"Trump has quietly
appointed anti-Russia hawks to key posts and admitted a new NATO member
over Russian objections. Trump’s top military commander, Gen. Joseph
Dunford, chairman of the Joint Chiefs of Staff, is backing an effort by
the Pentagon and Congress to arm Ukraine with new weapons....Just before Russia’s recent war games with
allied Belarus, the United States and NATO allies carried out their
“biggest military exercise in eastern Europe since the Cold War” right
next door. These tensions only stand to worsen in a political climate in
which diplomacy with Russia is seen as a weakness, and in which
challenging it through sanctions and militarism is one of the few areas
of bipartisan agreement. Conflict with a nuclear power may threaten the
future annihilation of many, but it offers immediate benefits for some.
“NATO concerns about Russia are seen as a positive for the defense
industry”"..."Facebook also says the majority of
ads, 56 percent, were seen “after the election.”"
10/7/17, "Russiagate Is More Fiction Than Fact," The Nation, by Aaron Maté
"From accusations of Trump campaign collusion to Russian Facebook ad buys, the media has substituted hype for evidence."
"In her new campaign memoir, What Happened, Hillary Clinton
reveals that she has followed “every twist and turn of the story,” and
“read everything I could get my hands on,” concerning Russia’s role in
the 2016 presidential election. “I do wonder sometimes about what would
have happened if President Obama had made a televised address to the
nation in the fall of 2016 warning that our democracy was under attack,”
she writes.
Clinton has had a lot to take in....Yet nearly one year later there is
still no concrete evidence of its central allegations.
There are claims by
US intelligence officials that the Russian government hacked e-mails
and used social media to help elect Donald Trump, but there has yet to
be any corroboration. Although the oft-cited January intelligence report
“uses the strongest language and offers the most detailed assessment
yet,” The Atlantic observed
that “it does not or cannot provide evidence for its assertions.”
Noting the “absence of any proof” and “hard evidence to back up the
agencies’ claims that the Russian government engineered the election
attack,” The New York Times concluded that the intelligence community’s message “essentially amounts to ‘trust us.'" That remains the case today.’"
The same holds for the question of collusion. Officials acknowledged to Reuters
in May that “they had seen no evidence of wrongdoing or collusion
between the campaign and Russia in the communications reviewed so far.”
Well-placed critics of Trump—including former DNI chief James Clapper, former CIA director Michael Morrell, Representative Maxine Waters, and Senator Dianne Feinstein—concur to date.
Recognizing this absence of evidence helps examine what has been substituted in its place. Shattered,
the insider account of the Clinton campaign, reports that “in the days
after the election, Hillary declined to take responsibility for her own
loss.” Instead, one source recounted, aides were ordered “to make sure
all these narratives get spun the right way.” Within 24 hours of
Clinton’s concession speech, top officials gathered “to engineer the
case that the election wasn’t entirely on the up-and-up.… Already,
Russian hacking was the centerpiece of the argument.”
But the focus on Russia has utility far beyond the Clinton camp. It
dovetails with elements of state power that oppose Trump’s call for
improved relations with Moscow and who are willing to deploy a familiar
playbook of Cold War fearmongering to block any developments on that
front. The multiple investigations and anonymous leaks are also a tool
to pacify an erratic president whose anti-interventionist rhetoric—by
all indications, a ruse—alarmed foreign-policy elites during the
campaign. Corporate media outlets driven by clicks and ratings are
inexorably drawn to the scandal. The public is presented with a
real-life spy thriller, which for some carries the added appeal of
possibly undoing a reviled president and his improbable victory.
These imperatives have incentivized a compromised set of
journalistic and evidentiary standards. In Russiagate, unverified claims
are reported with little to no skepticism. Comporting developments are
cherry-picked and overhyped, while countervailing ones are minimized or
ignored. Front-page headlines advertise explosive and incriminating
developments, only to often be undermined by the article’s content, or
retracted entirely.
Qualified language—likely, suspected, apparent—appears
next to “Russians” to account for the absence of concrete links. As a
result, Russiagate has enlarged into a storm of innuendo that engulfs
issues far beyond its original scope.
The latest two stories about alleged Trump campaign collusion
were initially received as smoking guns. But upon further examination,
they may actually undermine that narrative. One was news that Trump had
signed a non-binding letter of intent to license his name for a proposed
building in Moscow as he ran for the White House. Russian-born
developer Felix Sater predicted to Trump lawyer Michael Cohen that the
deal would help Trump win the presidency. “I will get Putin on this
program and we will get Donald elected,” Sater wrote, believing that
voters would be impressed that Trump could make a real-estate deal with
the United States’ “most difficult adversary.” The New York Times describes the outcome:
"There is no evidence in the emails that Mr. Sater
delivered on his promises, and one email suggests that Mr. Sater
overstated his Russian ties. In January 2016, Mr. Cohen wrote to Mr.
Putin’s spokesman, Dmitri S. Peskov, asking for help restarting the
Trump Tower project, which had stalled. But Mr. Cohen did not appear to
have Mr. Peskov’s direct email, and instead wrote to a general inbox for
press inquiries.
The project never got government permits or financing, and died weeks later."
Peskov has confirmed he ended up seeing the e-mail from Cohen, but
did not bother to respond. The story does raise a potential conflict of
interest: Trump pursued a Moscow deal as he praised Putin on the
campaign trial. But it is hard to see how a deal that never got off the
ground is of more importance than actual deals Trump made in places like
Turkey, the Philippines, and the Persian Gulf. If anything, the story
should introduce skepticism into whether any collusion took place: The
deal failed, and Trump’s lawyer did not even have an e-mail address for
his Russian counterparts.
The revelation of Sater’s e-mails to Cohen followed the earlier
controversy of Rob Goldstone offering Donald Trump Jr. incriminating
information on Hillary Clinton as “part of Russia and its government’s
support for Mr. Trump.” Goldstone’s e-mail was more fruitful than
Sater’s in that it yielded a meeting, albeit one that Trump Jr. claims
he abandoned after 20 minutes. Those who deem the Sater-Goldstone e-mail
chains incriminating or even treasonous should be reminded of their
provenance: Sater is known as “a canny operator and a colorful bullshitter” who has “launched a host of crudely named websites—including IAmAFaggot.com and VaginaBoy.com…
to attack a former business partner.” Meanwhile, Goldstone is a British
tabloid journalist turned music publicist. One does not have to be an
intelligence expert to doubt that they are Kremlin cut-outs.
Then there is Facebook’s disclosure that fake accounts “likely
operated out of Russia” paid $100,000 for 3,000 ads starting in June
2015 ["56 percent, were seen “after the election,”" so it's down to at best $50,000; and the rubes aren't allowed to see any of the alleged ads. Again, it's 'trust us']. The New York Times editorial board described
it as “further evidence of what amounted to unprecedented foreign
invasion of American democracy.” A $100,000 Facebook ad buy seems
unlikely to have had much impact in a $6.8 billion election.
According
to Facebook, “the vast majority of ads…didn’t specifically reference the
US presidential election, voting or a particular candidate” but rather
focused “on amplifying divisive social and political messages across the
ideological spectrum—touching on topics from LGBT matters to race
issues to immigration to gun rights.” Facebook also says the majority of
ads, 56 percent, were seen “after the election.” The ads have not been
released publicly. But by all indications, if they were used to try to
elect Trump, their sponsors took a very curious route.
The ads are commonly described as “Russian disinformation,” but in the most extensive reporting on the story to date, The Washington Post adds multiple qualifiers in noting that the ads “appear to have come from accounts associated with the Internet Research Agency,” itself a Kremlin-linked firm (emphasis added).
The Post also reveals that an initial Facebook review of the
suspected Russian accounts found that they “had clear financial
motives, which suggested that they weren’t working for a foreign
government.” Furthermore, “the security team did not find clear evidence
of Russian disinformation or ad purchases by Russian-linked accounts.”
But Russiagate logic requires a unique response to absent evidence: “The
sophistication of the Russian tactics caught Facebook off-guard.”
The Post adds how Russian “sophistication” was overcome:
"As Facebook struggled to find clear evidence of
Russian manipulation, the idea was gaining credence in other influential
quarters.
In the electrified aftermath of the election, aides to Hillary
Clinton and Obama pored over polling numbers and turnout data, looking
for clues to explain what they saw as an unnatural turn of events.
One of the theories to emerge from their post-mortem was that
Russian operatives who were directed by the Kremlin to support Trump may
have taken advantage of Facebook and other social media platforms to
direct their messages to American voters in key demographic areas in
order to increase enthusiasm for Trump and suppress support for Clinton.
These former advisers didn’t have hard evidence that Russian
trolls were using Facebook to micro-target voters in swing districts—at
least not yet—but they shared their theories with the House and Senate
intelligence committees, which launched parallel investigations into
Russia’s role in the presidential campaign in January."
The theories paid off. A personal visit in May by Democratic Senator
Mark Warner, vice-chair of the Senate Intelligence Committee, “spurred
the company to make some changes in how it conducted its internal
investigation.” Facebook’s announcement in August of finding 3,000
“likely” Russian ads is now an ongoing “scandal” that has dragged the
company before Congressional committees.
Other election threats loom. A recent front-page New York Times article
linking Russian cyber operations to voting irregularities across the
United States is headlined, “Russian Election Hacking Efforts, Wider
Than Previously Known, Draw Little Scrutiny.” But read on and you’ll
discover that there is no evidence of “Russian election hacking,” only
evidence-free accusations of it. Voting problems in Durham, North
Carolina, “felt like tampering, or some kind of cyberattack,” election
monitor Susan Greenhalgh says, and “months later…questions still linger
about what happened that day in Durham as well as other counties in
North Carolina, Virginia, Georgia and Arizona.” There is one caveat:
“There are plenty of other reasons for such breakdowns—local officials
blamed human error and software malfunctions—and no clear-cut evidence
of digital sabotage has emerged, much less a Russian role in it.”
The evidence-free concern over Russian hacking expanded in late
September when the Department of Homeland Security informed 21 states
that they had been targeted by Russian cyber-operations during the 2016
election. But three states have already dismissed the DHS claims,
including California, which announced that after seeking “further
information, it became clear that DHS’s conclusions were wrong.”
Recent elections in France and Germany saw similar fears of
Russian hacking and disinformation—and similar results. In France, a
hack targeting the campaign of election winner Emmanuel Macron ended up
having “no trace,” of Russian involvement, and “was so generic and
simple that it could have been practically anyone,” the head of French
cyber-security quietly explained after the vote. Germany faced an even
more puzzling outcome: Nothing happened. “The apparent absence of a
robust Russian campaign to sabotage the German vote has become a mystery
among officials and experts who had warned of a likely onslaught,” the Post reported in an article headlined “As Germans prepare to vote, a mystery grows: Where are the Russians?” The mystery was so profound that The New York Times also explored it days later: “German Election Mystery: Why No Russian Meddling?”
Following this evidentiary praxis, Russia can be blamed for
matters far beyond Western elections. After the recent white-supremacist
violence in Charlottesville, foreign-policy consultant Molly McKew
issued a widely circulated appeal on Twitter:
“We need to have a conversation about what is happening today in
Charlottesville and Russian influence, and operations, in the United
States.” (McKew recently testified at a US government hearing on “The
Scourge of Russian Disinformation.”)
Writing for CNN,
Yale Law School’s Asha Rangappa asserted that Charlottesville
“highlighted again the problem of Russia.” Sure, Rangappa concedes,
“there is no evidence to date that Russia is directly supporting extreme
right groups in the United States.” But Russian government ties to the
European far-right “when viewed through the lens of Trump’s response to
Charlottesville, suggests an opening for Russian intelligence to use
domestic hate groups as a vehicle for escalating their active measures
inside the United States.”
Linking Russia to right-wing American racists contrasts with just
a few months prior, when it was fashionable to tie Russia to the polar
opposites. In March, intelligence-community witnesses soberly testified
to Congress that Russia’s “21st-century cyber invasion” has “tried to
sow unrest in the U.S. by inflaming protests such as Occupy Wall Street
and the Black Lives Matter movement.” The evidence presented for this
claim was that both movements were covered by the Russian state-owned
television network RT.
Russian-linked tweets about NFL players kneeling during the
national anthem to protest racial injustice show the Russians “trying to
push divisiveness in this country,” says Republican Senator James Lankford.
A Russian-linked ad about Black Lives Matter aimed at audiences in
Ferguson and Baltimore “tells us…that the Russians who bought these ads
were sophisticated enough to understand that targeting a Black Lives
Matter ad to the communities…would help sow political discord.…the goal
here was really about creating chaos,” says CNN reporter Dylan Byers.
But this story might actually tell us a lot more about the
attitudes of pundits and lawmakers towards their audiences. On top of
the 3,000 ads identified by Facebook, Twitter has now informed Congress
of around 200 accounts “linked to Russian interference in the 2016
election.” Twitter has 328 million users. To suggest 200 accounts out of
328 million could have had an impact is as much an insult to common
sense as it is to basic math. It also suggests Black Lives Matter
protesters in places like Ferguson and Baltimore were unwitting foreign
agents who needed Russian social-media prodding to march in the streets.
To protest racism is not to sow “chaos” and “political discord,” but to
protest racism.
Because the ads may have originated in Russia, it is widely taken
for granted that they were part of an alleged Russian government plot.
Few have considered a different scenario, pointed out
by the journalist Max Blumenthal, that the ads could have been like
those from any other troll farm: clickbait to attract page views.
Some who focus on Russiagate may be acting from the real fear and
disorientation that follows from the victory of the most unqualified
and unpredictable president in history. But those who partake,
particularly those in positions of privilege, should consider that
Russiagate offers them a safe and anodyne way to “Resist.” For
privileged Americans to challenge Trump mainly over Russia is to do so
in a way that avoids confronting their own relationship to the economic
and political system that many of his voters rebelled against. “If the
presidency is effectively a Russian op, if the American presidency right
now is the product of collusion between the Russian intelligence
services and an American campaign,” to borrow a scenario posed by Rachel
Maddow, then there is nothing else to confront.
But economic discontent, along with voter suppression, the
Democratic Party’s failures to reach voters, and corporate media that
gave endless attention to Trump’s empty promises and racial animus, are
among the issues cast aside by the incessant focus on Russigate, as are
the very real US-Russia tensions that do not fit the narrative.
Amid
widespread talk of Putin pulling the strings, Trump has quietly
appointed anti-Russia hawks to key posts and admitted a new NATO member
over Russian objections. Trump’s top military commander, Gen. Joseph
Dunford, chairman of the Joint Chiefs of Staff, is backing an effort by
the Pentagon and Congress to arm Ukraine with new weapons. President
Obama had rejected a similar proposal out of fear it would inflame the
country’s deadly conflict. Just before Russia’s recent war games with
allied Belarus, the United States and NATO allies carried out their
“biggest military exercise in eastern Europe since the Cold War” right
next door.
These tensions only stand to worsen in a political climate in
which diplomacy with Russia is seen as a weakness, and in which
challenging it through sanctions and militarism is one of the few areas
of bipartisan agreement. Conflict with a nuclear power may threaten the
future annihilation of many, but it offers immediate benefits for some.
“NATO concerns about Russia are seen as a positive for the defense
industry,” the business press notes in reporting that military stocks
have reached “all-time highs.” As have the ratings of MSNBC, the cable
network that has pushed Russiagate more than any other.
Those unbound by Russiagate’s offerings need not succumb to them.
Trump didn’t get to the White House via Russia, but by falsely
portraying himself as a populist champion. The only con he will be
undone by is his own."
.......................
Comment: Half the American electorate still has no political party behind them. We thought we had one person behind us, Mr. Trump, but it turns out he's a worse neocon than Bush. Personally, I hope he rots in hell. We're moving on without him.
....................
George Soros gave Ivanka's husband's business a $250 million credit line in 2015 per WSJ. Soros is also an investor in Jared's business.
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About Me
- susan
- I'm the daughter of a World War II Air Force pilot and outdoorsman who settled in New Jersey.
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