The political theatrics that begin Wednesday raise
several questions. For starters, will Joe Biden be
investigated for mounting evidence of corruption?
And why is the corporate media turning the CIA
“whistleblower” into a phantom in plain sight?
By Patrick Lawrence
November 13, 2019 "Information
Clearing House" - Now
that “Russiagate” has failed and
“Ukrainegate”
neatly takes its place, many questions arise. Will
the Democratic Party, this time in open collusion
with the intelligence apparatus, succeed in its
second attempt to depose President Donald Trump in
what might fairly be called a bloodless coup?
Whatever the outcome of the thus-far-farcical
impeachment probe, which is
to be conducted publicly
as of Wednesday,
did the president use his office to pressure Ukraine
in behalf of his own personal and political
interests? Did Trump, in his fateful telephone
conversation last July 25 with Volodymyr Zelensky,
Ukraine’s president, put U.S. national security at
risk, as is alleged?
All good questions. Here is another: Will Joe Biden,
at present the leading contender for the Democratic
presidential nomination, get away with what is
almost certain to prove his gross corruption and
gross abuse of office when he carried the Ukraine
portfolio while serving as vice president under
Barack Obama?
Corollary line of inquiry: Will the corporate media,
The New York Times in the lead, get away
with self-censoring what is now irrefutable evidence
of the impeachment probe’s various frauds and
corruptions? Ditto in the Biden case: Can the
Times and the media that faithfully follow its
lead continue to disregard accumulating
circumstantial evidence of Biden’s guilt as he
appears to have acted in the interest of his son
Hunter while the latter sat on the board of one of
Ukraine’s largest privately held natural gas
producers?
Innuendo & Interference
It is not difficult to imagine that Trump presented
Zelensky with his famous quid pro quo when they
spoke last summer: Open an investigation into Biden
père et fils and I will release $391
million in military aid and invite you to the White
House. Trump seems to be no stranger to abuses of
power of this sort. But the impeachment probe has
swiftly run up against the same problem that sank
the good ship Russiagate: It has produced no
evidence. Innuendo and inference, yes. Various
syllogisms, yes. But no evidence.
There is none in the transcript of the telephone
exchange. Zelensky has flatly stated that there was
no quid pro quo.
Are You Tired Of
The Lies And
Non-Stop Propaganda?
The witnesses so far called to
testify have had little to offer other than their
personal opinions, even if Capitol Hill Democrats
pretend these testimonies are prima facie
damning. And the witnesses are to one or another
degree of questionable motives: To a one, they
appear to be Russophobes who favor military aid to
Ukraine; to a one they are turf-conscious careerists
who think they set U.S. foreign policy and resent
the president for intruding upon them. It is
increasingly evident that Trump’s true offense is
proposing to renovate a foreign policy framework
that has been more or less untouched for 75 years
(and is in dire need of renovation).
Ten days ago Real Clear Investigations suggested that
the “whistleblower” whose “complaint” last August
set the impeachment probe in motion was in all
likelihood a CIA agent named Eric Ciaramella. And
who is Eric Ciaramella? It turns out he is a young
but seasoned Democratic Party apparatchik conducting
his spookery on American soil.
Ciaramella has previously worked with Joe Biden
during the latter’s days as veep; with Susan Rice,
Obama’s recklessly hawkish national security
adviser; with John Brennan, a key architect of the
Russiagate edifice; as well as with Alexandra
Chalupa, a Ukrainian-born Democratic National
Committee official charged during the 2016 campaign
season with digging up dirt on none other than
candidate Donald Trump.
For good measure, Paul Sperry’s perspicacious
reporting in Real Clear Investigations
reveals that Ciaramella conferred with the staff of
Rep. Adam Schiff, the House Democrat leading the
impeachment process, a month prior to filing his
“complaint” to the CIA’s inspector general.
This information comes after Schiff stated on the
record that the staff of the House Intelligence
Committee, which he heads, had no contact with the
whistleblower. Schiff has since acknowledged the
Ciaramella connection.
Phantom in Plain Sight
No wonder no one in Washington will name this
phantom in plain sight. The impeachment probe starts
to take on a certain reek. It starts to look as if
contempt for Trump takes precedence over democratic
process — a dangerous priority. Sperry quotes Fred
Fleitz, a former National Security Council official,
thus: “Everyone knows who he is. CNN knows. The
Washington Post knows. The New York Times knows.
Congress knows. The White house knows…. They’re
hiding him because of his political bias.”
Here we come to another question. If everyone knows
the whistleblower’s identity, why have the corporate
media declined to name him? There can be but one
answer to this question: If Ciaramella’s identity
were publicized and his professional record exposed,
the Ukrainegate narrative would instantly collapse
into a second-rate vaudeville act — farce by any
other name, although “hoax” might do, even if Trump
has made the term his own.
There is another half to this burlesque. While
Schiff and his House colleagues chicken-scratch for
something, anything that may justify a formal
impeachment, a clear, documented record emerges of
Joe Biden’s official interventions in Ukraine in
behalf of Burisma Holdings, the gas company that
named Hunter Biden to its board in March 2014 — a
month, it is worth noting, after the U.S.–cultivated
coup in Kiev.
There is no thought of scrutinizing Biden’s
activities by way of an official inquiry. In its
way, this, too, reflects upon the pantomime of the
impeachment probe. Are there sufficient grounds to
open an investigation? Emphatically there are. Two
reports published last week make this plain by any
reasonable measure.
‘Bursimagate’
John Solomon, a singularly competent follower of
Russiagate and Ukrainegate, published
a report last Monday exposing Hunter
Biden’s extensive contacts with the Obama State
Department in the early months of 2016. Two
developments were pending at the time. They lie at
the heart of what we may well call “Burismagate.”
One, the Obama administration had committed to
providing Ukraine with $1 billion in loan
guarantees. In a December 2015 address to the Rada,
Ukraine’s legislature, V–P Biden withheld an
apparently planned announcement of the credit
facility.
Two, coincident with Hunter Biden’s numerous
conferences at the State Department, Ukraine’s
prosecutor general, Viktor Shokin, was swiftly
advancing a corruption investigation into Burisma’s
oligarchic owner, Mykola Zlochevsky, who was by
early 2016 living in exile. Just prior to Biden’s
spate of visits to Foggy Bottom, Shokin had
confiscated several of Zlochevsky’s properties—a
clear sign that he was closing in. Joe Biden wanted
Shokin fired. He is, of course,
famously on the recordboasting
of his threat [starts
at 52.00 in video below]to withhold the loan
guarantee as a means to getting this done. Shokin
was in short order dismissed, and the loan guarantee
went through.
Solomon documents his report with memos he obtained
via the Freedom of Information Act earlier this
year. These add significantly to the picture.
“Hunter Biden and his Ukrainian gas firm colleagues
had multiple contacts with the Obama State
Department during the 2016 election cycle,” he
writes, “including one just a month before Vice
President Joe Biden forced Ukraine to fire the
prosecutor investigating his son’s company for
corruption.”
Last Tuesday, a day after Solomon published his
report, Moon of Alabama, the much-followed
web publication, posted a granularly researched and
well-sourced
timeline of the events surrounding
Shokin’s dismissal at Vice President Biden’s
request. This is the most complete chronology of the
Burismagate story yet available.
In an ethical judicial system, it or something like
it would now sit on a prosecutor’s desk. There is no
suggestion in the Moon of Alabama’s timeline
that Shokin had shelved his investigation into
Burisma by the time Biden exerted pressure to get
him sacked, as Biden’s defenders assert. Just the
opposite appears to be the true case: The timeline
indicates Shokin was about to pounce. Indeed Shokin
said so
under oath in an Austrian court case,
testifying that he was fired because of Biden’s
pressure not to conduct the probe.
It is important to note that there is no conclusive
evidence that Joe Biden misused his office in behalf
of his son’s business interests simply because there
has been no investigation. Given what is beginning
to emerge, however, the need for one can no longer
be in doubt. Can Democrats and the media obscure
indefinitely what now amounts to very strong
circumstantial evidence against Biden?
We live in a time when the corporate media make as
much effort to hide information as they do to report
it. But as in the case of Ciaramella’s identity, it
is unlikely these myriad omissions can be sustained
indefinitely — especially if Biden wins the
Democratic nomination next year. Forecast: If only
because of Burismagate, Joe Biden will never be
president.
As everyone in Washington seems to understand, it is
highly unlikely Trump will be ousted via an
impeachment trial: The Republican-controlled Senate
can be counted on to keep him in office. Whatever
Trump got up to with Zelensky, there is little
chance it will prove sufficient to drive him from
office. As to the charge that Trump’s dealings with
the Ukrainian president threatened national
security, let us allow this old chestnut to speak
for itself.
Price of Irresponsible Theatrics
This leaves us to
reckon the price our troubled republic will pay for
months of irresponsible theatrics that are more or
less preordained to lead nowhere.
More questions. What
damage will the Democrats have done when Ukrainegate
draws to a close (assuming it does at some point)?
What harm has come to U.S. political institutions,
governing bodies, judiciary and media? The corporate
press has been profligately careless of its already
questionable credibility during the years of
Russiagate and now Ukrainegate. Can anyone argue
there is no lasting price to pay for this?
More urgently, what do
the past three years of incessant efforts to unseat
a president tell us about the power of unelected
constituencies? The CIA is now openly operating on
American soil in clear breach of its charter and
U.S. law. There is absolutely no way this can be
questioned. We must now contemplate the frightening
similarities Russiagate and Ukrainegate share with
the agency’s classic coup operations abroad:
Commandeering the media, stirring discontent with
the leadership, pumping up the opposition, waving
false flags, incessant disinformation campaigns:
Maybe it was fated that what America has been doing
abroad the whole of the postwar era would eventually
come home.
What, at last, must we
conclude about the ability of any president (of any
stripe) to effect authentic change when our
administrative state — “deep,” if you like — opposes
it?
Patrick Lawrence, a
correspondent abroad for many years, chiefly for
the International
Herald Tribune,
is a columnist, essayist, author and lecturer. His
most recent book is “Time No Longer: Americans After
the American Century” (Yale). Follow him on Twitter @thefloutist. His
web site is Patrick Lawrence.
Support his work via his
Patreon site.
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