The Russia-gate hysteria has grown stronger
after President Trump’s firing of FBI Director
Comey, but the bigger question is whether an
American “soft coup” is in the works, reports
Robert Parry.
By Robert Parry
May 13,
2017 "Information
Clearing House"
- Where is Stanley Kubrick when we need him? If
he hadn’t died in 1999, he would be the perfect
director to transform today’s hysteria over
Russia into a theater-of-the-absurd movie
reprising his Cold War classic, “Dr.
Strangelove,” which savagely satirized the
madness of nuclear brinksmanship and the crazed
ideology behind it.
To prove my point, The Washington Post on
Thursday published
a lengthy story
entitled in the print editions “Alarm at Russian
in White House” about a Russian photographer who
was allowed into the Oval Office to photograph
President Trump’s meeting with Russian Foreign
Minister Sergey Lavrov.
The
Post cited complaints from former U.S.
intelligence officials who criticized the
presence of the Russian photographer as “a
potential security breach” because of “the
danger that a listening device or other
surveillance equipment could have been brought
into the Oval Office while hidden in cameras or
other electronics.”
To
bolster this alarm, the Post cited a Twitter
comment from President Obama’s last deputy CIA
director, David S. Cohen, stating “No, it was
not” a sound decision to admit the Russian
photographer who also works for the Russian news
agency, Tass, which published the photo.
One
could picture Boris and Natasha, the evil spies
in the Bullwinkle cartoons, disguised as
photographers slipping listening devices between
the cushions of the sofas.
Or we
could hear how Russians are again threatening to
“impurify all of our precious bodily fluids,” as
“Dr. Strangelove” character, Gen. Jack D.
Ripper, warned us in the 1964 movie.
Watching that brilliant dark comedy again might
actually be a good idea to remind us how crazy
Americans can get when they’re pumped up with
anti-Russian propaganda, as is happening again
now.
Taking
Down Trump
I
realize that many Democrats, liberals and
progressives hate Donald Trump so much that they
believe that any pretext is justified in taking
him down, even if that plays into the hands of
the neoconservatives and other warmongers. Many
people who detest Trump view Russia-gate as the
most likely path to achieve Trump’s impeachment,
so this desirable end justifies whatever means.
Some people have told me that they even believe
that it is the responsibility of the major news
media, the law enforcement and intelligence
communities, and members of Congress to engage
in a “soft coup” against Trump – also known as a
“constitutional coup” or
“deep state coup”
– for the “good of the country.”
The
argument is that it sometimes falls to these
Establishment institutions to “correct” a
mistake made by the American voters, in this
case, the election of a largely unqualified
individual as U.S. president. It is even viewed
by some anti-Trump activists as a responsibility
of “responsible” journalists, government
officials and others to play this “guardian”
role, to not simply “resist” Trump but to remove
him.
There
are obvious counter-arguments to this view,
particularly that it makes something of a sham
of American democracy. It also imposes on
journalists a need to violate the ethical
responsibility to provide objective reporting,
not taking sides in political disputes.
But The
New York Times and The Washington Post, in
particular, have made it clear that they view
Trump as a clear and present danger to the
American system and thus have cast aside any
pretense of neutrality.
The
Times justifies its open hostility to the
President as part of its duty to protect “the
truth”; the Post has adopted a slogan aimed at
Trump, “Democracy Dies in Darkness.” In other
words, America’s two most influential political
newspapers are effectively pushing for a “soft
coup” under the guise of defending “democracy”
and “truth.”
But the
obvious problem with a “soft coup” is that
America’s democratic process, as imperfect as it
has been and still is, has held this diverse
country together since 1788 with the notable
exception of the Civil War.
If
Americans believe that the Washington elites are
removing an elected president – even one as
buffoonish as Donald Trump – it could tear apart
the fabric of national unity, which is already
under extraordinary stress from intense
partisanship.
That
means that the “soft coup” would have to be
carried out under the guise of a serious
investigation into something grave enough to
justify the President’s removal, a removal that
could be accomplished by congressional
impeachment, his forced resignation, or the
application of Twenty-fifth Amendment, which
allows the Vice President and a majority of the
Cabinet to judge a President incapable of
continuing in office (although that could
require two-thirds votes by both houses of
Congress if the President fights the maneuver).
A Big
Enough ‘Scandal’
That is
where Russia-gate comes in. The gauzy allegation
that Trump and/or his advisers somehow colluded
with Russian intelligence officials to rig the
2016 election would probably clear the threshold
for an extreme action like removing a President.
And, given the determination of many key figures
in the Establishment to get rid of Trump, it
should come as no surprise that no one seems to
care that
no actual government-verified evidence has been
revealed publicly
to support any of the Russia-gate allegations.
There’s
not even any public evidence from U.S.
government agencies that Russia did “meddle” in
the 2016 election or – even if Russia did slip
Democratic emails to WikiLeaks (which WikiLeaks
denies) – there has been zero evidence that the
scheme resulted from collusion with Trump’s
campaign.
The FBI
has been investigating these suspicions for at
least nine months, even reportedly securing a
Foreign Intelligence Surveillance Act warrant
against Carter Page, an American whom Trump
briefly claimed as a foreign policy adviser when
Trump was under fire for not having any foreign
policy advisers.
One of
Page’s alleged offenses was that he gave a
speech to an academic conference in Moscow in
July 2016 that was mildly critical of how the
U.S. treated countries from the former Soviet
Union. He also once lived in Russia and
apparently met with a Russian diplomat who –
apparently unbeknownst to Page – had been
identified by the U.S. government as a Russian
intelligence officer.
It appears that is enough, in
these days of our New McCarthyism,
to get an American put under a powerful
counter-intelligence investigation.
The FBI
and the Department of Justice also reportedly
are including as part of the Russia-gate
investigation Trump’s stupid campaign joke
calling on the Russians to help find the tens of
thousands of emails that Clinton erased from the
home server that she used while Secretary of
State.
On July
27, 2016, Trump said, apparently in jest, “I
will tell you this, Russia: if you’re listening,
I hope you’re able to find the 30,000 emails
that are missing.”
The
comment fit with Trump’s puckish, provocative
and often tasteless sense of humor, but was
seized on by Democrats as if it were a serious
suggestion – as if anyone would use a press
conference to seriously urge something like
that. But it now appears that the FBI is
grabbing at any straw that might support its
investigation.
The (U.K.) Guardian
reported this
week that “Senior DoJ officials have declined to
release the documents [about Trump’s comment] on
grounds that such disclosure could ‘interfere
with enforcement proceedings’. In a
filing to a
federal court in Washington DC, the DoJ states
that ‘because of the existence of an active,
ongoing investigation, the FBI anticipates that
it will … withhold all records’.
“The statement suggests that Trump’s provocative
comment last July is being seen by the
FBI as relevant
to its own ongoing investigation.”
The NYT’s
Accusations
On Friday, in the wake of Trump’s firing of FBI
Director James Comey and the President’s
characterization of Russia-gate as “a total
hoax,” The New York Times reprised what it
called “The Trump-Russia Nexus” in
a lead editorial
trying to make the case of some fire behind the
smoke.
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Though
the Times acknowledges that there are “many
unknowns” in Russia-gate and the Times can’t
seem to find any evidence of collusion, such as
slipping a Russian data stick to WikiLeaks, the
Times nevertheless treats a host of Trump
advisers and family members as traitors because
they’ve had some association with Russian
officials, Russian businesses or Russian allies.
Regarding Carter Page, the Times wrote:
“American officials believe that Mr. Page, a
foreign policy adviser, had contacts with
Russian intelligence officials during the
campaign. He also gave a pro-Russia speech in
Moscow in July 2016. Mr. Page was once employed
by Merrill Lynch’s Moscow office, where he
worked with Gazprom, a government-owned giant.”
You
might want to let some of those words sink in,
especially the part about Page giving “a
pro-Russia speech in Moscow,” which has been
cited as one of the principal reasons for Page
and his communications being targeted under a
FISA warrant.
I’ve
actually read Page’s speech and to call it
“pro-Russia” is a wild exaggeration. It was a
largely academic treatise that faulted the
West’s post-Cold War treatment of the nations
formed from the old Soviet Union, saying the
rush to a free-market system led to some
negative consequences, such as the spread of
corruption.
But
even if the speech were “pro-Russia,” doesn’t
The New York Times respect the quaint American
notion of free speech? Apparently not. If your
carefully crafted words can be twisted into
something called “pro-Russia,” the Times seems
to think it’s okay to have the National Security
Agency bug your phones and read your emails.
The
Ukraine Case
Another
Times’ target was veteran political adviser Paul
Manafort, who is accused of working as “a
consultant for a pro-Russia political party in
Ukraine and for Ukraine’s former president,
Viktor Yanukovych, who was backed by the
Kremlin.”
Left
out of that Times formulation is the fact that
the Ukrainian political party, which had strong
backing from ethnic Russian Ukrainians — not
just Russia– competed in a democratic process
and that Yanukovych won an election that was
recognized by international observers as free
and fair.
Yanukovych was then ousted in February 2014 in a
violent putsch that was backed by U.S. Assistant
Secretary of State Victoria Nuland and U.S.
Ambassador Geoffrey Pyatt. The putsch, which was
spearheaded by right-wing nationalists and even
neo-Nazis, touched off Ukraine’s civil war and
the secession of Crimea, the key events in the
escalation of today’s New Cold War between NATO
and Russia.
Though
I’m no fan of U.S. political hired-guns selling
their services in foreign elections, there was
nothing illegal or even unusual about Manafort
advising a Ukrainian political party. What
arguably was much more offensive was the U.S.
support for an unconstitutional coup that
removed Yanukovych even after he agreed to a
European plan for early elections so he could be
voted out of office peacefully.
But the Times, the Post and virtually the entire
Western mainstream media sided with the
Ukrainian coup-makers and hailed Yanukovych’s
overthrow. That attitude has become such a
groupthink that the Times has
banished the thought that there was a coup.
Still,
the larger political problem confronting the
United States is that the neoconservatives and
their junior partners, the liberal
interventionists, now control nearly all the
levers of U.S. foreign policy. That means they
can essentially dictate how events around the
world will be perceived by most Americans.
The neocons and the liberal hawks also want to
continue their open-ended wars in the Middle
East by arranging the
commitment of additional U.S. military forces to
Afghanistan, Iraq and Syria – and perhaps a new
confrontation with Iran.
Early
in Obama’s second term, it became clear to the
neocons that Russia was becoming the chief
obstacles to their plans because President
Barack Obama was working closely with President
Vladimir Putin on a variety of projects that
undermined neocon hopes for more war.
Particularly, Putin helped Obama secure an
agreement from Syria to surrender its chemical
weapons stockpiles in 2013 and to get Iran to
accept tight constraints on its nuclear program
in 2014. In both cases, the neocons and their
liberal-hawk sidekicks were lusting for war.
Immediately after the Syria chemical-weapons
deal in September 2013, key U.S. neocons began
focusing on Ukraine as what National Endowment
for Democracy president Carl Gershman
called “the
biggest prize” and a first step toward unseating
Putin in Moscow.
Gershman’s grant-giving NED stepped up its
operations inside Ukraine while Assistant
Secretary Nuland, the wife of arch-neocon Robert
Kagan, began pushing for regime change in Kiev
(along with other neocons, including Sen. John
McCain).
The
Ukraine coup in 2014 drove a geopolitical wedge
between Obama and Putin, since the Russian
president couldn’t just stand by when a
virulently anti-Russian regime took power
violently in Ukraine, which was the well-worn
route for invasions into Russia and housed
Russia’s Black Sea fleet at Sevastopol in
Crimea.
Rather than defend the valuable cooperation
provided by Putin, Obama went with the political
flow and joined in the Russia-bashing as key
neocons raised their sights and
put Putin in the crosshairs.
An
Unexpected Obstacle
For the
neocons in 2016, there also was the excited
expectation of a Hillary Clinton presidency to
give more momentum to the expensive New Cold
War. But then Trump, who had argued for a new
détente with Russia, managed to eke out an
Electoral College win.
Perhaps
Trump could have diffused some of the hostility
toward him but his narcissistic personality
stopped him from extending an olive branch to
the tens of millions of Americans who opposed
him. He further demonstrated his political
incompetence by wasting his first days in office
making ridiculous claims about the size of his
inaugural crowds and disputing the fact that he
had lost the popular vote.
Widespread public disgust over his behavior
contributed to the determination of many
Americans to “resist” his presidency at all
junctures and at all costs.
Russia-gate, the hazy suggestion that Putin put
Trump in the White House and that Trump is a
Putin “puppet” (as Clinton claimed), became the
principal weapon to use in destroying Trump’s
presidency.
However, besides the risks to U.S. stability
that would come from an Establishment-driven
“soft coup,” there is the additional danger of
ratcheting up tensions so high with
nuclear-armed Russia that this extreme
Russia-bashing takes on a life – or arguably
many, many deaths – of its own.
Which
is why America now might need a piercing satire
of today’s Russia-phobia or at least a revival
of the Cold War classic, “Dr. Strangelove,”
subtitled “How I Learned to Stop Worrying and
Love the Bomb.”
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.
Wilkerson: Trump "Needs a Good War" and Pence is
Waiting in the Wings to Lead It
Lawrence Wilkerson is a retired United States
Army soldier and former chief of staff to United
States Secretary of State Colin Powell.
Wilkerson is an adjunct professor at the College
of William & Mary where he teaches courses on US
national security. He also instructs a senior
seminar in the Honors Department at the George
Washington University entitled "National
Security Decision Making."
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