By
Reginald Johnson
Finally, some truth has emerged in the long-running Russia-gate scandal.
Special Counsel Robert Mueller, after an
exhaustive two year investigation, concluded that there was no conspiracy
between Donald Trump and the Russian government to influence the 2016 presidential
election.
The Mueller investigative team employed
dozens of attorneys and interviewed more than 500 witnesses. They issued 2800 subpoenas, executed 500 search warrants
and issued 230 orders for communications
records, according to a statement by U.S. Attorney General William Barr.
On the issue of possible obstruction of justice by Trump, both Barr and Deputy
Attorney General Rod Rosenstein --- who had originally ordered the Russia probe
---- said they found insufficient evidence in the Mueller report to prove that
President Trump had illegally tried to impede the investigation.
The report is clearly a vindication of Trump, who has maintained all along that the
claims about collusion with Russia were a hoax.
While Trump and his family still face legal
jeopardy from investigations into other matters, the culmination of the Mueller
probe marks the effective end of the Russia-gate scandal.
That began in the summer of 2016, when
claims were made that Russia had hacked Democratic Party computers and gained
information damaging to Democratic candidate Hillary Clinton in order to
undermine her campaign and throw the election to Trump.
About the same time, word of a secret
dossier emerged, a document written by former British intelligence agent
Christopher Steele, which claimed that Trump had connections with the Russian
government and was doing their bidding. Steele was paid by a firm doing
opposition research for the Clinton campaign.
On July 31, 2016, the FBI began an
investigation of the Trump campaign.
A
McCarthyistic hysteria took over Washington,
with pundits, former intelligence officials and lawmakers accusing Trump and
his family of being traitors and
secretly helping the Russian government and Vladimir Putin.
The
frenzy continued unabated for two years, and, after Trump fired FBI Director
James Comey, ostensibly for his improper
handling of the Hillary Clinton email probe, there were bi-partisan demands
that a special counsel be set up to look at Russian election interference and
possible collusion by Trump.
Mueller, who had been the FBI director for
years prior to Comey, was then appointed to conduct the probe.
Although Democratic members of Congress vow to continue the Russia investigation
in the House, with several leaders saying they are not satisfied with
Mueller’s conclusions, it is hard to see
how these committee probes will lead anywhere, and more importantly, why the
American people would take them seriously.
Polling by USA Today done just before the
Mueller report was issued, showed that 50% of the American people agreed with
Trump that the Russia collusion investigation was a “witch hunt.” Now
that the report is out --- essentially clearing Trump --- it is likely that a
majority of Americans would be skeptical
about the purpose of any further investigations. The House inquiries could in
fact turn into a political liability for Democrats heading into the 2020
election season.
While the result of the Mueller
investigation has settled the issue of collusion, it did nothing to answer a
number of other crucial questions. Just
what was the basis for suspecting Trump was compromised by Russia in the first place? Was the Steele
dossier a legitimate basis for the FBI launching an investigation? Who was
pushing the campaign to paint Trump and his family as being traitors?
President Donald Trump |
Another issue that needed investigation was
the FBI application filed in October of 2016 for a surveillance warrant from
the Foreign intelligence Surveillance Court
(FISC), that enabled them to spy on the Trump campaign. The Steele
dossier again was used to provide a basis for the application. FBI officials, including Comey, conceded
later that they never verified the claims in the document. But they went ahead anyway with the
application for the warrant.
It also appears that FBI and Justice officials did not adequately
disclose to the court the political origins of the dossier. If the court was
intentionally misled, that would be fraud, and those who signed off on the
application, including Comey, could be prosecuted.
These issues need to be fully investigated,
because they turn on whether there have been serious abuses of power by the
leaders of our government, in the FBI, the CIA, the Justice Department and even
by the former president, Barack Obama.
Looking back on the whole saga, there is good
reason to believe that the drive to portray Trump as compromised, was orchestrated
by members of the intelligence community, officials of the Justice Department
and possibly Obama.
This cabal, oriented to the neo-con
interventionist mindset, wanted to make sure that the hawkish Hillary
Clinton won the presidency. They didn’t
like Trump. The New York businessman, who had talked in his campaign about
improving relations with Russia and staying away from interventions such as
Syria, was seen as an unreliable commodity, who couldn’t be trusted to do the
right thing.
What better way to undermine Trump’s
campaign than to paint him as a Russian
agent --- after an FBI- authorized
investigation found that Democratic National Committee campaign computers were
hacked by Russians and information
damaging to Clinton was then given to Wikileaks for publication? It was a perfect storyline. Trump had sold
out to the Russians.
The transcripts of cell phone text messages
between FBI agents Peter Strzok and Lisa Page, released by the Inspector
General and a Senate committee in January 2018, point to a conspiracy by FBI
officials and others to frame Trump and
block his election.
Strzok, who was the lead investigator in the
Trump probe, and his paramour, Lisa Page, an agency attorney, exchanged
numerous messages in which they showed a hatred for Trump and an strong
preference for Clinton. They used profanities to describe Trump.
Then in one message to Page, Strzok
referenced a meeting in FBI Deputy Director Andrew McCabe’s office, in which
Trump’s election chances were discussed.
“I want to believe the path you threw out for
consideration in Andy’s office --- that there’s no way he gets elected --- but
I’m afraid we can’t take that risk. It’s like an insurance policy in the
unlikely event you die before you’re 40,” Strzok wrote.
What was the insurance policy? Apparently it
was using the counter intelligence probe into the Trump campaign to gain
negative information about Trump and use that, together with the dossier, to
spread misinformation in the media about the GOP candidate and thwart his
election.
Another
text message between Strzok and Page linked Obama to the conspiracy.
“POTUS wants to know everything we’re doing,”
Strzok said.
After his surprising election victory, the drive against Trump
turned into a coup attempt. First,
anti-Trump forces took the highly-unusual step of trying to persuade electors
in the Electoral College to change their votes from Trump to Colin Powell, the
former Secretary of State and military hawk.
That didn’t work.
In the spring of 2017,
according to a report on “60 Minutes,”
McCabe, Rosenstein and other
officials discussed the idea of Rosenstein wearing a wire and then meeting with
Trump and seeing if the president might say something incriminating. If that happened, members of the Cabinet were
going to be asked to invoke the 25th amendment, which allows the
Cabinet to remove a president if he or she is deemed unable to carry out the
duties of their office. There was never any follow-up on this discussion, which
Rosenstein denies having.
With respect to the entire Russia-collusion
case, the actions of FBI and Justice
Department officials, CIA Director John Brennan (who behind the scenes peddled
the phony Steele dossier to members of Congress and the media) and President
Obama, need to be thoroughly investigated by Congress or by an independent
commission.
Members of the journalism community also
have to take a long hard look at their performance during the entire Russia-
gate scandal. Simply put, it’s been
terrible. Too many reporters and editors too eagerly embraced the
Trump-Russia-collusion narrative as fact. The cardinal rule of journalism ---
to show skepticism and think critically --- was tossed out the window. As a
result, numerous “major” stories turned out to be wrong. CNN, MSNBC, the New
York Times and the Washington Post, all made mistakes or over-hyped many of the
Trump-Russia stories.
What caused the press failures? Part of it was
the desire of reporters to be the next Woodward-Bernstein, to break that big
Watergate-style story that brings down a president. In other cases reporters
were too cozy with members of the intelligence community, and they willingly
spit out a false story line.
Over the years, I’ve had little use for
conservative media. Often I find conservative pundits completely off- base. But
on Trump-Russia collusion, outlets like FOX --- which consistently questioned
the conspiracy narrative --- got it right. They deserve credit.
The nation has been through a lot during the
last three years of Russia-gate. There’s been abuses of power by top officials of our
government. The democratic process has been undermined. Journalists covering the story have shown a lack of professionalism.
Now, there has to be a reckoning.
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