contrary to that of the Obama
administration that was still in office at the time this conversation had
supposedly taken place—he had violated the Logan Act, which prohibits private
individuals conducting U.S. foreign policy. No one has been prosecuted under
this statute for 200 years. Why the Russians would want to invoke an obscure
statute to threaten Flynn, an official well-disposed toward them, with a
prosecution that could never succeed and thereby to undermine the very policy
they were seeking, namely, the lifting of sanctions, was never explained.
Nonetheless, armed with this nonsense, Yates rushed over to the White House
demanding dismissal of Flynn. He was susceptible to blackmail and was therefore
a security risk. It seemed to be a joke, but for reasons that remain baffling,
the White House meekly complied with Yates’s demand.
We now know
that the Obama administration’s surveillance of Trump’s people reached
pathological levels following the election. It is almost certain that the FBI
did pay Steele to continue his work. The Washington Post reported that the bureau had
“reached an agreement with [Steele] a few weeks before the election for the
bureau to pay him to continue his work.” The Post claims that
“Ultimately, the FBI did not pay Steele. Communications between the bureau and
the former spy were interrupted as Steele’s now-famous dossier became the
subject of news stories, congressional inquiries and presidential denials.”
This seems highly unlikely. According to a number of news stories, the Clinton
campaign stopped paying Steele sometime at the end of October. Yet Steele
continued sending memos through December. Somebody had to have paid him. Steele
is not the type to work pro bono.
Obama
people such as Samantha Power, Susan Rice and Ben Rhodes went on an unmasking
rampage during the election and after. House Intelligence Committee Chairman
Devin Nunes (R-Calif.) has claimed that the Obama administration made
“hundreds of requests during the 2016 presidential race to unmask the
names of Americans in intelligence reports, including Trump transition
officials.” The requests were made without specific justifications on why the
information was needed. More sinister were the activities of the Obama people
after the election. Trounced by Trump, they vented their fury doing everything
possible to undermine the incoming administration. The New York Times reported that during the last
days of the Obama administration “White House officials scrambled to spread
information about Russian efforts to undermine the presidential…across the
government. Former American officials say they had two aims: to ensure that
such meddling isn’t duplicated in future American or European elections, and to
leave a clear trail of intelligence for government investigators.”
A former
deputy assistant secretary of defense in the Obama administration official,
Evelyn Farkas, revealed that she was telling her former colleagues:
Get as much
information as you can, get as much intelligence as you can, before President
Obama leaves the administration, because I had a fear that somehow that
information would disappear with the senior people that left….That the Trump
folks, if they found out how we knew what we knew about their, the staff, the
Trump staff’s dealing with Russians, that they would try to compromise those
sources and methods, meaning we would no longer have access to that
intelligence. So I became very worried, because not enough was coming out into
the open, and I knew that there was more.
The full
extent of the Obama administration’s campaign of surveillance, espionage and
sabotage has yet to be revealed. The right-wing media have excitedly latched
onto the Clinton revelations in order to put out a ridiculous story of their
own. Americans are still innocent victims; Russians are still villains
interfering with our gloriously pristine elections. The new victim-in-chief is
Trump and the new Russian colluder-in-chief is Clinton. As ever, nothing
changes in Washington.
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