The Scheme to
Take Down Trump
The U.S. intelligence community’s unprecedented assault
on an incoming U.S. president – now including spreading
salacious rumors – raises questions about how long
Donald Trump can hold the White House, says Daniel
Lazare.
By Daniel Lazare
January 19, 2017 "Information
Clearing House"
- "Consortium
News"-
Is a
military coup in the works? Or are U.S. intelligence
agencies laying the political groundwork for forcing
Donald Trump from the presidency because they can’t
abide his rejection of a new cold war with Russia? Not
long ago, even asking such questions would have marked
one as the sort of paranoid nut who believes that lizard
people run the government. But no longer.
Thanks to the
now-notorious 35-page dossier concerning Donald Trump’s
alleged sexual improprieties in a Moscow luxury hotel,
it’s clear that strange maneuverings are underway in
Washington and that no one is quite sure how they will
end.
Director of
National Intelligence James Clapper added to the mystery
Wednesday evening by releasing
a 200-word statement to the effect that he was
shocked, shocked, that the dossier had found its way
into the press. Such leaks, the statement said, “are
extremely corrosive and damaging to our national
security.”
Clapper
added: “that this document is not a US
Intelligence Community product and that I do not believe
the leaks came from within the IC. The IC has not made
any judgment that the information in this document is
reliable, and we did not rely upon it in any way for our
conclusions. However, part of our obligation is to
ensure that policymakers are provided with the fullest
possible picture of any matters that might affect
national security.”
Rather than
vouching for the dossier’s contents, in other words, all
Clapper says he did was inform Trump that it was making
the rounds in Washington and that he should know what it
said – and that he thus couldn’t have been more
horrified than when Buzzfeed posted all 35
pages on its website.
But it doesn’t
make sense. As The New York Times
noted, “putting the summary in a report that went to
multiple people in Congress and the executive branch
made it very likely that it would be leaked”
(emphasis in the original). So even if the “intelligence
community” didn’t leak the dossier itself, it
distributed it knowing that someone else would.
Then there is
the Guardian, second to none in its loathing
for Trump and Vladimir Putin and hence intent on giving
the dossier the best possible spin. It printed a
quasi-defense not of the memo itself but of the man who
wrote it: Christopher Steele, an ex-MI6 officer who now
heads his own private intelligence firm. “A sober,
cautious and meticulous professional with a formidable
record” is how the Guardian
described him. Then it quoted an unnamed ex-Foreign
Office official on the subject of Steele’s credibility:
“The idea his
work is fake or a cowboy operation is false, completely
untrue. Chris is an experienced and highly regarded
professional. He’s not the sort of person who will
simply pass on gossip. … If he puts something in a
report, he believes there’s sufficient credibility in it
for it to be worth considering. Chris is a very straight
guy. He could not have survived in the job he was in if
he had been prone to flights of fancy or doing things in
an ill-considered way.”
In other words,
Steele is a straight-shooter, so it’s worth paying
attention to what he has to say. Or so the Guardian
assures us. “That is the way the CIA and the FBI, not to
mention the British government, regarded him, too,” it
adds, so presumably Clapper felt the same way.
What is
Afoot?
So what does it
all mean? Simply that U.S. intelligence agencies
believed that the dossier came from a reliable source
and that, as a consequence, there was a significant
possibility that Trump was a “Siberian candidate,” as
Times columnist Paul Krugman
once described him. They therefore sent out multiple
copies of a two-page summary on the assumption that at
least one would find its way to the press.
Even if Clapper
& Co. took no position concerning the dossier’s
contents, they knew that preparing and distributing such
a summary amounted to a tacit endorsement. They also
knew, presumably, that it would provide editors with an
excuse to go public. If the CIA, FBI, and National
Security Agency feel that Steele’s findings are worthy
of attention, then why shouldn’t the average reader have
an opportunity to examine them as well?
How did Clapper
expect Trump to respond when presented with allegations
that he was vulnerable to Russian blackmail and
potentially under the Kremlin’s thumb? Did he expect him
to hang his head in shame, break into great racking
sobs, and admit that it was all true? If so, did Clapper
\then plan to place a comforting hand on Trump’s
shoulder and suggest, gently but firmly, that it was
time to step aside and allow a trusted insider like Mike
Pence to take the reins?
Based on the
sturm und drang of the last few days, the
answer is very possibly yes. If so, the gambit failed
when Trump, in his usual high-voltage manner,
denounced the dossier as “fake news” and sailed into
the intelligence agencies for behaving like something
out of “Nazi Germany.” The intelligence community’s
hopes, if that’s what they were, were dashed.
All of which is
thoroughly unprecedented by American political
standards. After all, this is a country that takes
endless pride in the peaceful transfer of power every
four years or so. Yet here was the intelligence
community attempting to short-circuit the process by
engineering Trump’s removal before he even took office.
But the
Guardian then upped the ante even more by
suggesting that the CIA continue with the
struggle. Plainly, the Republican congressional
leadership has “no appetite” for an inquiry into
Steele’s findings, the paper’s New York correspondent,
Ed Pilkington,
wrote, adding:
“That leaves
the intelligence agencies. The danger for Trump here is
that he has so alienated senior officials, not least by
likening them to Nazis, that he has hardly earned their
loyalty.”
What was the
Guardian suggesting – that disloyal
intelligence agents keep on searching regardless? And
what if they come up with what they claim is a smoking
gun?
Explained
Pilkington: “To take a flight of fancy, what if it [i.e.
Steele’s findings] were substantiated? That would again
come down to a question of politics. No US president has
ever been forced out of office by impeachment (Richard
Nixon resigned before the vote; Andrew Johnson and Bill
Clinton were acquitted by the Senate). Any such
procedure would have to be prepared and approved by a
majority of the House of Representatives, and then
passed to the Senate for a two-thirds majority vote. As
the Republicans hold the reins in both chambers, it
would take an almighty severing of ties between Trump
and his own party to even get close to such a place.”
It’s a long
shot, but the Guardian’s recommendation is that
rogue agents keep on digging until they strike pay dirt,
at which point they should go straight to Congress and
persuade – if not pressure – the Republican leadership
to initiate the process of throwing Trump out of office.
This is not the
same as sending an armored column to attack Capitol
Hill, but it’s close. Essentially, the Guardian
was calling on the intelligence agencies to assume
ultimate responsibility regarding who can sit in the
Oval Office and who cannot.
A
Desperate Establishment
All of which
demonstrates how desperate the military-intelligence
complex has grown after Clapper’s report on alleged
Russian hacking of Democratic emails met with such a
derisory reception following its publication on Jan.
6. Even the Times
admitted that it provided “no new evidence to
support assertions that Moscow meddled covertly through
hacking and other actions” while the Daily Beast
said it was “unlikely to convince a single skeptic”
due to a notable absence of anything by way of back-up
data.
Indiana Gov.
(now Vice President-elect) Mike Pence speaking in
Phoenix, Arizona, on Aug. 31, 2016. (Flickr Gage
Skidmore)
The Steele
dossier was supposed to take up the slack. Yet it has
fallen short as well. It asserts, for example, that
Trump attorney Michael Cohen traveled to Prague to
discuss hacking with a Russian official named Oleg
Solodukhin, a claim that both men have since
denied. It misspells the name of a major Russian
bank and gets its Russian geography wrong too.
As Owen
Matthews points out in
a very smart article in Newsweek, it “seems
to be under the impression that the suburb of Barvikha
on the tony Rublevskoe highway is a closed government
compound, instead of just an expensive vacation home
area favored by the new rich.”
The dossier
misspells the name of an Azeri real-estate mogul named
Aras Agalarov and “reports his association with Trump as
news in August 2016 – when Agalarov publicly organized
Trump’s visit to the Miss Universe pageant in 2013 and
arranged a meeting with top Russian businessmen for
Trump afterward, both of which were widely reported at
the time.”
Other aspects
of the dossier don’t add up either. It reports that the
Russian government “has been cultivating, supporting and
assisting Trump for at least five years” in order to
“encourage splits and divisions in the Western
alliance.” But as Matthews points out, Trump wasn’t in
politics five years ago and was considered a long shot
for months after entering the presidential race in
mid-2015. So how could the Kremlin be sure that their
man would ultimately prevail?
The dossier
says that Trump “accepted a regular flow of intelligence
from the Kremlin, including on Democratic and other
political rivals.” But Trump gave no hint of having
inside information when he called for “Crooked Hillary”
to be locked up for purging her email files; to the
contrary, he did so on the basis of information
available on every front page. The memo says that the
Russians also had “compromising material” on Clinton. If
so, then why wasn’t it used?
Hearsay
Evidence
The
discrepancies go on. But this is what one would expect
of a document based entirely of hearsay in which Source
A claims to have gotten a juicy tidbit from Source B,
who heard it from Source C deep inside the Kremlin.
Russian
President Vladimir Putin during a state visit to
Austria on June 24, 2014. (Official Russian
government photo)
Grasping at
straws, the Guardian’s Ed Pilkington conceded
that no news agency has been able to verify the
dossier’s findings. But, he said, they are “unlikely to
be discarded as quickly or as conclusively as Trump
would like” for the simple reason that “the flip side of
information that cannot be classed reliable is that
neither can it be classed unreliable.”
But the same
could be said for information that someone got from a
friend whose brother-in-law heard from a park ranger
that Barack and Michelle like to while away their
evenings snorting cocaine. It can’t be classed as
reliable because no one can verify that it’s true. But
it can’t be classed as unreliable because no one can
prove that it’s wrong. So maybe the best thing to do is
to impeach Obama in the few days he has remaining just
to be sure.
This not to say
that the so-called President-elect’s legitimacy is not
open to question. To the contrary, it is questionable
in the extreme given that he lost the popular election
by more
than 2.86 million votes. In a democratic country,
this should count for something. But the intelligence
community is not attacking him on democratic grounds,
needless to say, but on imperial.
Trump is a
rightwing blowhard whose
absurd babblings about Saudi Arabia, Iran and Yemen
reveal a man who is dangerously ignorant about how the
world works. But he has managed to seize on one or two
semi-good ideas over the years. One is that Obama
administration’s confrontational policies toward Russia
are a recipe for disaster, while another is that
toppling Syria’s Bashar al-Assad with Al Qaeda and ISIS
still up and about will only hasten their march on
Damascus.
Both views are
perfectly sensible. But because Washington’s endlessly
bellicose foreign-policy establishment is wedded to the
opposite, it sees them as high treason.
This is very
serious. U.S. foreign policy has been marked by a high
degree of continuity since World War II as Republican
and Democratic presidents alike pledged to uphold the
imperial agenda. But Trump, as radical in his way as
William Jennings Bryan was in 1896 or Henry A. Wallace
in 1948, is bucking the consensus to an unprecedented
degree.
Even though its
policies have led to disaster after disaster, the
foreign-policy establishment is aghast. Consequently, it
is frantically searching for a way to prevent him from
carrying his ideas out. The intelligence agencies appear
to be running out of time with the inauguration only a
few days away. But that doesn’t mean they’re giving
up. All it means, rather, is that they’ll go deeper
underground. Trump may enter the White House on Jan.
20. But the big question is how long he’ll remain.
Daniel Lazare is the author of several books including The
Frozen Republic: How the Constitution Is Paralyzing
Democracy (Harcourt
Brace). |