What
Russia-gate Has Wrought
For five months, there was a daily drumbeat on
Russia-gate, the sprawling conspiracy theory
that Russia had somehow put Donald Trump in the
White House, but suddenly the “scandal”
disappeared.
By Robert Parry
Democrats,
liberals and some progressives might be feeling
a little perplexed over what has happened to
Russia-gate, the story that pounded Donald Trump
every day since his election last November –
until April 4, that is.
On April 4, Trump fully capitulated to the
neoconservative bash-Russia narrative amid
dubious claims
about a chemical attack in Syria. On April 6,
Trump fired off 59 Tomahawk missiles at a Syrian
airbase; he also restored the neocon demand for
“regime change” in Syria; and he alleged that
Russia was possibly complicit in the supposed
chemical attack.
Since
Trump took those actions – in accordance with
the neocon desires for more “regime change” in
the Middle East and a costly New Cold War with
Russia – Russia-gate has almost vanished from
the news.
I
did find
a little story
in the lower right-hand corner of page A12 of
Saturday’s New York Times about a still-eager
Democratic congressman, Mike Quigley of
Illinois, who spent a couple of days in Cyprus
which attracted his interest because it is a
known site for Russian money-laundering, but he
seemed to leave more baffled than when he
arrived.
“The
more I learn, the more complex, layered and
textured I see the Russia issue is – and that
reinforces the need for professional full-time
investigators,” Quigley said, suggesting that
the investigation’s failure to strike oil is not
that the holes are dry but that he needs better
drill bits.
Yet,
given all the hype and hullabaloo over
Russia-gate, the folks who were led to believe
that the vague and amorphous allegations were
“bigger than Watergate” might now be feeling a
little used. It appears they may have been
sucked into a conspiracy frenzy in which the
Establishment exploited their enthusiasm over
the “scandal” in a clever maneuver to bludgeon
an out-of-step new President back into line.
If
that’s indeed the case, perhaps the most
significant success of the Russia-gate ploy was
the ouster of Trump’s original National Security
Adviser Michael Flynn, who was seen as a key
proponent of a New Détente with Russia, and his
replacement by General H.R. McMaster, a protégé
of neocon favorite, retired Gen. David Petraeus.
McMaster was viewed as the key player in
arranging the April 6 missile strike on Syria
and in preparing a questionable “intelligence
assessment” on April 11 to justify the rush to
judgment. Although McMaster’s four-page white
paper has been accepted as gospel by the
mainstream U.S. news media,
its many weaknesses
have been noted by actual experts, such as MIT
national security and technology professor
Theodore Postol.
How
Washington Works
But the
way Official Washington works is that Trump was
made to look weak when he argued for a more
cooperative and peaceful relationship with
Russia. Hillary Clinton dubbed him Vladimir
Putin’s “puppet” and “Saturday Night Live”
portrayed Trump as in thrall to a bare-chested
Putin. More significantly, front-page stories
every morning and cable news segments every
night created the impression of a compromised
U.S. President in Putin’s pocket.
Conversely, Trump was made to look strong when
he fired off missiles against a Syrian airbase
and talked tough about Russian guilt. Neocon
commentator Charles Krauthammer
praised Trump’s
shift as demonstrating that “America is back.”
Trump
further enhanced his image for toughness when
his military dropped the GBU-43/B Massive
Ordnance Air Blast Bomb (MOAB), nicknamed the
“mother of all bombs,” on some caves in
Afghanistan. While the number of casualties
inflicted by the blast was unclear, Trump
benefited from the admiring TV and op-ed
commentaries about him finally acting
“presidential.”
But the
real test of political courage is to go against
the grain on a policy that may be unpopular in
the short term but is in the best interests of
the United States and the world community in the
longer term.
In that
sense, Trump seeking peaceful cooperation with
Russia – amid the intense anti-Russian
propaganda of the past several years – required
actual courage, while launching missiles and
dropping bombs might win praise but actually
make the U.S. position in the world weaker.
Trump, however, saw his fledgling presidency
crumbling under the daily barrage of
Russia-gate, even though
there was no evidence
that his campaign colluded with Russia to
interfere with the U.S. election and there
wasn’t even clear evidence that Russia was
behind the disclosure of Democratic emails, via
WikiLeaks, during the campaign.
Still,
the combined assault from the Democrats, the
neocons and the mainstream media forced Trump to
surrender his campaign goal of achieving a more
positive relationship with Russia and greater
big-power collaboration in the fight against
terrorism.
For
Trump, the incessant chatter about Russia-gate
was like a dripping water torture. The
thin-skinned Trump fumed at his staff and
twittered messages aimed at changing the
narrative, such as accusing President Obama of
“wiretapping” Trump Tower. But nothing worked.
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However, once Trump waved the white flag by
placing his foreign policy under the preferred
banner of the neoconservatives, the Russia-gate
pressure stopped. The op-ed pages suddenly were
hailing his “decisiveness.” If you were a neocon,
you might say about Russia-gate: Mission
accomplished!
Russia-gate’s Achievements
Besides
whipping Trump into becoming a more compliant
politician, Russia-gate could claim some other
notable achievements: it spared the national
Democrats from having to confront their own
failures in Campaign 2016 by diverting
responsibility for the calamity of Trump’s
election.
Instead
of Democratic leaders taking responsibility for
picking a dreadful candidate, ignoring the
nation’s anti-establishment mood, and failing to
offer any kind of inspiring message, the
national Democrats could palm off the blame on
“Russia! Russia! Russia!”
Thus,
rather than looking in the mirror and trying to
figure out how to correct their deep-seated
problems, the national Democrats could instead
focus on a quixotic tilting at Trump’s
impeachment.
Many on
the Left joined in this fantasy because they
have been so long without a Movement that the
huge post-inaugural “pussy hat” marches were a
temptation that they couldn’t resist.
Russia-gate became the fuel to keep the
“Movement” bandwagon rolling. #Resistance!
It didn’t matter that the “scandal” – the belief
that Russia somehow conspired with Trump to rig
the U.S. presidential election – amounted to
a bunch of informational dots
that didn’t connect.
Russia-gate also taught the American “left” to
learn to love McCarthyism since “proof” of guilt
pretty much amounted to having had contact with
a Russian — and anyone who questioned the
dubious factual basis of the “scandal” was
dismissed as a “Russian propagandist” or a
“Moscow stooge” or a purveyor of “fake news.”
Another
Russia-gate winner was the mainstream news media
which got a lot of mileage – and loads of new
subscription money – by pushing the convoluted
conspiracy. The New York Times positioned itself
as the great protector of “truth” and The
Washington Post adopted a melodramatic new
slogan: “Democracy Dies in Darkness.”
On Thanksgiving Day, the Post
ran a front-page article
touting an anonymous Internet group called
PropOrNot that identified some 200 Internet news
sites, including Consortiumnews.com and other
major sources of independent journalism, as
guilty of “Russian propaganda.” Facts weren’t
needed; no chance for rebuttal; the accusers
even got to hide in the shadows; the smear was
the thing.
The
Post and the Times also conflated complaints
against news outlets that dared to express
skepticism toward claims from the U.S. State
Department and some entrepreneurial sites that
trafficked in intentionally made-up stories or
“fake news” to make money.
To the
Post and Times, there appeared to be no
difference between questioning the official U.S.
narrative on, say, the Ukraine crisis and
knowingly fabricating pretend news articles to
get lots of clicks. Behind the smokescreen of
Russia-gate, the mainstream U.S. news media took
the position that there was only one side to a
story, what Official Washington chose to
believe.
While
it’s likely that there will be some revival of
Russia-gate to avoid the appearance of a
completely manufactured scandal, the conspiracy
theory’s more significant near-term consequence
could be that it has taught Donald Trump a
dangerous lesson.
If he finds himself in a tight spot,
the way out is to start bombing
some “enemy” halfway around the world. The next
time, however, the target might not be so
willing to turn the other cheek. If, say, Trump
launches a preemptive strike against North
Korea, the result could be a retaliatory nuclear
attack against South Korea or Japan.
Or, if the neocons push ahead with their
ultimate “regime change” strategy of staging
a “color revolution” in Moscow
to overthrow Putin, the outcome might be – not
the pliable new leader that the neocons would
want – but an unstable Russian nationalist who
might see a nuclear attack on the U.S. as the
only way to protect the honor of Mother Russia.
For all his faults, Trump did offer a more
temperate approach toward U.S.-Russian
relations, which also could have tamped down
spending for nuclear and other strategic weapons
and freed up some of that money for
infrastructure and other needs at home. But that
was before Russia-gate.
Investigative reporter Robert Parry broke many
of the Iran-Contra stories for The Associated
Press and Newsweek in the 1980s. You can buy his
latest book,
America’s Stolen Narrative,
either in print
here or as an
e-book (from
Amazon and
barnesandnoble.com).
The
views expressed in this article are solely those
of the author and do not necessarily reflect the
opinions of Information Clearing House.