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 Taibbi
December 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.
Are You Tired Of
The Lies And
Non-Stop Propaganda?
|
Likewise, the use of reports by
ex-spy/campaign researcher Christopher
Steele in pursuit of Foreign Intelligence
Surveillance Act (FISA) authority had
far-reaching ramifications.
Not
only did obtaining a FISA warrant allow
authorities a window into other Trump
figures with whom Page communicated, they
led to a slew of leaked “bombshell”
news stories that advanced many public
misconceptions, including that a court had
ruled there was “probable cause” that a
Trump figure was an “agent
of a foreign power.”
There are too many to list in one column,
but the Horowitz report show years of
breathless headlines were wrong. Some key
points:
The so-called “Steele dossier” was,
actually, crucial to the FBI’s decision to
seek secret surveillance of Page.
Press figures have derided the idea that
Steele was crucial to the FISA application,
with some insisting it was only a “small
part”
of the application. Horowitz is clear:
We determined that the Crossfire
Hurricane team’s receipt of Steele’s
election reporting on September 19, 2016
played a central and
essential role in the
FBI’s and Department’s decision to seek the
FISA order.
The
report describes how, prior to receiving
Steele’s reports, the FBI General Counsel (OGC)
and/or the National Security Division’s
Office of Intelligence (OI) wouldn’t budge
on seeking FISA authority. But after getting
the reports, the OGC unit chief said,
“receipt of the Steele reporting changed her
mind on whether they could establish
probable cause.”
Meanwhile, the OI unit chief said Steele’s
reports were “what kind of pushed it over
the line.” There’s no FISA warrant without
Steele.
Horowitz ratifies the oft-denounced
“Nunes memo.”
Democrats are not going to want to hear
this, since conventional wisdom says former
House Intelligence chief Devin Nunes is a
conspiratorial evildoer, but the Horowitz
report ratifies the major claims of the
infamous “Nunes
memo.”
As
noted, Horowitz establishes that the Steele
report was crucial to the FISA process, even
using the same language Nunes used
(“essential”). He also confirms the Nunes
assertion that the FBI double-dipped in
citing both Steele and a September 23, 2016
Yahoo! news story using Steele as
an unnamed source. Horowitz listed the idea
that Steele did not directly provide
information to the press as one of seven
significant “inaccuracies or omissions” in
the first FISA application.
Horowitz also verifies the claim that Steele
was “closed for cause” for talking to the
media,
i.e. officially cut off as a confidential
human source to the FBI. He shows that
Steele continued to talk to Justice Official
Bruce Ohr before and after Steele’s formal
relationship with the FBI ended. His report
confirms that the Steele information had not
been corroborated when the FISA application
was submitted, another key Nunes point.
There was gnashing of teeth when Nunes first
released his memo in January, 2018. The
press universally crapped on his letter,
with a Washington Post piece
calling it
a “joke” and a “sham.”
House Speaker Nancy Pelosi slammed Nunes for
the release of a “bogus” document, while New
York Senator Chuck Schumer said the memo was
intended to “sow conspiracy theories and
attack the integrity of federal law
enforcement.” Many called for his removal as
Committee chair.
The
Horowitz report says all of that
caterwauling was off-base. It also undercuts
many of the assertions made in a ballyhooed
response letter by Nunes counterpart Adam
Schiff, who described the FBI’s “reasonable
basis” for deeming Steele credible. The
report is especially hostile to Schiff’s
claim that the FBI “provided additional
information obtained through multiple
independent sources that corroborated
Steele’s reporting.”
In
fact, far from confirming the Steele
material, the FBI over time seems mainly to
have uncovered more and more reasons to run
screaming from Steele, to wit:
The “Steele dossier” was “Internet
rumor,” and corroboration for the pee tape
story was “zero.”
The
Steele report reads like a pile of rumors
surrounded by public information
pulled off the Internet,
and the Horowitz report does nothing to
dispel this notion.
At
the time the FBI submitted its first FISA
application, Horowitz writes, it had
“corroborated limited information in
Steele’s election reporting, and most of
that was publicly available information.”
Horowitz says of Steele’s reports: “The CIA
viewed it as ‘internet rumor.’”
Worse (and this part of the story should be
tattooed on the heads of Russia truthers),
the FBI’s interviews of Steele’s sources
revealed Steele embellished the most
explosive parts of his report.
The
“pee tape” story, which inspired countless
grave headlines (see this chin-scratching
New York Times history of Russian “sexual
blackmail”)
and plunged the Trump presidency into crisis
before it began, was, this source said,
based a “conversation that [he/she] had over
beers,” with the sexual allegations made… in
“jest”!
Steele in his report said the story had been
“confirmed” by senior, Western hotel staff,
but the actual source said it was all “rumor
and speculation,” never confirmed. In fact,
charged by Steele to find corroboration, the
source could not: corroboration was “zero,”
writes Horowitz.
Meanwhile the Steele assertions that
Russians had a kompromat file on
Hillary Clinton, and that there was a
“well-developed conspiracy of coordination”
between the Trump campaign and Russians,
relied on a source Steele himself
disparaged as an “egoist” and “boaster” who
“may engage in some embellishment.” This was
known to the FBI at the start, yet they
naturally failed to include this info in the
warrant application, one of what Horowitz
described as “17 significant errors or
omissions” in the FISA application.
Finally, when the FBI conducted an
investigation into Steele’s “work-related
performance,” they heard from some that he
was “smart,” and a “person of integrity,”
and “if he reported it, he believed it.”
So
far, so good. But Horowitz also wrote:
Their notes stated: “[d]emonstrates lack
of self-awareness, poor judgment;” “[k]een
to help” but “underpinned by poor judgment;”
“Judgment: pursuing people with political
risk but no intel value;” “[d]idn’t always
exercise great judgment- sometimes [he]
believes he knows best;” and “[r]eporting in
good faith, but not clear what he would have
done to validate.”
The
Crossfire Hurricane team got all of this,
but, again, didn’t pass it upstairs or
include any of it in its warrant
application.
I’ve written about how reporters used
sleight of hand
to
get the Steele dossier into print
without putting it through a vetting
process. What Horowitz describes is worse: a
story about bad journalism piled on bad
journalism, balanced on a third layer of
wrong reporting.
Steele in his “reports” embellished his
sources’ quotes, played up nonexistent
angles, invented attributions, and ignored
inconsistencies. The FBI then transplanted
this bad reporting in the form of a warrant
application and an addendum to the
Intelligence Assessment that included the
Steele material, ignoring a new layer of
inconsistencies and red flags its analysts
uncovered in the review process.
Then, following a series of leaks, the news
media essentially reported on the FBI’s
wrong reporting of Steele’s wrong reporting.
The
impact was greater than just securing a
warrant to monitor Page. More significant
were the years of headlines that grew out of
this process, beginning with the leaking of
the
meeting with Trump about Steele’s blackmail
allegations,
the
insertion of Steele’s conclusions
in the Intelligence Assessment about Russian
interference, and the leak of news about the
approval of the Page FISA warrant.
As
a result, a “well-developed conspiracy”
theory based on a report that Comey
described as “salacious and unverified
material that a responsible journalist
wouldn’t report without corroborating,”
became the driving news story in a
superpower nation for two years. Even
the New York Times, which published
a lot of these stories, is in the wake of
the Horowitz report noting
Steele’s role in
“unleashing a flood of speculation in the
news media about the new president’s
relationship with Russia.”
No
matter what people think the political
meaning of the Horowitz report might be,
reporters who read it will know: Anybody who
touched this nonsense in print should be
embarrassed.
This article was originally published by
"Rolling
Stone"
- -
Do you agree or
disagree? Post your comment here |