An
Inspector General’s Report Reveals the Steele Dossier
Was Always a Joke
The report throws water on one “deep state” conspiracy
theory of the Russia investigation, but validates
complaints about “fake news”
By Matt TaibbiDecember 12, 2019 "Information
Clearing House" - The
Guardian headline reads: “DOJ
Internal watchdog report clears FBI of illegal
surveillance of Trump adviser.”
If the report released Monday by Justice Department
Inspector General Michael Horowitz constitutes a
“clearing” of the FBI, never clear me of anything. Holy
God, what a clown show the Trump-Russia
investigation was.
Like the much-ballyhooed report by Special Counsel
Robert Mueller, the Horowitz report is a Rorschach test,
in which partisans will find what they want to find.
Much of the press is concentrating on Horowitz’s
conclusion that there was no evidence of “political bias
or improper motivation” in the FBI’s probe of Donald
Trump’s Russia contacts, an investigation Horowitz says
the bureau had “authorized
purpose” to conduct.
Horowitz uses phrases like “serious performance
failures,” describing his 416-page catalogue of errors
and manipulations as incompetence rather than
corruption. This throws water on the notion that the
Trump investigation was a vast frame-up.
However, Horowitz describes at great length an FBI
whose “serious” procedural problems and omissions of
“significant information” in pursuit of surveillance
authority all fell in the direction of expanding the
unprecedented investigation of a presidential candidate
(later, a president).
Officials on the “Crossfire Hurricane” Trump-Russia
investigators went to extraordinary, almost comical
lengths to seek surveillance authority of figures like
Trump aide Carter Page. In one episode, an FBI attorney
inserted the words “not a source” in an email he’d
received from another government agency. This disguised
the fact that Page had been an informant for that
agency, and had dutifully told the government in real
time about being approached by Russian intelligence. The
attorney then passed on the email to an FBI supervisory
special agent, who signed a FISA warrant application on
Page that held those Russian contacts against Page,
without disclosing his informant role.