"The Republican [voters'] support for Trump’s desire for détente with Russia has
not eroded one jot."...8/6/17, "Playing Politics with the World’s Future," Alastair Crooke, Consortium News
2/7/18, "Russiagate or Intelgate?" The Nation, Stephen F. Cohen
"The
publication of the Republican House Committee memo and reports of other
documents increasingly suggest not only a “Russiagate” without Russia
but also something darker: The “collusion” may not have been in the
White House or the Kremlin."
"Stephen Cohen, professor emeritus of Russian Studies and Politics at
NYU and Princeton, and John Batchelor continue their (usually) weekly
[usually Tuesdays in the 10pm hour] discussions of the new US-Russian Cold War. (Previous installments, now
in their fourth year, are at TheNation.com.) Cohen first raised the question of “Intelgate,” perhaps coining the word, in the first half of 2017. He returns to it here.
"Referring to the memo whose preparation was overseen by
Republican Congressman Devin Nunes and whose release was authorized by
President Trump, and to similar reports likely to come, Cohen, having
for years researched Soviet-era archive materials (once highly
classified), understands the difficulties involved in summarizing such
secret documents, especially when they have been generated by
intelligence agencies. They must be put in the larger political context
of the time, which can be fully understood only by using other sources
as well, including open ones; and they may be contradicted by other
classified materials not yet available.
Nonetheless, the “Republican memo,” as it has become known while
we await its Democratic counterpart, indicates that some kind of
operation against presidential candidate and then President Trump, an
“investigation,” has been under way among top officials of US
intelligence agencies for a long time.
The memo focuses on questionable
methods used by Obama’s FBI and Justice Department to obtain a warrant
permitting them to surveil Carter Page, a peripheral and short-tenured
Trump foreign-policy adviser, and the role played in this by the
anti-Trump “dossier” complied by Christopher Steele, a former British
intelligence officer whose career specialization was Russia. But the
memo’s implications are even larger.
Steele’s dossier, which alleged that Trump had been compromised
by the Kremlin in various ways for several years even preceding his
presidential candidacy, was the foundational document of the Russiagate
narrative, at least from the time its installments began to be leaked to
the American media in the summer of 2016, to the US “Intelligence
Community Assessment” of January 2017 (when BuzzFeed also
published the dossier), the same month that FBI Director James Comey
“briefed” President-elect Trump on the dossier—apparently in an effort
to intimidate him—and on to today’s Mueller investigation.
Even though both have been substantially challenged for their
lack of verifiable evidence, the dossier and subsequent ICA report
remain the underlying sources for proponents of the Russiagate narrative
of “Trump-Putin collision.” The memo and dossier are now being
subjected to close (if partisan) scrutiny, much of it focused on the
Clinton campaign’s having financed Steele’s work through his employer,
Fusion GPS. But two crucial and ramifying questions are not, Cohen
argues, being explored:
Exactly when, and by whom, was this Intel
operation against Trump started? And exactly where did Steele get the
“information” that he was filing in periodic installments and that grew
into the dossier? In order to defend itself against the memo’s charge
that it used Steele’s unverified dossier to open its investigation into
Trump’s associates, the FBI claims it was prompted instead by a May 2016
report of remarks made earlier by another lowly Trump adviser, George
Papadopoulos, to an Australian ambassador in a London bar. Even leaving
aside the ludicrous nature of this episode, the public record shows it
is not true.
In testimony to the House Intelligence Committee in May
2017, John Brennan, formerly Obama’s head of the CIA, strongly suggested
that he and his agency were the first, as The Washington Post put it at the time, “in triggering an FBI probe.” Certainly both the Post and The New York Times
interpreted his remarks in this way. Equally certain, Brennan played a
central role in promoting the Russiagate narrative thereafter, briefing members of Congress privately and giving President Obama himself a top-secret envelope
in early August 2016 that almost certainly contained Steele’s dossier.
Early on, Brennan presumably would have shared his “suspicions” and
initiatives with James Clapper, director of national intelligence. FBI
Director Comey, distracted by his mangling of the Clinton private-server
affair during the presidential campaign, may have joined them actively
somewhat later. But when he did so publicly, in his March 2017 testimony
to the House Intelligence Committee, it was as J. Edgar Hoover
reincarnate—as the nation’s number-one expert on Russia and its profound
threat to America (though, when asked, he said he had never heard of
Gazprom, the giant Russian-state energy company often said to be a major
pillar of President Putin’s power).
The question therefore becomes: When did Brennan begin his
“investigation” of Trump? His House testimony leaves this somewhat
unclear, but, according to a subsequent Guardian article,
by late 2015 or early 2016 he was receiving, or soliciting, reports
from foreign intelligence agencies regarding “suspicious ‘interactions’
between figures connected to Trump and known or suspected Russian
agents.”
In short, if these reports and Brennan’s own testimony are to be
believed, he, not the FBI, was the instigator and godfather of
Russiagate. Certainly, his subsequent frequent and vociferous public
retelling of the Russiagate allegations against Trump suggest that he
played a (and probably the) instigating role. And, it seems, a role in the Steele dossier as well.
Where, then, Cohen asks, did Steele get his information?
According to Steele and his many stenographers—which include his
American employers, Democratic Party Russiagaters, the mainstream media,
and even progressive publications—it came from his “deep connections in
Russia,” specifically from retired and current Russian intelligence officials in or near the Kremlin.
From the moment the dossier began to be leaked to the American media,
this seemed highly implausible (as reporters who took his bait should
have known) for several reasons:
§ Steele has not returned to Russia after leaving his post there
in the early 1990s. Since then, the main Russian intelligence agency,
the FSB, has undergone many personnel and other changes, especially
after 2000, and especially in or near Putin’s Kremlin. Did Steele really
have such “connections” so many years later?
§ Even if he did, would these purported Russian insiders really
have collaborated with this “former” British intelligence agent under
what is so widely said to be the ever-vigilant eye of the ruthless
“former KGB agent” Vladimir Putin, thereby risking their positions,
income, perhaps freedom, as well as the well-being of their families?
§ Originally it was said that his Russian sources were highly paid by
Steele. Arguably, this might have warranted the risk. But subsequently
Steele’s employer and head of Fusion GPS, Glenn Simpson, wrote in The New York Times
that “Steele’s sources in Russia…were not paid.” If the Putin Kremlin’s
purpose was to put Trump in the White House, why then would these
“Kremlin-connected” sources have contributed to Steele’s anti-Trump
project without financial or political gain-only with considerable risk?
§ There is the also the telling matter of factual mistakes in the
dossier that Kremlin “insiders” were unlikely to have made, but this is
the subject for a separate analysis.
And indeed we now know that Steele had at least three other "sources" for the dossier, ones not previously mentioned by him or his employer.
There was the information from foreign intelligence agencies provided by
Brennan to Steele or to the FBI, which we also now know was
collaborating with Steele. There was the contents of a “second Trump-Russia dossier”
prepared by people personally close to Hillary Clinton and who shared
their “findings” with Steele. And most intriguingly, there was the
“research” provided by Nellie Ohr, wife of a top Department of Justice
official, Bruce Ohr, who, according to the Republican memo, “was
employed by Fusion GPS to assist in the cultivation of opposition
research on Trump. Ohr later provided the FBI with all of his wife’s
opposition research.” Most likely, it found its way into Steele’s
dossier. (Mrs. Ohr was a trained Russian Studies scholar with a PhD from
Stanford and a onetime assistant professor at Vassar, and thus, it must
have seemed, an ideal collaborator for Steele.)
We are left, then, with a vital, ramifying question: How much of
the “intelligence information” in Steele’s dossier actually came from
Russian insiders, if any? (This uncertainly alone should stop Fox News’s
Sean Hannity and others from declaring that the Kremlin used Steele—and
Hillary Clinton—to pump its “propaganda and disinformation” into
America. Such pro-Trump allegations, like those of Russiagate itself,
only fuel the new Cold War, which risks becoming actual war any day,
from Syria to Ukraine.)
And so, Cohen concludes, we are left with even more ramifying questions:
§ Was Russiagate produced by the primary leaders of the US
intelligence community, not just the FBI? If so, it is the most perilous
political scandal in modern American history, and the most detrimental
to American democracy. And if so, it does indeed, as zealous promoters
of Russiagate assert, make Watergate pale in significance. (To
understand more, we will need to learn more, including whether Trump
associates other than Carter Page and Paul Manafort were officially
surveilled by any of the agencies involved. And whether they were
surveilled in order to monitor Trump himself, on the assumption they
were or would be in close proximity to him, as the president once
suggested in a tweet.)
§ If Russiagate involved collusion among US intelligence
agencies, as now seems likely, why was it undertaken? There are various
possibilities. Out of loathing for Trump? Out of institutional
opposition to his promise of better relations—“cooperation”—with Russia?
Or out of personal ambition? Did Brennan, for example, aspire to
remaining head of the CIA, or to a higher position, in a Hillary Clinton
administration?
§ What was President Obama’s role in any of this? Or to resort to
the Watergate question: What did he know and when did he know it? And
what did he do? The same questions would need to be asked about his
White House aides and other appointees. Whatever the full answers, there
is no doubt that Obama acted on the Russiagate allegations. He cited
them for the sanctions he imposed on Russia in December 2016, which led
directly to the case of General Michael Flynn (not for doing anything
wrong with Russia but for “lying to the FBI”); to the worsening of the
new US-Russian Cold War; and thus to the perilous relationship inherited
by President Trump, who has in turn been thwarted by Russiagate in his
attempts to improve relations through “cooperation” with Putin.
§ With all of this in mind, and assuming Trump knew most of it,
did he really have any choice in firing FBI Director Comey, for which he
is now unfairly being investigated by Mueller? We might also ask, given
Comey’s role during Hillary Clinton’s presidential campaign (for which
she and her team loudly condemned him), whether as president she would
have had to fire him.
Listening almost daily to the legion of former US intel officers
condemn Russiagate skeptics ever more loudly and persistently in the
media, we may wonder if they are increasingly fearful it will become
known that Russiagate was mostly Intelgate. For that we will need a new
bipartisan Senate Church Committee of the 1970s, which investigated and
exposed misdeeds by US intelligence agencies and which led to important
reforms that are no longer the preventive measures against abuses of
power they were intended to be. (Ideally, everyone involved would be
granted amnesty for recent misdeeds, ending all talk of “jail time,” on
the condition they now testify truthfully.) But such an inclusive
investigation of Intelgate would require the support of Democratic
members of Congress, which no longer seems possible."
"Stephen F. Cohen is a professor emeritus of Russian studies and politics at New
York University and Princeton University and a contributing editor of The Nation."
.....................
Comment: The 2016 election was decided by 63 million voters who reject the senseless demonizing of Russia by the Endless War Racket. Additionally, we reject the assumption that as Americans we're born as slaves of the Endless War Racket:
"The point here is that
the Republican [voters'] support for Trump’s desire for détente with Russia has
not eroded one jot"...8/6/17, "Playing Politics with the World’s Future," Alastair Crooke, Consortium News
In 2016 we voted to free ourselves from bondage to the global war machine. If we're to pay for tanks, put them on the US southern border, not ridiculously surrounding Russia's border half a world away. Russians aren't killing Americans on American soil or traveling around the world randomly blowing up people in other countries. Islamists--via US immigration and refugee policy--are killing Americans on American soil and have been for several decades.
CFR will have to find other ways of financing its constant wars. Its individual members might try to get a life. They can't have ours.
------------
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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- I'm the daughter of a World War II Air Force pilot and outdoorsman who settled in New Jersey.
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