How Did Russiagate Begin?
How Did Russiagate Begin?
Why Barr’s investigation is important and should be encouraged.
By Stephen F. Cohen
MAY 30, 2019
It cannot be emphasized too often:
Russiagate—allegations that the American president has been compromised by
the Kremlin and which may even have helped to put him in the White House—is the
worst and (considering the lack of actual evidence) most fraudulent political
scandal in American history. We have yet to calculate the damage Russsiagate
has inflicted on America’s democratic institutions, including the presidency
and the electoral process, and on domestic and foreign perceptions of
American democracy, or on US-Russian relations at a critical moment when both
sides, having “modernized” their nuclear weapons, are embarking on a new, more
dangerous, and largely unreported arms race.
Rational (if politically innocent) observers
may have thought that when the Mueller Report found no “collusion” or other
conspiracy between Trump and Vladimir Putin’s Kremlin, only possible
“obstruction” by Trump—nothing Mueller said in his May 29 press statement
altered that conclusion—Russiagate would fade away. If so, they were badly
mistaken. Evidently infuriated that Mueller did not liberate the White House
from Trump, Russiagate promoters—liberal Democrats and progressives foremost
among them—have only redoubled their unverified collusion allegations, even in
once-respectable media outlets. Whether out of political ambition or
impassioned faith, the damage wrought by these Russiagaters continues to mount,
with no end in sight.
One way to end Russiagate might be to discover
how it actually began. Considering what we have learned, or been told, since
the allegations became public nearly three years ago, in mid-2016, there seem
to be at least three hypothetical possibilities:
1. One is the orthodox Russiagate explanation:
Early on, sharp-eyed top officials of President Obama’s intelligence agencies,
particularly the CIA and FBI, detected truly suspicious “contacts” between
Trump’s presidential campaign and Russians “linked to the Kremlin” (whatever
that may mean, considering that the presidential administration employs
hundreds of people), and this discovery legitimately led to the full-scale
“counter-intelligence investigation” initiated in July
2016. Indeed, Mueller documented various foreigners who contacted, or
who sought to contact, the Trump campaign. The problem here is that
Mueller does not tell us, and we do not know, if the number of them was
unusual.
Many foreigners seek “contacts” with US
presidential campaigns and have done so for decades. In this case, we do not
know, for the sake of comparison, how many such foreigners had or
sought contacts with the rival Clinton campaign, directly or through the
Clinton Foundation, in 2016. (Certainly, there were quite a
few contacts with anti-Trump Ukrainians, for example.) If the number
was roughly comparable, why didn’t US intelligence initiate a
counter-intelligence investigation of the Clinton campaign?
If readers think the answer is because the
foreigners around the Trump campaign included Russians, consider this: In 1988,
when Senator Gary Hart was the leading candidate for the Democratic
presidential nomination, he went to Russia—still Communist Soviet Russia—to
make contacts in preparation for his anticipated presidency, including meeting
with Soviet leader Mikhail Gorbachev. US media coverage of Hart’s visit was
generally favorable.(I accompanied Senator Hart and do not recall much, if any,
adverse US media reaction.)
2. The second explanation—currently, and
oddly, favored by non-comprehending pro-Trump commentators at Fox News and
elsewhere—is that “Putin’s Kremlin” pumped anti-Trump “disinformation” into the
American media, primarily through what became known as the Steele
Dossier. As
I pointed out nearly a year and a half ago, this makes no sense
factually or logically. Nothing in the Dossier suggests that any of its
contents necessarily came from high-level Kremlin sources, as Steele claimed.
Moreover, if Kremlin leader Putin so favored Trump, as A Russiagate premise
insists, is it really plausible that underlings in the Kremlin would have
risked Putin’s ire by furnishing Steele with anti-Trump “information”? On the
other hand, there
is plenty of evidence that “researchers” in the US (some, like
Christopher Steele, paid by the Clinton campaign) were supplying him with
the fruits of their research.
3. The third possible explanation—one
I have termed “Intelgate,” and that I explore in my recent
book War
With Russia?: From Putin & Ukraine to Trump & Russiagate—is
that US intelligence agencies undertook an operation to damage, if not destroy,
first the candidacy and then the presidency of Donald Trump. More evidence of
“Intelgate” has since appeared. For example, the intelligence community has
said it began its investigation in April 2016 due to a few innocuous remarks by
a young, lowly Trump foreign policy adviser, George Papadopoulos. The
relatively obscure Papadopoulos suddenly found himself befriended by apparently
influential people he had not previously known, among them Stefan Halper,
Joseph Mifsud, Alexander Downer, and a woman calling herself Azra Turk. What we
now know—and what Papadopoulos did not know at the time—is
that all of them had ties to US and/or UK and Western European
intelligence agencies.
US Attorney General William Barr now proposes
to investigate the origins of Russiagate. He has appointed yet another special
prosecutor, John Durham, to do so, but the power to decide the range and focus
of the investigation will remain with Barr. The important news is Barr’s expressed
intention to investigate the role of other US intelligence agencies, not just
the FBI, which obviously means the CIA when it was headed by John Brennan and
Brennan’s partner at the time, James Clapper, then Director of National
intelligence. As
I argued in The Nation, Brennan, not Obama’s hapless FBI
Director James Comey, was the godfather of Russiagate, a thesis for which more
evidence has
since appeared. We should hope that Barr intends to exclude nothing,
including the two foundational texts of the deceitful Russiagate
narrative: the Steele Dossier and, directly related, the contrived but equally
ramifying Intelligence Community Assessment of January 2017. (Not
coincidentally, they were made public at virtually the same
time, inflating Russiagate into an obsessive national scandal.)
Thus far, Barr has been cautious in his public
statements. He has acknowledged there was “spying,” or surveillance, on the
Trump campaign, which can be legal, but he surely knows that in the case of
Papadopoulos (and possibly of General Michael Flynn) what happened was more
akin to entrapment, which is never legal. Barr no doubt also recalls, and will
likely keep in mind, the
astonishing warning Senator Charles Schumer issued to President-elect
Trump in January 2017: “Let me tell you, you take on the intelligence
community, they have six ways from Sunday at getting back at you.” (Indeed,
Barr might ask Schumer what he meant and why he felt the need to be the
menacing messenger of intel agencies, wittingly or not.)
But Barr’s thorniest problem may be
understanding the woeful role of mainstream media in Russiagate. As Lee Smith,
who contributed important investigative reporting, has
written: “The press is part of the operation, the indispensable part. None
of it would have been possible … had the media not linked arms with spies,
cops, and lawyers to relay a story first spun by Clinton operatives.” How does
Barr explore this “indispensable” complicity of the media in originating and
perpetuating the Russiagate fraud without impermissibly infringing on
the freedom of the press?
Ideally, mainstream media—print and
broadcast—would now themselves report on how and why they permitted
intelligence officials, through leaks and anonymous sources, and as “opinion”
commentators, to use their pages and programming to promote Russiagate for so
long, and why they so excluded well-informed, nonpartisan alternative opinions.
Instead, they have almost unanimously reported and broadcast negatively, even
antagonistically, about Barr’s investigation, and indeed about Barr
personally. (The
Washington Post even found a way to print this: “William Barr
looks like a toad …”) Such is the seeming panic of the Russiagate media over
Barr’s investigation, which promises to declassify related documents,
that TheNew
York Times again trotted out its easily
debunked fiction that public disclosures will endanger a purported US
informant, a Kremlin mole, at Putin’s side.
Finally, but most crucially, what was the real
reason US intelligence agencies launched a discrediting operation against
Trump? Was it because, as seems likely, they intensely disliked his campaign
talk of “cooperation with Russia,” which seemed to mean the prospect of a new
US-Russian détente? Even fervent political and media opponents of Trump should
want to know who is making foreign policy in Washington. The next intel target
might be their preferred candidate or president, or a foreign policy they
favor.
Nor, it seems clear, did the CIA stop. In
March 2018, the current director, Gina Haspel, flatly lied to President
Trump about an incident in the UK in order to persuade him to escalate measures
against Moscow, which he then reluctantly did. Several
non-mainstream media
outlets have reported the true story. Typically, The New
York Times, on April 17 of this year, reported
it without correcting Haspel’s falsehood.
We are left, then, with this paradox,
formulated in a tweet on May 24 by the British journalist John O’Sullivan:
“Spygate is the first American scandal in which the government wants the facts
published transparently but the media want to cover them up.”
This commentary is based on Stephen F. Cohen’s
most recent weekly discussion with the host of The
John Batchelor Show. Now in their sixth year, previous installments are
at TheNation.com.
No comments:
Post a Comment
Note: Only a member of this blog may post a comment.