Saturday, March 17, 2018

(Lengthy) The Real Collusion Story

Submitted by: Terry Payne

The Real Collusion Story

https://www.nationalreview.com/2018/03/russia-collusion-real-story-hillary-clint
on-dnc-fbi-media/


Folks: Long and detailed analysis of FBI & DOJ plot to frame Trump and
associates.

“We have a word to describe the use of fabricated evidence to make an innocent
man appear guilty: The Obama administration framed Carter Page. But not only
Carter Page. The Obama administration framed Donald Trump.
This alibi won’t wash. McCabe’s team was fully aware, in September, that
Steele stood behind the Isikoff article. In fact, the appearance of “a senior
U.S. law enforcement official” in the article implicates McCabe’s team more or
less directly. In short, Steele’s FBI handlers were aware of his role in
leaking information at that time, and it caused them no consternation. On the
contrary, after the Isikoff article, the FBI drew Steele even closer, flying him
to Rome and offering him $50,000. His work as a cutout received further tacit
commendation when McCabe’s team used the Isikoff article to dupe the FISA-court
judges.
The troubles that eventually befell Steele and McCabe’s team have no bearing on
the simple facts: They worked as partners in prosecuting a campaign of innuendo
against Carter Page in September, and again in placing him under surveillance in
October. What is more, the surveillance order went beyond McCabe’s team, to the
highest levels in the FBI and the DOJ. James Comey had to sign off on that
decision - and that fact implicates him in a serious abuse of power.
Steele’s description of Carter Page’s activities in Moscow is comical. We have
a word to describe the use of fabricated evidence to make an innocent man appear
guilty: The Obama administration framed Carter Page. But not only Carter Page.
According to Steele’s dossier, Page was in Moscow to cut a deal on another’s
behalf: He was an emissary - the trusted agent of Donald Trump. Without Steele’
s allegations against Carter Page - without, that is, the story of Page
negotiating with Sechin to remove the sanctions - there was no credible
allegation of a Trump-Putin conspiracy. The FBI, therefore, carried out a
campaign of innuendo against Donald Trump in September. And the Obama
administration placed him under investigation in October, if not earlier. The
Obama administration framed Donald Trump.
During the Watergate scandal, the press popularized the phrase “the non-denial
denial.” The Nixon White House had a special talent for issuing statements that
sounded like categorical denials of allegations but that, upon close parsing,
affirmed them to be true. In the matter of the Steele dossier, Obama officials,
some of their allies in Congress, and senior leaders in the FBI have developed
an analogous ploy: the “non-verification verification.” These are statements
that distance the speaker from the laughable fantasies of the Steele dossier
while still affirming that the tale of collusion it weaves must be taken
seriously.
The unrivaled master of the move is John Brennan. In a recent appearance on
NBC’s Meet the Press, Brennan defended the FBI’s use of the Steele dossier in
its FISA warrant application. He railed against the FBI’s critics, whom he
depicted as partisan hacks. He played the role of sober intelligence
professional. Expressing his personal appraisal of the dossier when he was still
director of the CIA, he said, “There were things in that dossier that made me
wonder whether or not they were, in fact, accurate and true.”
Exactly what things? Was it the dossier’s view of Page as the diabolical
mastermind of the DNC hack that struck the CIA director as credible? Avoiding
the dossier’s specific allegations, Brennan maintained his front and asserted,
with the somber tone of a button-down national-security professional, that
Steele’s reports contain valuable intelligence leads. “I think Jim Comey has
said that it contained salacious and unverified information,” Brennan
continued. “Just because it was unverified didn’t mean it wasn’t true.”
John Brennan sees things that we cannot see. If he indeed has access to secrets
that transform stories from Marvel Comics into the stuff of everyday reality,
then he has done a very poor job of explaining what they are. Moreover, no
disinterested intelligence professional has supported him. Brennan’s somber and
self-righteous appeal to hidden secrets is the oldest con in the book. Just
replace his top-secret computer monitor with a crystal ball or dried chicken
bones, and his scam is the same one that Gypsy fortunetellers ran on
superstitious peasants in early-modern Europe, or that soothsayers were
operating in Homer’s Greece.
********************************************************************

NATIONAL REVIEW

The Real Collusion Story
March 13, 2018 6:30 AM



Hillary Clinton at a “Get Out the Vote” rally in Concord, N.H., February 6,
2016. (Brian Snyder/Reuters)

By  MICHAEL DORAN <https://www.nationalreview.com/author/michael-doran/>
In a textbook example of denial and projection, Trump foes in and out of
government wove a sinister yarn meant to take him down.
Barack Obama keeps a close watch on his emotions. “I loved Spock,” he wrote in
February 2015 in a presidential statement eulogizing Leonard Nimoy. Growing up
in Hawaii, the young man who would later be called “No-Drama Obama” felt a
special affinity for the Vulcan first officer of the U.S.S. Enterprise. “Long
before being nerdy was cool, there was Leonard Nimoy,” the eulogy continued.
“Leonard was Spock. Cool, logical, big-eared and level-headed.”
It is the rare occasion when Obama lets his Spock mask slip. But November 2,
2016, was just such a moment. Six days before the presidential election, when
addressing the Congressional Black Caucus, he stressed that the Republican
candidate, Donald Trump, threatened hard-won achievements of blacks: tolerance,
justice, good schools, ending mass incarceration - even democracy itself.
“There is one candidate who will advance those things,” he said, his voice
swelling with emotion. “And there’s another candidate whose defining
principle, the central theme of his candidacy, is opposition to all that we’ve
done.”19
The open display of emotion was new, but the theme of safeguarding his legacy
was not. Two months earlier, on July 5, in Charlotte, N.C., Obama delivered his
first stump speech for Hillary Clinton. He described his presidency as a leg in
a relay race. Hillary Clinton had tried hard to pass affordable health care
during Bill Clinton’s administration, but she failed - and the relay baton fell
to the ground. When Obama entered the White House, he picked it up. Now, his leg
of the race was coming to an end. “I’m ready to pass the baton,” he said.
“And I know that Hillary Clinton is going to take it.”
But he was less certain than he was letting on. Hillary Clinton was up in the
polls, to be sure, but she was vulnerable. Three weeks earlier, on June 15, a
cyberattacker fashioning himself as Guccifer 2.0 had published a cache of emails
stolen from the Democratic National Committee (DNC). They proved, as supporters
of Vermont senator Bernie Sanders had long alleged, that the DNC had conspired
with the Clinton campaign to undermine their candidate. Sanders was still
withholding his endorsement of Clinton for president, even though her nomination
as the Democratic candidate was now a foregone conclusion. At the very moment
when Clinton had expected the Democratic party to unite behind her, its deepest
chasm seemed to be growing wider. In contrast to Clinton, Obama held some sway
over the Sanders insurgents. He came to Charlotte to urge them to support
Clinton against their shared enemy, the presumptive Republican nominee for
president, Donald Trump.
The insurgency was not the only Clinton vulnerability on Obama’s mind. He had
come to Charlotte, in addition, to deflect attention from the news conference
that James Comey, the director of the FBI, had held that morning in Washington,
D.C. The investigation into Hillary Clinton’s use of a private email server was
complete, Comey announced. The FBI would recommend no criminal charges - that
was the honey. But Comey administered it with a dose of vinegar. He dwelled on
Clinton’s mishandling of classified material in such detail that it sounded as
if he was laying the foundation for an indictment. The decision not to charge
Clinton, his statement signaled, was an exercise in prosecutorial restraint, not
a true exoneration.
From the perspective of the voters, Clinton’s twin email travails - the hack of
the DNC and the investigation into her server - were two faces of a single
problem. Call it “Clinton, Inc.” Sanders and Trump were painting Clinton as
Wall Street’s darling, the establishment candidate. She was the greatest
defender and a prime beneficiary of a rigged political and financial system.
Comey’s statement had played directly into the hands of the Sanders insurgents.
It left the distinct impression that laws are for the little people; they simply
don’t apply to Hillary Clinton, because, well, she’s Hillary Clinton.
Which points to Obama’s third and final job at Charlotte: humanizing the queen.
“I saw how she treated everybody with respect, even the folks who aren’t,
quote/unquote, ‘important,’” Obama testified. He enlarged Clinton’s humility
before the crowd, because it was invisible to the naked eye. With his jacket and
tie off, the cuffs of his sleeves turned, and a winning smile spread from ear to
ear, Obama came to loan Hillary Clinton his common touch.
Passing the baton to her was a team effort, however. It demanded hard work from
countless enablers. These included not just Democrats but also many Republicans,
who shared the conviction that Trump represented an extraordinary threat to our
democracy. Desperate times call for desperate measures. To block Trump,
Clinton’s supporters bent rules and broke laws. They went to surprising lengths
to strengthen her while framing him - both in the sense of depicting him in a
particular light and of planting evidence against him.
OE FRIDAY
When it comes to ongoing FBI criminal investigations, presidents typically
refrain from describing their preferred outcomes. They fear the appearance of
exerting undue influence over Lady Justice. But in the case of Hillary Clinton’
s email abuses, Obama made an exception. “She would never intentionally put
America in any kind of jeopardy,” he remarked in a TV interview in April 2016.
She has displayed “a carelessness in terms of managing emails,” he allowed.
“But I also think it is important to keep this in perspective.”
Well-intentioned but careless, said the commander in chief, describing Hillary’
s use of a private email server. Three months later, Comey, in a Vulcan
mind-meld with his boss, arrived at an identical conclusion.
Well-intentioned but careless, said the commander in chief. Three months later,
the FBI finished its investigation, and James Comey arrived at an identical
conclusion. “Although we did not find clear evidence that Secretary Clinton or
her colleagues intended to violate laws governing the handling of classified
information,” he said in his July 5 statement, “there is evidence that they
were extremely careless in their handling of very sensitive, highly classified
information.” Well-intentioned but careless - Comey was locked in a Vulcan
mind-meld with his boss.
As a political move, highlighting Clinton’s intentions was astute. It had a
commonsense feel. Americans instinctively take intentions into account when
determining guilt. As a strict matter of law, however, it was vapid. The
mishandling of classified information falls into the category of a “non-intent
crime.” It’s a type of objective recklessness, like running over a pedestrian
while blowing through a red light. Violations of this sort trigger criminal
liabilities regardless of the offender’s state of mind.
But let’s assume that some clever lawyer in the Department of Justice
discovered a very learned and superficially compelling rationale for applying
Obama’s fictive standard of intent. Even so, Hillary Clinton couldn’t clear
the hurdle. The sheer volume of classified material the FBI recovered from her
server constituted proof of intent. “Fifty-two email chains . . . contain
classified information,” Comey said.
Particularly damning was the form this material took. It is impossible to paste
a classified document into an unclassified email accidentally, because the three
computer systems (Unclassified, Confidential/Secret, and Top Secret) are
physically separate networks, each feeding into an independent hard drive on the
user’s desk. If a classified document appears in an unclassified email, then
someone downloaded it onto a thumb drive and manually uploaded it to the
unclassified network - an intentional act if ever there was one.
One of Clinton’s emails suggests that downloading and uploading material in
this fashion was a commonplace activity in her office. In June 2011, a staffer
encountered difficulty transmitting a document to her by means of a classified
system. An impatient Clinton instructed him to strip the classified markings
from the document and send it on as an unclassified email. “Turn into non paper
w no identifying heading and send non secure,” Clinton instructed.
On three separate occasions staffers got sloppy and failed to strip the “non
papers” of all markings that betrayed their classified origins. The FBI
recovered one email, for example, that contained a “C” in parenthesis in the
margin - an obvious sign that the corresponding paragraph was classified
“Confidential.” When an agent personally interviewed Clinton, on July 2, he
showed her the document and asked whether she understood what the “C” meant.
For anyone who has ever held a security clearance, “C’s” in the margins are
more ubiquitous than “C’s” on water faucets - and no more baffling. But
Clinton played the ditzy grandmother. She had simply assumed, she said, that the
“C” was marking an item in an alphabetized list.
In the 2,500-year life of the alphabet, this was a first: a list that started
with the third letter and contained but a single item. The explanation was
laughable, but any sensible answer would have constituted an acknowledgement of
malicious intent. Her only out was the “well-intentioned but careless” script
that Obama had written for her. In other words, she lied to the FBI - a felony
offense.
Before she ever told this howler, however, Comey had already prepared a draft of
his statement exonerating her. The FBI let Hillary Clinton skate.
If Comey had followed the letter of the law, the trail of guilt may have led all
the way to Obama himself.
But give Comey his due. If he had followed the letter of the law, the trail of
guilt may have led all the way to Obama himself. As Andrew C. McCarthy has
demonstrated at National Review Online, Obama used a dummy email account to
communicate with Clinton
<https://www.nationalreview.com/2018/01/hillary-clinton-barack-obama-emails-key-
decision-not-indict-hillary/
>  via her private server. Did this make Obama
complicit in Clinton’s malfeasance? Anyone in Comey’s position would have
thought twice before moving to prosecute her - and not only because the case
might have ensnared the president himself. The FBI must enforce the law, but it
must also be seen to be enforcing it. As a rule, these two imperatives buttress
each other. During the 2016 election, Comey faced extraordinary circumstances.
If he had followed the law to the letter, he would have toppled the leading
candidate for president and decapitated the Democratic party. Clinton’s
supporters, more than 50 percent of the electorate, would have erupted in
outrage, screaming that a politicized FBI had thrown the election to Donald
Trump.
Guarding the bureau’s reputation for impartiality is a serious concern. But it
is nevertheless a thoroughly political concern. Comey would have us believe that
it was a unique moment in his career, the singular entry into the political
arena of an otherwise apolitical servant of the law. Truth be told, Comey loves
being in the thick of it, but not because he is a partisan brawler. He is not.
It is the drama that he relishes - the grand stage. His favorite role is that of
Joe Friday, the no-nonsense lawman, the guardian of legal processes before the
encroachments of dirty politicians.
Joe Friday, however, was a simple detective, a confirmed bachelor, content to
live quietly with his mother and his parakeet. And, of course, he was a TV
fiction. In real life, humble straight shooters get clobbered with a brick
before they ever reach the limelight. In real life, snagging the big part often
requires the equivalent of leaving a bloody horsehead in the producer’s bed.
CABE AND THE LOVERS
And it requires a supportive staff. Midyear Exam, the codename for the
investigation into Hillary Clinton’s emails, relied on a team of men and women
with the right stuff - a quality that is hard to define but easy to recognize.
The right stuff did not require strong Democratic credentials, but they
certainly helped. Andrew McCabe, the deputy director of the FBI, led the team.
McCabe was not your FBI gumshoe of old. He spent no time in his younger days
chasing bank robbers in Des Moines. He was part of a new breed - the post-9/11
FBI leadership, for whom the career fast track was counterterrorism. He came of
age at the intersection of law enforcement with national security, shuttling
between D.C. and New York. Along the way, he developed a valuable personal
network. His wife, Jill, ran as a Democrat for a Virginia state-senate seat in
2015. The political organization of Virginia governor Terry McAuliffe, one of
Hillary Clinton’s very closest associates, gave her nearly $500,000.
Perhaps more important than having Democratic credentials was having a
heightened understanding of the needs of senior leadership - in the FBI,
certainly, but also in the DOJ. Right across the street from the J. Edgar Hoover
Building sat Attorney General Loretta Lynch. She would be scrutinizing Midyear
Exam in every detail. And not just Lynch. Hillary Clinton herself would be
watching closely - and would be brought in for questioning, too. Being willing
and able to treat her with kid gloves was essential. She “might be our next
president,” team member Lisa Page reminded Peter Strzok, the agent in charge of
Midyear Exam. Referring to Clinton’s upcoming FBI interview, Page wrote, “The
last thing you need us going in there loaded for bear.”
Like McCabe, Strzok had pursued a career at the nexus of law enforcement and
counterterrorism. But he was less overtly political. A John Kasich sympathizer,
he was by nature a middle-of-the-roader, and a Republican-leaning one, at that.
Clinton left him cold. But Trump left him even colder - and his active personal
life helped concentrate his mind on that antipathy. Strzok was having an affair
with Page, who was an FBI lawyer on McCabe’s staff. Both were married. Page’s
politics were typical of highly educated people in D.C.: She detested Trump and
his supporters. He is “a loathsome human being,” she texted to Strzok, who
readily agreed. After Trump captured the nomination, hostility to him quickly
became part of their private idiom.
If “the ultimate aphrodisiac,” as Henry Kissinger famously claimed, is power,
then wielding it together with an illicit lover must be the pinnacle of
eroticism. Together, Strzok and Page explored the power of secrets, routinely
leaking to the press to shape political outcomes. “Still on the phone with
Devlin,” Page texted to Strzok, referring to former Wall Street Journal
national-security reporter Devlin Barrett. Big news about the Hillary Clinton
email story was breaking when Devlin and Page were on the phone together. “You
might wanna tell Devlin he should turn on CNN, there’s news on,” Strzok texted
back.
Page: He knows. He just got handed a note.
Strzok: Ha. He asking about it now?
Page: Yeah. It was pretty funny.
Influencing the nation’s politics was routine. And ridiculously easy: one quick
call to “Devlin,” and boom! The world changed.
McCabe and the two lovers demonstrated the very essence of the right stuff: a
breezy comfort with bending the law to the demands of politics.
Deploying secrets for political effect - deciding which to keep, which to tell,
and how to tell them - was a task that they approached with alacrity. The
ultimate goal, of course, was not propping up Hillary Clinton so much as
maximizing the power and autonomy of the FBI. In pursuing this goal, McCabe and
the two lovers demonstrated the very essence of the right stuff: a breezy
comfort with bending the law to the demands of politics.
They honed their skills on Midyear Exam. As that test ended, an even bigger one
loomed before them. At the end of July, Comey and McCabe would officially open
an investigation into Russian meddling in the election, including possible
coordination between Russia and the Trump campaign. On July 5, the day of
Comey’s press conference on Clinton’s emails, a former British spy,
Christopher Steele, flew to Rome to meet an old FBI contact. The information he
brought had weighty implications for the impending investigation. But neither
the information nor the implications are what we have been led to believe.
SUPER SPY
Steele - a former British spy and a Russia expert - was working on contract to
Fusion GPS, a Washington-based public-relations firm, which, in turn, was on
contract to a D.C. law firm, which, in turn, was on contract to the Hillary
Clinton campaign and the DNC. Steele, that is to say, was working for Hillary
Clinton. His job, among other things, was to collect opposition research on
Trump from his network of Russian sources.
When Steele arrived in Rome, his famous “dossier” did not exist. The dossier,
as we have come to know it, is some 17 reports that he compiled between June and
December 2016. In early July, Steele had been working on the Clinton account for
only a few weeks and had written but one report, dated June 20. It claimed that
Trump was Vladimir Putin’s Manchurian candidate. “[The] Russian regime has
been cultivating, supporting, and assisting Trump for at least 5 years,” Steele
reported. Putin’s goal was “to sow discord and disunity both within the US
itself, but more especially within the Transatlantic alliance.” The Russian
leader supported Trump, mainly, by supplying “valuable intelligence on his
opponents, including Democratic presidential candidate Hillary Clinton.”
Putin had offered lucrative financial contracts, but Trump had turned them down.
The wily Russian, however, had managed to get his hooks into Trump due to the
American’s “sexual perversion.” During a visit to Moscow in 2013, Trump had
hired prostitutes to stay with him in the same hotel suite used by the Obamas on
one of their trips. The FSB, Russia’s secret police, had fitted the room with
cameras and recording equipment. Trump had the prostitutes defile Obama’s bed
by putting on a “golden shower” performance for him. All of it was caught on
tape.
Earthshaking news: Vladimir Putin was blackmailing Donald J. Trump. No doubt,
Steele’s FBI handler rushed this report to his superiors in Washington, D.C.
They, in turn, raced it straight to Obama’s desk. Sorry, wrong. According to
the New York Times, Steele’s explosive revelations wound their way to the J.
Edgar Hoover Building only slowly. It took weeks before they appeared in
Strzok’s in-box. Why?
Mike Morell, the former deputy director of the CIA, helps explain the delay.
Morell did some digging into Christopher Steele’s dossier and shared the
results of his research at a public forum in Washington, D.C., in March 2017.
Steele, according to Morell, did not have direct access to the Russians whom he
labeled as his “sources” - people who included former officers in the FSB. He
“communicated” with them, if that is the right word, through paid
intermediaries, who paid the so-called sources.
The chances of Steele having been played were thus great. Morell explained it
like this:
If you’re paying somebody, particularly former FSB officers, they are going to
tell you truth and innuendo and rumor, and they’re going to call you up and
say, “Hey, let’s have another meeting, I have more information for you,”
because they want to get paid some more.
This process, Morell said, “takes you nowhere.”
Steele’s report was, in a word, junk. And Morell, the man who expressed that
opinion, was not just a seasoned intelligence professional; he was also a
staunch supporter of Hillary Clinton for president. Nor did Steele’s FBI
handler in Rome set off an alarm in Washington, because he, presumably, was also
a seasoned professional who knew junk when he saw it. And he had many additional
reasons to doubt the veracity of Steele’s reporting - reasons that Morell
refrained from broaching. How, for example, could Steele be sure that the former
FSB officers in his network were fully retired? The convoluted pipeline between
Moscow and London gave Russian intelligence too many opportunities to inject
disinformation into the flow of reports to London.
And let’s not neglect the glaring issue of plausibility. When in the history of
the rivalry between the West and Russia has it been possible for a British spy
to call up sources in Moscow and gain immediate access to the deepest secrets of
the Kremlin? Steele, relying only on his wits, unearthed gems the likes of which
glittered only in the dreams of the CIA, Mossad, and MI6, the greatest
intelligence-gathering organizations on earth. To believe that tale, we must
assume that Steele, like James Bond, is no ordinary secret agent. He’s a super
spy.
Then there’s the little matter of Steele’s personal bias. According to one
well-informed associate, Steele was “passionate about” preventing Trump from
winning the election. His financial incentives, of course, oriented him in
exactly the same direction. He was a paid piper - and he got paid only for
collecting information detrimental to Trump. Isn’t it possible - likely, even -
that his shadowy paymasters in the demimonde of the Clinton campaign were
calling the tune?
Steele’s reports certainly harmonized beautifully with the campaign’s
propaganda. On June 2, in a speech in San Diego, Hillary Clinton unveiled her
main line of attack on Donald Trump’s foreign policy. His ideas, she said, were
“dangerously incoherent.” In fact, they weren’t “even really ideas - just a
series of bizarre rants, personal feuds, and outright lies.” Particularly
mystifying was his attitude toward the Russian dictator: “He said if he were
grading Vladimir Putin as a leader, he’d give him an A. . . . I’ll leave it to
the psychiatrists to explain his affection for tyrants.”
But the demimonde wasn’t about to leave it to mental-health professionals. It
hired instead a British super spy. He immediately explained that Putin was
extorting Trump. Two weeks after that, he flew to Rome to share his explanation
with the FBI. By the time he left Rome, his handler might not have guessed that
the Clinton campaign was funding the spy’s work. The political nature of
Steele’s mission, however, would have been obvious.
In Rome on July 5, the FBI was beginning to acquire a new secret. But it was not
the one contained in Steele’s report. The Clinton campaign, the FBI would soon
learn with certainty, was intent on framing Trump as Putin’s puppet. That
secret was truly explosive - and perhaps thrilling for the two lovers on
McCabe’s staff. In time, all of them -Strzok, Page, McCabe, and Comey - would
all mishandle it, damaging their careers irreparably. In July, however, they
were not yet in a rush to ruination. The team with the right stuff cautiously
watched and waited. Not until September would they take their fateful missteps.


Hillary Clinton greets supporters at the Democratic National Convention in
Philadelphia, Pa., July 28, 2016.

THE BIRTH OF THE COLLUSION THESIS
On July 22, WikiLeaks released the largest cache of DNC emails. The plan behind
the hack now became clear: to sabotage the Democratic National Convention, which
opened in Philadelphia on July 25. While Clinton was organizing a celebration of
Democratic unity, Guccifer 2.0 was working to flood the convention floor with
enraged Bernie Sanders insurgents. In the event, Clinton managed to prevent the
protests from ruining the convention. But they did damage her theater of power -
and they also handed Trump a fresh opportunity to broadcast his “Crooked
Hillary” theme. He took obvious delight in the rage of the Sanders followers.
“An analysis showed that Bernie Sanders would have won the Democratic
nomination if it were not for the Super Delegates,” Trump tweeted on the eve of
the convention.
The statement hit Clinton like an iron bar to her kneecap. The thought that a
malevolent foreign actor was helping Trump deliver the blow only increased the
pain. Most observers assumed that Russian state-backed hackers stood behind
Guccifer 2.0 (an assumption that has grown stronger with time). If Trump felt
sheepish about benefiting from such people, he hid it well. “I will tell you
this, Russia. If you’re listening, I hope you’re able to find the 30,000
emails that are missing,” he said on July 27, referring to Hillary Clinton’s
messages that the FBI never recovered during its investigation of her private
server.
In the eyes of his supporters, Trump’s appeal to Putin was a stage whisper, a
mock gesture - and a pointed dig at Clinton. In her rush to hide emails from the
FBI, Trump implied, she had delivered them up to Putin on a platter. But his
brand of humor was lost on Clinton and her team. To them, the appeal to Putin
was sinister. “I just think that’s beyond the pale,” said Clinton loyalist
and former CIA director Leon Panetta. To shame Trump before the voters, the
campaign shifted its rhetoric perceptibly. In June, Clinton had depicted Trump’
s attitude toward Putin as irrational. Now the two were said to be in a
partnership - a “bromance” was how John Podesta, Clinton’s campaign chairman,
described it. “This has to be the first time that a major presidential
candidate has actively encouraged a foreign power to conduct espionage against
his political opponent,” said senior Clinton policy aide Jake Sullivan. “This
has gone from being a matter of curiosity, and a matter of politics, to being a
national-security issue.”
Shaming was all well and good, but it only resonated among committed voters.
Winning the election required convincing independents that Trump was more than
just a passive beneficiary of the DNC hack; he had to be an accomplice.
Clinton’s campaign thus posted five questions on its website:
1. What’s behind Trump’s fascination with Vladimir Putin?
2. Why does Trump surround himself with advisers with links to the Kremlin?
3. Why do Trump’s foreign policy ideas read like a Putin wish list?
4. Do Trump’s still-secret tax returns show ties to Russian oligarchs?
5. Why is Trump encouraging Russia to interfere in our election?
Each question was followed by a short answer, leading to the inevitable
conclusion that Trump was actively conspiring with Putin.
And so, the collusion thesis was born. The website did not spell out the details
of the conspiracy, but the campaign’s demimonde left nothing to the
imagination. Christopher Steele had discovered Russian “sources” who painted a
vivid picture of the plot. Putin had decided against releasing the compromising
videos of Trump. The Manchurian candidate was proving just too beneficial to
Russia. In fact, a full-blown alliance had formed between Putin and Trump. Based
on their “mutual interest in defeating . . . Hillary Clinton,” they struck a
grand bargain: Putin would help elect Trump, who would deliver a supine American
policy on Ukraine and NATO defense.
The super spy’s network was remarkable. His Russian sources were as close to
Trump as they were to Putin. “An ethnic Russian close associate” of Trump’s
“admitted that there was a well-developed conspiracy” between him and the
Russians. Another source revealed more: The DNC hack was carried out “with the
full knowledge and support of Trump and senior members of his campaign team.”
There it was: the proof the Clinton campaign needed. The great crime against
Hillary Clinton was a joint Russian-American operation, and Trump was in on it
from the beginning.
Steele’s startling discoveries hardly stopped there. But before revealing more,
let’s pause and consider the purpose of his reports. How, precisely, did his
direct employer, Fusion GPS, use them?
THE SUPER DUO
To hear Glenn Simpson tell it, his company, Fusion GPS, is a research
organization. “What we do is provide people with factual information,” he told
the Senate Judiciary Committee in August 2017. “Our specialty is public record
information.” In truth, Simpson’s true specialty is not research but
persuasion - more specifically, persuasion of reporters. He has a talent for
convincing journalists to publish stories, true or not, that benefit his
clients. In short, he is a public-relations flack.
But Simpson is no ordinary PR man; he’s a super flack. In the first decade of
this century, he was in his early forties and working as an investigative
journalist for the Wall Street Journal. He was reaching the pinnacle of his
profession just as the Internet was gutting the print media. Simpson, however,
had a marketable talent. “I call it journalism for rent,” he said at a public
forum in August 2017. Journalism as we once knew might be dead, but
deep-pocketed clients still needed to get stories into the press. And they
needed to block other stories from being published. Simpson knew almost every
member of the Washington press corps personally, and he understood the
constraints under which they worked - what it took to get a story past an
editor. He handed them canned articles. They got scoops; he got happy clients.
When pitching stories on Trump-Putin collusion, Simpson eventually discovered
the great benefit of placing Christopher Steele directly in front of reporters.
In September and October, he would fly the spy from London to the United States
so the two of them could brief major media outlets as a team. Before that, in
July and August, Simpson did not have the benefit of Steele’s physical
presence. But neither was he alone. He still had the super spy’s reports -
James Bond in a briefcase.
Con men stoke the greed of their marks by letting them catch glimpses of
suitcases bulging with cash. Simpson gave his marks a sense that he was
similarly loaded - but with valuable information, not money. “In September
2016, Steele and I met in Washington and discussed the information now known as
the ‘dossier,’ ” wrote Jonathan Winer, in the Washington Post. A former U.S.
deputy assistant secretary of state, Winer admitted passing Steele’s
information to his superiors. “I was allowed to review, but not to keep, a copy
of these reports to enable me to alert the State Department,” he explained.
Simpson, we infer, would let journalists catch a glimpse of the super spy’s
“raw intelligence.” Then he would quickly take the document back - because,
you understand, it was just too sensitive to leave lying around.
If journalists feared that Steele’s startling reports (such as, for example,
the one about the golden shower) contained Russian disinformation, Simpson had a
well-rehearsed spiel at the ready to reassure them. He inadvertently shared it
before the House Intelligence Committee in November 2017. Steele, Simpson
explained, had a “standard presentation” for journalists to explain how he
avoided falling prey to the diabolical Russians. Sliding into the first person,
he rattled off Steele’s lines:
I was the lead Russianist at Ml6 in the final years of my career. And I was
previously stationed in Moscow. And I speak Russian. And I’ve done Russian
intelligence/counterintelligence issues all my life. And the central problem
when you’re a Russian intelligence expert is disinformation, and that the
Russians have . . . a long history and an advanced capability in disinformation.
And so . . . before we go any further, I just want you to know that . . . this
is . . . the fundamental problem with my profession. And it should be assumed
that in any sort of intelligence gathering . . . there will be some
disinformation. And I’m trained to spot that and filter it out, but . . . you
should understand that . . . no one’s perfect.
Simpson staked the credibility of the dossier on just one thing: Steele’s super
awesomeness.
Simpson then switched to the first-person plural. Perhaps, when briefing
journalists, this was the point at which he would speak, in his own voice, as
the leader of the talented and experienced team at Fusion GPS:
And so we’ve essentially filtered out everything that we think is
disinformation, and we’re not going to present that to you here. We’re going
to present to you things that we think come from credible sources, but we’re
not going to warrant [sic] to you . . . that this is all true.
Simpson staked the credibility of the dossier on just one thing: Steele’s super
awesomeness. On his own, Simpson would have been flacking salacious rumor, but
paired with Steele, he was briefing “credible intelligence.” Together, they
became a super duo.
The purpose of the dossier would change over time. In July and August, the goal
was not to get Steele’s reports directly into the press. Nobody knew better
than Simpson, a highly experienced reporter, that Steele’s claims were
unverifiable and, therefore, unprintable. The best he could achieve was an
article that reinforced the main suppositions of the collusion thesis -  an
article such as “Trump and Putin: A Love Story,” which David Remnick, the
editor of The New Yorker, wrote and published in early August. “Putin,” sees
in Trump a grand opportunity,” Remnick explained. “He sees in Trump weakness
and ignorance, a confused mind. He has every hope of exploiting him.”
Remnick stopped just short of claiming that Putin was actually blackmailing
Trump, but his depiction of their relations matched, in general, the story that
emerged from Steele’s reports. Remnick took pains, for example, to instruct
readers:
The gathering of kompromat - compromising material - is a familiar tactic in
Putin’s arsenal. For years, the Russian intelligence services have filmed
political enemies in stages of sexual and/or narcotic indulgence, and have
distributed the grainy images online.
Did Remnick personally rely on a Fusion GPS briefing? We do not know. Jane
Mayer, a staff writer for the New Yorker, recently confessed that she received a
briefing, in September, directly from super spy himself - so the potential for
communication certainly existed. Regardless of what inspired Remnick, his
approach represented a win for Simpson. If, with the help of the dossier or any
other tool of persuasion, he could convince journalists that Putin was
blackmailing Trump with compromising videos, then it was just that much easier
to convince them to report stories about, say, the danger to the Western
alliance that Trump represented - a story that would require nothing more than
stringing together a few quotes from Trump with a few ominous warnings from
foreign-policy experts. The dossier, in short, helped Simpson sell a master
narrative.
A DIABOLICAL MASTERMIND
By choosing to convince voters that Trump was somehow an accomplice to the DNC
hack, the Clinton campaign had set itself a difficult challenge: defining the
role of Putin’s American partners in crime. After all, the hack did not require
the assistance of a Tom Cruise character. No one broke into DNC headquarters,
crawled through a ventilator shaft, rappelled from a cable, and slid a disk into
a hard drive. The hackers carried out the operation unilaterally,
electronically, and probably from offshore. They required no accomplices on
American soil.
Steele solved this problem by finding “sources” who revealed that the crucial
contributions of Trump’s team came in the planning stages. As it turns out,
Steele reported, the idea to hack the DNC actually originated from the American
side. It was Trump’s team that defined the objective of the operation:
“leaking the DNC e-mails to Wikileaks during the Democratic Convention” in
order “to swing supporters of Bernie Sanders away from Hillary Clinton and
across to Trump.”
This report solved half of the Clinton campaign’s problem: It established
Trump’s guilt. But a conspiracy can’t grab the popular imagination if it is
devoid of actual conspirators. Here again, the super spy’s “sources” came to
the rescue. On the day-to-day level, the job of managing the Trump-Putin
collusion fell to Paul Manafort, who, at that time, was still Trump’s campaign
manager. But Manafort was not the architect of the DNC hack. Fortunately, the
super spy was running a mole who was able to identify that criminal genius. The
plot, Steele reported, “was conceived and promoted by Trump’s foreign policy
adviser Carter Page.”
Here the super spy’s vaunted ability to filter out Russian disinformation
appears to have failed him. Carter Page (who is no relation to Lisa Page on
McCabe’s team) played a negligible role in the campaign. The Trump people had
placed him on a team of foreign-policy advisers, to be sure, but they had thrown
the group together in haste to counter the accusation that the campaign lacked
an expert bench. Page did not know Donald Trump personally. He worked in
finance, with a focus on investing in Russia’s energy sector, but he had no
notable achievements to his name. A former boss described him, very unkindly, as
“a gray spot,” a man “without any special talents or accomplishments.”
Steele’s allegations against Page make sense only in a Marvel Comics universe.
Carter Page: by day, a mild-mannered businessman; by night, a diabolical
mastermind.
The role that the super spy ascribed to Page may have been absurd, but what
choice did he have? The conspiracy needed a face. That person had to have
plausible connections to Russia plus a certain amount of visibility. In Trump’s
orbit, there were only two candidates: Manafort and Page. Manafort’s ties,
however, were to Ukraine, not Russia - and he was too well known. He had been
working in Washington since the Reagan era.
Page, by contrast, had direct connections to Russia, having lived in Moscow for
some three years. The modesty of his career was actually a plus, because
Clinton’s propagandists could present it as shadowy rather than unsuccessful.
For an unknown, Page was surprisingly visible. His trip to Moscow in July 2016
had received significant press attention, not least because he had expressed
opinions in favor of rapprochement with Russia and critical of American foreign
policy.
With the aid of Fusion GPS, the Clinton campaign rolled out their master
narrative on Trump-Putin collusion. A new orthodoxy immediately gripped the
establishment press, which amplified the overwrought propaganda, complete with
suggestions of dirty deals, dark conspiracies, and blackmail. It was Jeffrey
Goldberg, the national correspondent (now editor) of The Atlantic, who first
trumpeted the new line. In his aptly titled article, “It’s Official: Hillary
Clinton Is Running against Vladimir Putin,” Goldberg alleged that Trump “has
chosen . . . to unmask himself as a de facto agent of Russian President Vladimir
Putin.”
In “Putin’s Puppet,” Franklin Foer of Slate examined the matter from the
Russian side: “Vladimir Putin has a plan for destroying the West - and that
plan looks a lot like Donald Trump,” he wrote. David Remnick’s article
discussing Putin’s affinity for grainy sex videos made identical points. All
three authors noted, with grave concern, the Russian ties of Paul Manafort and .
. . Carter Page.
With the exception of Fox News, the broadcast media beat the same drum. CNN
might not have accused Page of masterminding the hack of the DNC, but it
recognized a dangerous man when it saw one. On August 8, for example, it devoted
a long segment entirely to Page. “What’s really remarkable here,” Jim
Sciutto, CNN’s chief national-security correspondent told anchorman Wolf
Blitzer, is that Page’s positions “match almost word for word the positions of
the Kremlin, on, for instance, alleged U.S. orchestration of pro-democracy in
and around Russia. And that is sparking concern from Russia experts and former
policy makers even inside the GOP.”
So Page was “sparking concern” even among Never-Trump Republicans? How
ominous! But imagine how much more ominous it would have sounded if journalists
could have reported that Page was also sparking concern in the FBI! At that
moment, John Brennan, the director of the CIA, was doing his damnedest to hand
journalists precisely that story.]


CIA director John Brennan testifies on Capitol Hill, June 16, 2016.

A VENTRILOQUIST AND HIS DUMMY
While the establishment press was singing in harmony with the Clinton campaign,
a cacophonous debate erupted inside government. At the end of July, James
Clapper, the director of National Intelligence, said at a public forum that the
intelligence community was not “ready yet to make a call on attribution” - not
ready, that is, to attribute the DNC hack to Putin. Clapper was also unready to
say that the intention of the hackers was to get Trump elected. The goal, he
said, may simply have been “to stir up trouble.” When combined with similar
comments by other intelligence officials, Clapper’s statements undercut Hillary
Clinton’s efforts to brand Trump as Putin’s active accomplice.
Enter John Brennan. In early August, Brennan launched a personal campaign to
force a consensus in support of Clinton’s propaganda. Before long, Clapper
became his partner in this effort. They would succeed, however, only after the
election - and then only by establishing an ad hoc and highly unorthodox
intelligence-assessment team. To man the team, Brennan and Clapper handpicked a
small number of analysts, tasking them with reaching a consensus before the
inauguration of Donald Trump. The team, no surprise, did not disappoint. In
January 2017, it produced the “consensus” that Brennan had been trying to
orchestrate for the previous five months. By then, it was still useful as a
propaganda tool against President Donald Trump, though it had arrived far too
late to help Hillary Clinton win the election.
Of course, Brennan has never admitted his political motives. On the contrary,
according to an in-depth Washington Post investigation (based on interviews with
either Brennan himself or people very close to him), the CIA director claimed to
be in possession of eye-popping intelligence reports about the DNC hack. These
reports supposedly “captured Putin’s specific instructions on the operation’s
audacious objectives - defeat or at least damage the Democratic nominee, Hillary
Clinton, and help elect her opponent, Donald Trump.” Yet even if this
intelligence trove actually did exist and truly did convince the CIA director,
it obviously did not have the same persuasive impact on his colleagues, as
evidenced by Brennan’s failure to deliver a consensus assessment of Putin’s
motives.
In his mission to transform the intelligence community into an official choir of
the Clinton campaign, Brennan ran up against a 6’7″ wall in the form of James
Comey. According to the New York Times, in August 2016, “a critical split”
emerged between “the CIA and counterparts at the FBI, where a number of senior
officials continued to believe . . . that Russia’s cyberattacks were aimed
primarily at disrupting America’s political system, and not at getting Mr.
Trump elected.” As a component of this disagreement, Brennan may also have
pressured Comey to investigate possible collusion with Russia by aides and
associates of Trump.
By law, the CIA cannot spy on Americans; only the FBI has the authority to
investigate citizens. But the CIA can share reports with the FBI about efforts
by foreign agents to suborn individual Americans, and it can strongly urge the
bureau to take action on the basis of those leads. Brennan, it would appear, did
just that in July 2016.
That was the moment when the FBI opened a counterintelligence investigation into
Russian efforts to influence the Trump campaign. As we mentioned, Peter Strzok,
who had been in charge of Midyear Exam, took charge of this investigation, too.
The genesis and scope of it, however, is shrouded in a fog of deliberate
misinformation. From the little we know, the probe seems to have centered on
George Papadopoulos, a young foreign-policy adviser to the Trump campaign.
Acting mostly on his own initiative, Papadopoulos reached out to Russians in the
hopes of brokering a meeting between Donald Trump and Vladimir Putin. In the
process, he may have bumped into Russian intelligence agents.
Papadopoulos’s activities took place, primarily, in London - a part of the
world where the CIA has greater reach than the FBI. How did Comey come to learn
of them? The answer is unclear, but certain clues point to Brennan.
One of these is Brennan’s own testimony before the House Intelligence Committee
in March 2017. The CIA, he explained, had shared certain information with the
FBI - an apparent reference to the Papadopoulos leads. This was information, he
said, “that required further investigation by the bureau to determine whether
or not U.S. persons were actively conspiring, colluding with Russian
officials.” Was Brennan taking responsibility for kick-starting the
investigation into the Trump campaign? He seemed to be saying that he had
dropped the Papadopoulos file on Comey’s desk and said, “Investigate Trump!”
If this supposition about the origins of the investigation in July is correct,
it may also help explain Brennan’s behavior in late August, when he grew
increasingly exasperated with Comey. In an effort to gain allies, Brennan turned
to friends in Congress for help. With the blessing of Obama, he organized a
series of briefings for the so-called Gang of Eight - the Democratic and
Republican leaders in both chambers of Congress, and the chairs and ranking
minority members on the Senate and the House intelligence committees. According
to the New York Times, Brennan told these senior lawmakers that he “had
information indicating that Russia was working to help elect Donald J. Trump
president,” a view that was not supported by an authoritative intelligence
assessment.
Obama and Brennan explained the briefings as an effort to forge bipartisan unity
in the face of the Russian threat. But if Brennan couldn’t force a consensus
inside the intelligence community, how could he possibly convince Republicans
and Democrats to join hands - during a polarizing election, no less?
Democratic lawmakers became the ventriloquist’s dummies, moving their lips
mechanically as CIA director Brennan spoke.
This high-minded bipartisanship was simply cover for a highly partisan move. The
true motive of the briefings was to ventriloquize the Democrats on the Hill. If
Brennan himself had gone public with his claims about Putin, he would have
called down attacks on himself for passing off Clinton propaganda as an official
intelligence assessment - and for meddling, as the director of the CIA, in
domestic politics. Democratic lawmakers who received his briefings, however,
operated under no such constraints. They were perfectly free to pass along
Brennan’s views to the public as their own. They became the ventriloquist’s
dummies, moving their lips mechanically as the CIA director spoke.
Brennan placed one of them center stage. On August 25, he gave a briefing that
differed from the others; he tailored its content especially to the bare-knuckle
politics of its recipient, Senate Minority Leader Harry Reid. During the 2012
election, Reid had assisted President Obama by falsely claiming that his
Republican presidential challenger, Mitt Romney, had paid no taxes for ten
years. When later asked if spreading a false rumor wasn’t reminiscent of
McCarthyism, Reid responded, “They can call it whatever they want. Romney
didn’t win, did he?” With the certain knowledge that Reid, who was in any case
retiring after the 2016 election, would do whatever it took to win, Brennan
indulged his own partisan political passions. He told Reid, according to the New
York Times, “that unnamed advisers to Mr. Trump might be working with the
Russians to interfere in the election.”
If Reid’s response is anything to go by, Brennan did much more than that: He
briefed the senator on information taken directly from Steele’s dossier; and he
complained about the recalcitrance of the director of the FBI. Two days after
the briefing, Reid wrote a letter to Comey, which he immediately shared with the
press. Claiming there was mounting evidence of “a direct connection between the
Russian government and Donald Trump’s presidential campaign,” Reid demanded
that the FBI launch an immediate investigation. The American people, he wrote,
deserve all the facts “before they vote this November.”
The Trump campaign, Reid continued bluntly, “has employed a number of
individuals with significant and disturbing ties to Russia and the Kremlin.” He
was particularly concerned with Trump associates who may have served as what he
called “complicit intermediaries” between the Russian government and hackers.
“The prospect of individuals tied to Trump, Wikileaks, and the Russian
government coordinating to influence our election raises concerns of the utmost
gravity and merits full examination.” In an unmistakable reference to Steele’s
reports on Carter Page, Reid informed Comey that “questions have been raised”
about a Trump adviser who allegedly “met with high-ranking sanctioned
individuals while in Moscow.”
Serving as Brennan’s dummy, Reid publicized the Marvel Comics rendering of
Carter Page, and he demanded that the FBI launch an investigation on the basis
of it. Before long, Comey would obey.


President Obama and Hillary Clinton at a campaign rally in Charlotte, N.C., July
5, 2016.

THE CUTOUT
Shortly after Reid’s letter, Obama asked the FBI for an update on its
investigation of Russian tampering with the election. The president, Lisa Page
texted to her lover Peter Strzok, “wants to know everything we’re doing.” The
text probably refers to Obama’s preparations for the G-20 meeting in China,
where he personally lodged a complaint with Putin about the Russian hacking. But
the request is intriguing. Obama was engaging the FBI just as it stood ready to
use the allegations of the Steele dossier as a basis for broadening its
investigation of Trump. When Comey informed Obama about “everything we are
doing,” did he discuss the Carter Page allegations? Did he note their source,
Christopher Steele? And what about the president himself? Did Obama nudge Comey
to comply with the demands of Brennan and Reid?
Whatever signals the president may have sent, McCabe and his lovebirds certainly
began supporting the efforts of Brennan and Reid to paint Trump as Putin’s
puppet. The form of support was nuanced and clandestine. If Peter Strzok and
Lisa Page had contacted their favorite reporter, Devlin Barrett, and leaked the
fact that a Trump adviser was coming under investigation, the leak would have
implicated the FBI. Trump and his supporters would then have castigated Comey,
accusing him of intervening in politics. To avoid such problems, the lovers used
a pair of cutouts - intermediaries who laundered the FBI’s information in the
same way that Reid had laundered information for Brennan.
Who better to play this role than the super duo, Simpson and Steele? Either
directly or through an intermediary, Strzok shared with Steele the news of the
impending investigation of Carter Page. He did so with the certain knowledge
that Steele would channel it to Simpson, who, in turn, would incorporate it into
his standard press briefings. (FBI representatives would later deny having used
Steele as a cutout with the press, but their self-defense, as we shall see
below, is demonstrably false.)
The experience of the journalist Julia Ioffe demonstrates how diligent Simpson
was at spreading the news that Strzok was surreptitiously feeding him. In mid
September, Ioffe published a profile on Carter Page for Politico. “As I started
looking into Page,” she relates, “I began getting calls from two separate
‘corporate investigators’ digging into what they claim are all kinds of shady
connections Page has to all kinds of shady Russians.” One of those
investigators was, presumably, Simpson; the other one probably represented
another dank corner of the Clinton demimonde. Both emphasized an allegation that
came directly from Steele’s dossier: namely, that Page, during his trip to
Moscow in July, had met with Igor Sechin, who is a key Putin ally and the
chairman of the Russian state oil company. The “corporate investigators,”
however, now had something else to push, something new and very newsworthy:
“The FBI was investigating Page.”
As knowledge of the FBI’s interest in Carter Page spread, Steele’s credibility
soared. To exploit the opportunity, Simpson flew Steele to the United States to
brief select media outlets in person. Thanks to the information that McCabe’s
team was leaking to the press through Steele, Simpson could repackage the super
spy. No longer just a former MI6 operative working as an “independent”
researcher, Steele was now a trusted colleague of the FBI’s. He possessed
unique insight into the fears of American counterintelligence officials about
Trump’s nefarious relations with Putin.
For the first time, Steele agreed to go on the record as a quoted source for
journalists. This round of briefings generated an article, written by veteran
Yahoo reporter Michael Isikoff. Entitled “U.S. Intel Officials Probe Ties
between Trump Adviser and Kremlin,” it focused, naturally, on Carter Page.
Isikoff reported that American officials had “received intelligence reports”
that Page had met with Sechin. “At their alleged meeting,” Isikoff reported,
“Sechin raised the issue of the lifting of sanctions with Page, the Western
intelligence source said.” A Western intelligence source? That would be
Christopher Steele. By identifying the super spy in this manner, Isikoff
disguises (wittingly or unwittingly) Steele’s identity as a Clinton operative
and as the author and disseminator of the reports in question. The moniker had
the added benefit of making Steele seem to work for a Western government,
creating the illusion of transatlantic trepidation about the cunning Carter
Page.
Confirmation of the article’s central claims came from two other sources. The
first was a “senior U.S. law enforcement official,” who told Isikoff that
Page’s meetings in Moscow were “being looked at.” Would that be Andrew
McCabe, Peter Strzok, or Lisa Page? The second confirmation came from “a
congressional source familiar with . . . briefings” that lawmakers had received
about Carter Page’s meetings in Moscow. Would that be Harry Reid? Whether these
were indeed the correct identities, it is obvious where Isikoff found his
sources: on Glenn Simpson’s Rolodex. Here was a story processed and canned in
Fusion GPS’s information factory. All Isikoff had to do was add water and
shake. His sources were all part of a single network conspiring to hoodwink the
public.
Why did Comey participate in this fraud? Perhaps it was to get Brennan and Reid
off his back. On the risk side of the ledger, the dangers were minimal. Today
the Isikoff article is a fingerprint on a hot bullet casing, irrefutable proof
placing the FBI at the scene of the crime. But in September 2016, the chances of
anyone ever tying the bureau to it were negligible. Although the article
announced with great flourish the opening of an investigation into Carter Page,
it’s not even clear that, at this point, Page was truly an official target of
the probe.
The important thing to Brennan and Reid was helping Hillary Clinton win the
election. What they desired most from the FBI was a public statement that the
Trump team was under investigation for conspiring with Putin. With the Isikoff
article, Comey didn’t fully satisfy them, but he threw them a bone.
On the reward side of the ledger, he showed Hillary Clinton and her friends that
he was, despite everything, a team player. And his contribution to the team
effort was indeed significant. The FBI’s leaks were indispensable in giving
super-flack Glenn Simpson a stable of seemingly independent sources willing to
go on the record about the grave concern sweeping the Western world about, of
all people, Carter Page.


FBI Deputy Director Andrew McCabe speaks at a press conference, July 20, 2016.

GET CARTER
“Mr. Page is not an advisor and has made no contribution to the campaign,”
said a Trump spokesman in reaction to the media storm over the Isikoff article.
If Carter Page thought this disavowal would return some normalcy to his life, he
was sadly mistaken. It actually put a target on his back. So long as he was
officially affiliated with the Trump campaign, Comey would no doubt hesitate to
seek a surveillance warrant, for fear of laying the FBI open to the charge of
engaging in politically motivated spying. After the disavowal, Comey had more
room for maneuver. He therefore gave the go-ahead to seek a surveillance
warrant.
Widening the probe to include Page carried a little additional risk for Comey,
but not much. If Clinton were to win the election, as everyone expected, then
she would never punish him for the move. If Trump were to win and learn about
the probe, it would certainly enrage him. But the investigation could also be
useful as leverage. Peter Strzok put it well in a text to Lisa Page a month
earlier. On August 15, 2016, referring to the possibility of a Trump victory,
Strzok wrote:
I want to believe the path u threw out 4 consideration in Andy’s [McCabe’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 u die be4 you’
re 40.
Strzok, presumably, was saying that a counterintelligence operation against
Trump and his team would give the FBI leadership a species of job insurance,
similar to the job insurance that J. Edgar Hoover enjoyed in his day. Presidents
dared not fire Hoover, because he kept a black book on them all.
Strzok’s team began the process of seeking a surveillance warrant on Carter
Page from the court established by the Foreign Intelligence Surveillance Act,
known as FISA. The FISA court’s proceedings are not public, because they treat
top-secret intelligence. To seek a warrant against Carter Page required the FBI
to show probable cause that he was acting as an agent of Russia. In preparation
for the warrant application, the FBI flew Steele to Rome for a face-to-face
meeting with his main FBI contact. According to the New York Times, the handler
told Steele that the FBI “would pay him $50,000” if he “could get solid
corroboration of his reports.” It was an incriminating admission. Steele’s
reports on Page’s Moscow trip were two months old. The U.S. government - that
is, the FBI and the CIA - hadn’t produced an iota of corroboration - and yet on
the basis of those stale reports, it had suddenly decided to target Page as a
probable agent of a foreign power.
Why? Because without the Carter Page who appeared in the Steele dossier -
without the Marvel Comics villain, there existed no credible intelligence
pointing to a criminal conspiracy between Trump and Putin. If the investigation
was to be sufficiently broad to dig up dirt on Trump, it had to include the
fanciful allegations against Page. These, however, were impossible to
corroborate - because they were fictive. They did, however, include one claim
that, if shorn of context, wasn’t as transparently silly as the others: namely,
that Page had met with Sechin, the chairman of the Russian state oil company. To
be sure, Steele’s report of the meeting contained the outlandish claim that
Page had negotiated with Sechin on lifting American sanctions against Russia.
But if McCabe’s team were to downplay this aspect as much as possible and focus
instead on whether the meeting actually took place (it didn’t) - well, that
could make it appear like a worrisome allegation calling out for a sober
follow-up.
The super spy sprang into action. He tapped his daisy chain of paid Russian
informants, and before McCabe’s team submitted the FISA warrant application, he
produced some short reports supposedly confirming the meeting with Sechin.
Steele discovered in his network another “source”: the friend of one of
Sechin’s friend, who had heard from Sechin and from Sechin’s personal
assistant that indeed Sechin had met with Page. Confirmation?! The “source”
also reported that Sechin offered Page, in return for Trump lifting of U.S.
sanctions on Russia, a personal reward: a 19 percent stake in the Russian
state-owned oil company - a haul worth millions upon millions, or probably
billions.
No mere criminal mastermind, Page was master negotiator as well! Cartoonish
depictions such as this constitute the primary basis on which the FBI made the
case that Page was probably a foreign agent and that, in addition, he had
probably broken American law - the legal standard for issuing surveillance
warrants. The application for a warrant against Page is locked behind a
top-secret classification. But McCabe testified before the House Intelligence
Committee in December 2017 that without Steele’s information, the FBI could not
have secured a surveillance warrant. And according to Senators Chuck Grassley
and Lindsey Graham, who have read the original warrant application and the three
renewal applications, “the bulk” of the material on which the FBI made its
case against Page came in the Steele dossier. What is more, the application
contained, in the words of the two senators, “no additional information
corroborating the dossier allegations” - no additional information, that is,
except for one newspaper article: the Isikoff piece.
McCabe’s team supported an application based primarily on Steele’s allegations
by offering the judges an article that itself was based solely on Steele’s
reports.
ALFA SHMALFA
Placing Page under surveillance marked the high point of the cooperation between
McCabe’s team and the super duo Simpson and Steele. But nefarious partnerships
are prone to unravel; and when they do, they unravel quickly. Only ten short
days after McCabe’s team pulled the wool over the eyes of the FISA-court
judges, Simpson and Steele broke off relations with the FBI in a fit of anger
and bitterness.
Relations started to fray amid an effort by the super duo to stage a repeat of
their Isikoff triumph. At some point in October, Simpson brought Steele to the
United States for a second round of in-person briefings with major news outlets.
Unfortunately, not one of these outlets has seen fit to disclose the subject of
the briefings, so their precise details are sketchy. Still serving as FBI
cutouts, the super duo probably updated reporters on the FISA warrant
application and other aspects of the Trump-Russia investigation. If so, they may
have intended for that information to serve as filler in articles about a new
scoop that Simpson was offering reporters. A journalist whom Fusion GPS briefed
at that time subsequently told the Washington Times that Simpson was pushing a
story about a secret computer link-up between Trump and a Russian bank.
According to the New York Times, news of the link-up had started to see the
light of day thanks to the “classified” briefings that Brennan had organized
for trusted Democrats on Capitol Hill. Intelligence officers disclosed, in the
words of the Times, “the possibility of financial ties between Russians and
people connected to Mr. Trump,” including “a mysterious computer back channel
between the Trump Organization and the Alfa Bank, which is one of Russia’s
biggest banks and whose owners have longstanding ties to Mr. Putin.” John
Brennan had designed those briefings to be leaky, so it should come as no
surprise that word of the Alfa Bank investigation flowed directly to Fusion GPS.
Following the winning formula that had produced the Isikoff article, Simpson
provided reporters with the scoop. At first, the plan proceeded flawlessly.
Franklin Foer of Slate ran a breathless story about the secret communications
between the servers. Do we know with certainty that Foer’s information came
directly from Fusion GPS? No. It’s certainly possible that, as we saw in the
case of Julia Ioffe, some other agent emerged from the shadows of the Clinton
demimonde to serve it up to him. Whatever the source of the information, Foer
thought he might just have discovered the greatest piece of incriminating
evidence yet - and Hillary Clinton agreed.
The Clinton campaign called on the FBI to investigate.
The speed and enthusiasm of her endorsement suggest more than a measure of
coordination. She immediately sent out not one, but two tweets flagging Foer’s
piece. One of them attached a statement from her campaign, which added heart
palpitations and comic-book imagery to Foer’s breathlessness. Slate’s
discovery of a “secret hotline,” the statement said, might unlock the mystery
behind Trump’s love for Putin, and it might also explain why Russia was
“masterminding” cyber theft designed “to hurt Hillary Clinton’s campaign.”
The Clinton campaign called on the FBI to investigate.
Clearly, this was the cue for McCabe’s lovers to chime in. Their role was to
affirm by means of a leak that the FBI was taking very seriously this threat to
national security, investigating with all the diligence that the American people
expect of their premier law-enforcement agency. Foer’s story came out on
October 31 - a week and a day before the voters went to the ballot box. If
McCabe’s team had stuck to the script, the media would have spent the final
week before the election talking of nothing but the “secret hotline” that
connected Putin to the lair of his evil minion high atop Trump Tower.
But McCabe’s team double-crossed Steele and Simpson - or so the super duo must
have felt. On the same day the Slate article appeared, the New York Times
reported that the FBI had investigated the link between Alfa Bank and Trump
Tower. The Bureau, the Times said, had concluded “that there could be an
innocuous explanation, like a marketing email or spam, for the computer
contacts.” This single sentence wiped out weeks of diligent work by Fusion GPS.
As if to console Simpson and Steele, the article did reveal that the FBI, all
summer long, had been conducting an investigation into the potential ties
between the Trump campaign and Russia. And the Times even disclosed details of
the probe - information that came courtesy, one assumes, of briefings from
Fusion GPS.
But to Simpson and Steele the inclusion of those details was the bitterest of
consolation. The damage the Times visited on their propaganda campaign was not
limited to undermining the Alfa Bank story. The article included two additional
facts, each as destructive as the other: The FBI’s wide-ranging investigation
into Trump had revealed no collusion with Putin, and the FBI did not even
believe that Putin was trying to get Hillary Clinton elected. In a convulsive
fit of journalistic integrity, the Times had rejected Fusion GPS’s master
narrative - and it had done so on the basis of authoritative leaks from the FBI.
Someone in the J. Edgar Hoover Building had dropped a pallet of bricks on
Simpson and Steele. Who?


FBI director James Comey testifies on Capitol Hill, July 7, 2016.

THE RETURN OF JOE FRIDAY
The collapse of the “secret hotline” story was part of a larger falling-out
between the FBI and the super duo - and not by any means the most important
part. The event that truly doomed their relations was an announcement, on
October 28, that the FBI was reopening the Clinton email investigation. And the
character standing at the center of that decision was James Comey.
The bureau had learned that Huma Abedin, Hillary Clinton’s trusted right hand,
had forwarded thousands of emails to a computer in her home, which Anthony
Weiner had put to personal use. Weiner was a former congressman, and he was
Abedin’s husband. But he was also a criminal under investigation by the FBI. In
her “well-intentioned but careless” use of government correspondence, Abedin
had streamed thousands of official emails to the laptop of a pedophile.
James Comey’s July statement closing the Clinton email case coincided with
Guccifer 2.0’s release of the DNC emails, and it helped build the impression of
Hillary Clinton as the entitled CEO of Clinton, Inc. This reopening of the case,
coming just a week before the election, was also timed for maximum visibility
and carried a similar political valence. It was the third in a string of blows
that Clinton received in the final stage of the election. The first came at a
September 11 memorial commemoration in New York, where she had stumbled badly
and seemed to faint, raising doubts about her stamina and health. On October 7,
WikiLeaks published the first trove of emails stolen, presumably by Russian
intelligence, from her campaign manager John Podesta. The emails were further
grist for the mill of those who argued that Bill and Hillary Clinton were
running a Tammany Hall for the 21st century. With Clinton stumbling, both
literally and figuratively, the director of the FBI seemed determined to knock
her back down.
What was he thinking? Comey now claims that he assumed Hillary Clinton would
win. He feared that, after the election, people would come to learn that he had
hidden the issue of Abedin’s laptop from the public, and they would accuse him
of giving unfair consideration to Clinton. That calculation may indeed have been
part of his thinking. But he may also have been hedging against a Trump victory.
The announcement about the laptop was a card that he could play to ingratiate
himself to Trump - to offset the damage of the leaks about the Russia
investigation. On top of those machinations, there was the old story: Comey’s
love of the spotlight. Here he was again in a national drama playing the
entirely principled and apolitical lawman. He was in Joe Friday heaven.
For their part, Clinton and her camp read the FBI director’s move as treachery
most vile. In a scream of rage masquerading as a letter to Comey, Harry Reid
spoke for the team. Comey, he wrote, was breaking the law by engaging in
partisan political activity in support of Trump. Whereas Comey never hesitated
to publicize damaging “innuendo” against Clinton, he was protecting Trump from
public humiliation.  “It has become clear that you possess explosive
information about close ties and coordination between Donald Trump, his top
advisers, and the Russian government - a foreign interest openly hostile to the
United States, which Trump praises at every opportunity,” Reid fumed. “The
public has a right to know this information.” To underscore that point, he
published the letter immediately.
Glenn Simpson and Christopher Steele shared the sense of betrayal. Simpson later
testified to the House intelligence committee:
At that point I felt like the rules had just been thrown out and that Comey had
violated . . . one of the more sacrosanct policies, which is not announcing law
enforcement activity in the closing days of an election. . . . We decided that
if James Comey wasn’t going to tell people about this investigation that, you
know, he had violated the rules, and [it] would only be fair if the world knew
that both candidates were under FBI investigation.
So Simpson and Steele “began talking to the press.”
And with that, the super duo brought about the end of their secret partnership
with McCabe’s team. The bureau expects its cutouts to behave as cutouts: that
is to say, they must launder secrets. Sensitive and classified information must
never appear in the press in a form that betrays its FBI origins.
Comey announced the reopening of the Clinton email case on Friday, October 28.
Simpson moved quickly. He arranged a Skype interview between Steele, who was now
back in London, and David Corn, a veteran journalist at Mother Jones. On October
31, Corn reported that “a former senior intelligence officer for a Western
country who specialized in Russian counterintelligence” told him “that in
recent months he provided the bureau with memos, based on . . . Russian sources,
contending that the Russian government has for years tried to co-opt and assist
Trump - and that the FBI requested more information from him.” The FBI
response, Steele told Corn, was “shock and horror.” In August, the FBI asked
for more of Steele’s memos. “It’s quite clear there was or is a pretty
substantial inquiry going on.” To ensure that Corn understood the nature of the
inquiry, Steele shared with him the text of the reports that he had given to the
Bureau.
Steele’s decision to expose his partnership with the FBI gave McCabe’s team no
choice but to terminate the relationship. The break-up was ugly, but its very
messiness would later prove useful. In late 2017, congressional investigators
would begin questioning the FBI’s senior leaders about the role Steele had
played as a cutout. The senior leaders would point to the break-up as proof of
the FBI’s integrity. Steele, they said, had been lying all along to the Bureau
about his work with journalists. McCabe’s team had no idea that he was
funneling the FBI’s secrets to the media. It was the Mother Jones interview
that alerted them to Steele’s duplicity; the moment it became clear, they
immediately terminated the relationship.
We have a word to describe the use of fabricated evidence to make an innocent
man appear guilty: The Obama administration framed Carter Page. But not only
Carter Page. The Obama administration framed Donald Trump.
This alibi won’t wash. McCabe’s team was fully aware, in September, that
Steele stood behind the Isikoff article. In fact, the appearance of “a senior
U.S. law enforcement official” in the article implicates McCabe’s team more or
less directly. In short, Steele’s FBI handlers were aware of his role in
leaking information at that time, and it caused them no consternation. On the
contrary, after the Isikoff article, the FBI drew Steele even closer, flying him
to Rome and offering him $50,000. His work as a cutout received further tacit
commendation when McCabe’s team used the Isikoff article to dupe the FISA-court
judges.
The troubles that eventually befell Steele and McCabe’s team have no bearing on
the simple facts: They worked as partners in prosecuting a campaign of innuendo
against Carter Page in September, and again in placing him under surveillance in
October. What is more, the surveillance order went beyond McCabe’s team, to the
highest levels in the FBI and the DOJ. James Comey had to sign off on that
decision - and that fact implicates him in a serious abuse of power.
Steele’s description of Carter Page’s activities in Moscow is comical. We have
a word to describe the use of fabricated evidence to make an innocent man appear
guilty: The Obama administration framed Carter Page. But not only Carter Page.
According to Steele’s dossier, Page was in Moscow to cut a deal on another’s
behalf: He was an emissary - the trusted agent of Donald Trump. Without Steele’
s allegations against Carter Page - without, that is, the story of Page
negotiating with Sechin to remove the sanctions - there was no credible
allegation of a Trump-Putin conspiracy. The FBI, therefore, carried out a
campaign of innuendo against Donald Trump in September. And the Obama
administration placed him under investigation in October, if not earlier. The
Obama administration framed Donald Trump.
SECOND SIGHT
During the Watergate scandal, the press popularized the phrase “the non-denial
denial.” The Nixon White House had a special talent for issuing statements that
sounded like categorical denials of allegations but that, upon close parsing,
affirmed them to be true. In the matter of the Steele dossier, Obama officials,
some of their allies in Congress, and senior leaders in the FBI have developed
an analogous ploy: the “non-verification verification.” These are statements
that distance the speaker from the laughable fantasies of the Steele dossier
while still affirming that the tale of collusion it weaves must be taken
seriously.
The unrivaled master of the move is John Brennan. In a recent appearance on
NBC’s Meet the Press, Brennan defended the FBI’s use of the Steele dossier in
its FISA warrant application. He railed against the FBI’s critics, whom he
depicted as partisan hacks. He played the role of sober intelligence
professional. Expressing his personal appraisal of the dossier when he was still
director of the CIA, he said, “There were things in that dossier that made me
wonder whether or not they were, in fact, accurate and true.”
Exactly what things? Was it the dossier’s view of Page as the diabolical
mastermind of the DNC hack that struck the CIA director as credible? Avoiding
the dossier’s specific allegations, Brennan maintained his front and asserted,
with the somber tone of a button-down national-security professional, that
Steele’s reports contain valuable intelligence leads. “I think Jim Comey has
said that it contained salacious and unverified information,” Brennan
continued. “Just because it was unverified didn’t mean it wasn’t true.”
The non-verification verification is central to the distinctive nature of the
Obama administration’s abuse of power. Most of our debate has focused on how
the FBI used the Steele dossier to validate the investigation of Carter Page.
This issue is important, to be sure, but it must not deflect us from seeing that
the reverse is also true: The administration deliberately used the investigation
of Page to validate the dossier.
Consider, again, the coy Brennan. When questioners push him to explain what in
the Steele dossier he finds compelling, he habitually takes shelter behind
secret sources - evidence hidden behind a classified screen, where only he, the
chief intelligence professional, was permitted to see it. “I was aware of
intelligence . . . about contacts between Russian officials and U.S. persons
that raised concerns in my mind about whether . . . those individuals were
cooperating with the Russians . . . and it served as the basis for the FBI
investigation to determine whether such collusion [or] cooperation occurred.”
Brennan’s somber and self-righteous appeal to hidden secrets is the oldest con
in the book.
John Brennan sees things that we cannot see. If he indeed has access to secrets
that transform stories from Marvel Comics into the stuff of everyday reality,
then he has done a very poor job of explaining what they are. Moreover, no
disinterested intelligence professional has supported him. Brennan’s somber and
self-righteous appeal to hidden secrets is the oldest con in the book. Just
replace his top-secret computer monitor with a crystal ball or dried chicken
bones, and his scam is the same one that Gypsy fortunetellers ran on
superstitious peasants in early-modern Europe, or that soothsayers were
operating in Homer’s Greece.
With respect to the framing of Trump, however, the second-sight scam required
elaborate orchestration, the work of many hands. The key was the double-tracking
of the dossier. Hillary Clinton’s enablers channeled it simultaneously into the
press and into the government. They then recruited people inside government to
verify to the outsiders that it was a serious document, a guide to the
intelligence that reporters were not allowed to see. Without this
double-tracking and official or quasi-official authentication, journalists would
never have believed that they were catching a glimpse of what Brennan and the
FBI saw in their crystal balls - pardon me, their top-secret monitors. And
without leaks about investigations, journalists would have had no
dossier-related news to report. Official statements that the dossier “was being
looked into” transformed it into a legitimate topic for reputable news outlets.
This con failed in its primary goal of preventing the election of Trump, but it
was nevertheless a partial success. It instilled in a significant portion of the
American public the conviction that Trump indeed conspired with Putin. This
conviction is especially prevalent among the lofty-minded - a class of people
that includes Republicans as well as Democrats.
The bipartisan character of the delusion was the greatest factor that
legitimated the appointment of Robert S. Mueller III, the special counsel
leading the investigation into Trump’s alleged relations with Russia. The
lofty-minded have greeted every indictment that Mueller has handed down as
confirmation of their collusion delusion. In reality, those indictments only
prove that a phalanx of crack investigators armed with nearly unlimited
resources, a grand jury, and an expansive mandate can draw blood almost at will.
If a similar phalanx were to target Hillary Clinton and the shenanigans
surrounding the Clinton Foundation, how much blood would flow? In other words,
Mueller’s indictments are just the latest form of the non-verification
verification.
Regardless of Mueller’s intentions, his probe serves as precisely the kind of
“insurance policy” that Strzok seems to have been discussing with his lover,
Lisa Page, in August 2016. Trump cannot shut down the Mueller probe and excise
the rot in the DOJ and the FBI without appearing to obstruct justice. In
practical terms, then, the Mueller probe is the cover-up.
Of course, the lofty-minded refuse to see it this way. The political damage that
Mueller’s team is inflicting on Trump helps explain why a surprising number of
people mount passionate and sincere defenses of the dossier and the super spy
who compiled it. The logic of partisan politics will always lead a significant
percentage of people to insist, with varying degrees of true belief, that a
sow’s ear really is a silk purse. But partisanship is not by any means the only
factor at work here. Even people with well-deserved reputations for intellectual
seriousness passionately defend the integrity of Christopher Steele, a man whom
the New York Times insists on calling, despite all contrary evidence, “a
whistleblower.”
For a complete understanding of the dossier’s tenacious hold on lofty minds,
one must supplement conventional political analysis with psychology. What we are
witnessing is nothing less than a textbook case of denial and projection - the
most perfect case imaginable.
The event that shaped the dossier more than any other was the hack of the DNC.
Guccifer 2.0 first began releasing documents on June 15. A week later, Steele
produced his first report. The Hillary Clinton that emerged from the DNC emails
was preternaturally unsuited to a populist moment. Here she was: the Hillary
Clinton who made high-priced speeches to Wall Street on the eve of the Iowa
caucuses. Here was the co-executive of the international slush funds of the
Clinton Foundation and the Clinton Global Initiative. Here was the power-hungry
political boss who worked with the DNC to fix the Democratic primaries.
Clinton’s supporters instinctively understood the size of the wound that the
hack opened up, and they worked frantically to cauterize it - which meant
deflecting attention from the greed, entitlement, and sleaze that characterized
Clinton, Inc.
The dossier quickly became a tool for denying the deficiencies of Bill and
Hillary Clinton, projecting them onto Donald Trump. Is Bill Clinton a sexual
predator? That’s nothing. Trump pays teams of prostitutes to pee on him! Did
Hillary Clinton preside over the failed “reset” with Russia? That’s nothing.
Putin is blackmailing Trump, and he fears Hillary! Did Bill Clinton pocket a
$500,000 fee for a speech he gave in Moscow, shortly before the sale of American
uranium to Russian interests? That’s nothing. Trump’s been dependent on Putin
for years! Do the emails from the DNC prove that Hillary Clinton rigged the
primaries? That’s nothing. Trump conspired with Putin to rig the entire
election!
In the wake of the DNC hack, leading figures in the press and senior officials
in the Obama administration faced a choice. They could depict Carter Page as he
really was: an unknown man of modest accomplishments who played no role of note
in the Trump organization. Or they could conspire with Fusion GPS to promote the
fiction that he was a sly operative in a sinister network. In a fateful choice,
they opted for dishonesty and deception over truth.
Once the enablers of Hillary Clinton compromised their own integrity, they
internalized her program of denial and projection. Their own egos are now
invested in perpetuating it. To avoid owning up to their shortcomings, they
insist, in ever-shriller tones, on the personal integrity of the super spy and
the credibility of his reports. The mere acknowledgement of a simple truth -
that the “dossier” is junk - would constitute an admission either of deep
professional malfeasance or of gob-smacking gullibility.
Choose your poison, Hillary enablers: You duped people and thereby abetted a
gross abuse of power; or you were yourself badly duped.
Choose your poison: You duped people and thereby abetted a gross abuse of power;
or you were yourself badly duped. That is the dilemma that the lofty-minded now
face. The choice is excruciating. It requires abandoning satisfying self-images
and embracing painful self-truths - while also handing a well-deserved victory
to a hated political enemy. As a consequence, the Steele dossier has proved to
be as consequential as it is asinine.
E GREATEST DENIER
Of course, no one is in deeper denial than Hillary Clinton herself. After she
had conceded to Trump on the night of the election, Obama called her. Taking the
phone, she said, “Mr. President, I’m sorry.”
Sorry, no doubt, that the baton had fallen to the ground once again. Sorry that
she would not be the first female president. Sorry that she would not hold the
reins of power. But was contrition an aspect of any component of her sorrow?
If there is one thing Hillary Clinton does not do well, it is contrition. In an
interview last September, she clung to the fiction that the election was stolen.
Her belief that Trump conspired with Putin was absolute. “There certainly was
communication, and there certainly was an understanding of some sort,” Clinton
said. She had “no doubt” that Putin sought a Trump victory, that there was “a
tangle of financial relationships” between Trump and Russia, and that Trump’s
associates “worked really hard to hide their connections with Russians.” Were
those, in her mind, clear signs of collusion? “I’m convinced of it,” she
said.
She will remain convinced until the day she dies. The alternative, a rigorous
examination of conscience, is too painful to contemplate. How much longer will
Clinton’s damaged psyche hold America hostage?
<https://www.nationalreview.com/author/michael-doran/>

MICHAEL DORAN  <https://www.nationalreview.com/author/michael-doran/> - Michael
Doran is a writer based in Washington, D.C. He is the author of Ike’s Gamble.
@doranimated <https://www.twitter.com/Doranimated>
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