The New York Times is leading the full-court press
to improve on what it regards as Special Counsel
Robert Mueller’s weak-kneed effort to blame the
Russians for giving us Donald Trump.
By Ray McGovern
August 25, 2020 "Information
Clearing House" -
The
fresh orgy of anti-Russian invective in the
lickspittle media (LSM) has the feel of fin de
siècle. The last four reality-impaired years do
seem as though they add up to a century. And no
definitive fin is in sight, as long as most
people don’t know what’s going on.
The LSM should be confronted: “At long last have you
left no sense of decency?” But who would hear the
question — much less any answer? The corporate media
have a lock on what Americans are permitted or not
permitted to hear. Checking the truth, once routine
in journalism, is a thing of the past.
Thus the reckless abandon with which The New York
Times is leading the current full-court press to
improve on what it regards as Special Counsel Robert
Mueller’s weak-kneed effort to blame the Russians
for giving us Donald Trump. The press is on, and
there are no referees to call the fouls.
The recent release of a 1,000-page, sans
bombshells and already out-of-date report by the
Senate Intelligence Committee has provided the
occasion to “catapult the propaganda,” as President
George W. Bush once put it.
As the the Times‘s Mark Mazzetti put it in
his
article Wednesday:
“Releasing the report less than 100 days before
Election Day, Republican-majority senators hoped
it would refocus attention on the interference
by Russia and other hostile foreign powers in
the American political process, which has
continued unabated.”
Mazzetti is telling his readers, soto voce:
regarding that interference four years ago, and the
“continued-unabated” part, you just have to trust us
and our intelligence community sources who would
never lie to you. And if, nevertheless, you persist
in asking for actual evidence, you are clearly in
Putin’s pocket.
Incidentally, Mueller’s report apparently was
insufficient, only two years in the making, and just
448 pages. The Senate committee’s magnum opus
took three years, is almost 1,000 pages — and
fortified. So there.
Iron Pills
Recall how disappointed the LSM and the rest of the
Establishment were with Mueller’s anemic findings in
spring 2019. His report claimed that the Russian
government “interfered in the 2016 presidential
election in sweeping and systematic fashion” via a
social media campaign run by the Internet Research
Agency (IRA) and by “hacking” Democratic emails. But
the evidence behind those charges could not bear
close scrutiny.
You would hardly know it from the LSM, but the
accusation against the IRA was thrown out of court
when the U.S. government admitted it could not prove
that the IRA was working for the Russian government.
Mueller’s ipse dixit did not suffice, as we
explained a year ago in “Sic Transit Gloria
Mueller.”
The Best Defense …
… is a good offense, and the Senate Intelligence
Committee’s release of its study — call it “Mueller
(Enhanced)” — and the propaganda fanfare — come at a
key point in the Russiagate/Spygate imbroglio. It
also came, curiously, as the Democratic Convention
was beginning, as if the Republican-controlled
Senate was sending Trump a message.
One chief worry, of course, derives from the
uncertainty as to whether John Durham, the US
Attorney investigating those FBI and other officials
who launched the Trump-Russia investigation will let
some heavy shoes drop before the election. Barr has
said he expects “developments in Durham’s
investigation hopefully before the end of the
summer.”
FBI attorney Kevin Clinesmith already has decided to
plead guilty to the felony of falsifying evidence
used to support a warrant from the Foreign
Intelligence Surveillance Court to surveillance to
spy on Trump associate Carter Page. It is abundantly
clear that Clinesmith was just a small cog in the
deep-state machine in action against candidate and
then President Trump. And those running the machine
are well known. The president has named names, and
Barr has made no bones about his disdain for what he
calls spying on the president.
The cognoscenti and the big fish themselves may be
guessing that Trump/Barr/Durham will not throw out
heavier lines for former FBI Director James Comey,
his deputy Andrew McCabe, CIA Director John Brennan,
and Director of National Intelligence James Clapper,
for example. But how can they be sure? What has
become clear is that the certainty they all shared
that Hillary Clinton would be the next president
prompted them not only to take serious liberties
with the Constitution and the law, but also to do so
without taking rudimentary steps to hide their
tracks.
The incriminating evidence is there. And as Trump
becomes more and more vulnerable and defensive about
his ineptness — particularly with regard to Covid-19
— he may summon the courage to order Barr and Durham
to hook the big fish, not just minnows like
Clinesmith. The neuralgic reality is that no one
knows at this point how far Trump will go. To say
that this kind of uncertainty is unsettling to all
concerned is to say the obvious.
So, the stakes are high — for the Democrats, as well
— and, not least, the LSM. In these circumstances it
would seem imperative not just to circle the wagons
but to mount the best offense/defense possible,
despite the fact that virtually all the ammunition
(as in the Senate report) is familiar and stale
(“enhanced” or not).
Black eyes might well be in store for the very top
former law enforcement and intelligence officials,
the Democrats, and the LSM — and in the key
pre-election period. So, the calculation: launch
“Mueller Report (Enhanced)” and catapult the truth
now with propaganda, before it is too late.
No Evidence of Hacking
The “hacking of the DNC” charge suffered a fatal
blow three months ago when it became known that
Shawn Henry, president of the DNC-hired
cyber-security firm CrowdStrike,
admitted under oath that his firm had no
evidence that the DNC emails were hacked — by Russia
or anyone else.
Henry gave his
testimony on Dec. 5, 2017, but House
Intelligence Committee chair Adam Schiff was able to
keep it hidden until May 7, 2020.
Here’s a brief taste of how Henry’s testimony went:
Asked by Schiff for “the date on which the Russians
exfiltrated the data”, Henry replied, “We just don’t
have the evidence that says it actually left.”
You did not know that? You may be forgiven — up
until now — if your information diet is limited to
the LSM and you believe The New York Times
still publishes “all the news that’s fit to print.”
I am taking bets on how much longer the NYT will be
able to keep Henry’s testimony hidden; Schiff’s
record of 29 months will be hard to beat.
Putting Lipstick on the Pig of Russian
‘Tampering’
Worse still for the LSM and other Russiagate
diehards, Mueller’s findings last year enabled Trump
to shout “No Collusion” with Russia. What seems
clear at this point is that a key objective of the
current catapulting of the truth is to apply
lipstick to Mueller’s findings.
After all, he was supposed to find treacherous
plotting between the Trump campaign and the Russians
and failed miserably. Most LSM-suffused Americans
remain blissfully unaware of this, and the likes of
Pulitzer Prize winner Mazzetti have been
commissioned to keep it that way.
In Wednesday’s
article, for example, Mazzetti puts it somewhat
plaintively:
“Like the special counsel … the Senate report
did not conclude that the Trump campaign engaged
in a coordinated conspiracy with the Russian
government — a fact that the Republicans seized
on to argue that there was ‘no collusion’.”
How could they!
Mazzetti is playing with words. “Collusion,” however
one defines it, is not a crime; conspiracy is.
‘Breathtaking’ Contacts: Mueller (Enhanced)
Mazzetti emphasizes that the Senate report “showed
extensive evidence of contacts between Trump
campaign advisers and people tied to the Kremlin,”
and Sen. Mark Warner (D-VA), the intelligence
committee’s vice chairman,
said the committee report details “a
breathtaking level of contacts between Trump
officials and Russian government operatives that is
a very real counterintelligence threat to our
elections.”
None of that takes us much beyond the Mueller report
and other things generally well known — even in the
LSM. Nor does the drivel about people like Paul
Manafort “sharing polling data with Russians” who
might be intelligence officers. That data was
“mostly public” the Times itself
reported, and the paper had to
correcta story that the data was
intended for Russian oligarchs, when it was meant
for Ukrainian oligarchs instead. That Manafort was
working to turn Ukraine towards the West and not
Russia is rarely mentioned.
Recent revelations regarding the false data given
the FISA court by an FBI lawyer to “justify”
eavesdropping on Trump associate Carter Page show
the Senate report to be not up to date and misguided
in endorsing the FBI’s decision to investigate Page.
The committee may wish to revisit that endorsement —
at least.
On the Steele Dossier, the committee also missed a
ruling by a British judge against Christopher
Steele,
labeling
his dossier an attempt to help Hillary
Clinton get elected. Consortium News
explained back in October 2017 that both
CrowdStrike and Steele were paid for by the
Democratic Party and Clinton campaign to push
Russiagate.
Also missed by the intelligence committee was a
document released by the Senate Judiciary Committee
last month that
revealed that Steele’s “Primary Subsource and
his friends peddled warmed-over rumors and laughable
gossip that Steele dressed up as formal intelligence
memos.”
Smearing WikiLeaks
The Intelligence Committee report also repeats
thoroughly
debunked myths about WikiLeaks and,
like Mueller, the committee made no effort to
interview Julian Assange before launching its
smears. Italian journalist Stefania Maurizi, who
partnered with WikiLeaks in the publication
of the Podesta emails, described the report’s
treatment of WikiLeaks in this Twitter
thread:
2. the description of
#WikiLeaks‘ publishing activities by
this
#SenateIntelligenceCommittee‘s Report
appears a true
#EdgarHoover‘s disinformation
campaign to make a legitimate media org
completely radioactive
3. Clearly, to describe #WikiLeaks and its
publishing activities the #SenateIntelligenceCommittee’s
Report completely rely on #US intelligence
community+ #MikePompeo’s characterisation of
#WikiLeaks. There is not even any pretense
of an independent approach
4. there are also unsubstantiated claims
like:
– “[WikiLeaks’] disclosures have jeopardized
the safety of individual Americans and
foreign allies” (p.200)
– “WikiLeaks has passed information to U.S.
adversaries” (p.201)
5. it’s completely false that “#WikiLeaks
does not seem to weigh whether its
disclosures add any public interest value”
(p.200) and any longtime media partner like
me could provide you dozens of examples on
how wrong this characterisation [is].
Titillating
Mazzetti did add some spice to the version of his
article that dominated the two top right columns of
Wednesday’s Times with the blaring headline:
“Senate Panel Ties Russian Officials to Trump’s
Aides: G.O.P.-Led Committee Echoes Mueller’s
Findings on Election Tampering.”
Those who make it to the end of Mazzetti’s piece
will learn that the Senate committee report “did not
establish” that the Russian government obtained any
compromising material on Mr. Trump or that they
tried to use such materials [that they didn’t have]
as leverage against him.” However, Mazzetti adds,
“According to the report, Mr. Trump met a former
Miss Moscow at a party during one trip in 1996.
After the party, a Trump associate told others
he had seen Mr. Trump with the woman on multiple
occasions and that they ‘might have had a brief
romantic relationship.’
“The report also raised the possibility that,
during that trip, Mr. Trump spent the night with
two young women who joined him the next morning
at a business meeting with the mayor of Moscow.”
This is journalism?
Another Pulitzer in Store?
The Times appends a note reminding us that
Mazzetti was part of a team that won a Pulitzer
Prize in 2018 for reporting on Donald Trump’s
advisers and their connections to Russia.
And that’s not the half of it. In September 2018,
Mazzetti and his NYT colleague Scott Shane wrote a
10,000-word
feature, “The Plot to Subvert an Election,”
trying to convince readers that the Russian Internet
Research Agency (IRA) had successfully swayed U.S.
opinion during the 2016 election with 80,000
Facebook posts that they said had reached 126
million Americans.
That turned out to be a grotesquely deceptive claim.
Mazzetti and Shane failed to mention the
fact that those 80,000 IRA posts (from
early 2015 through 2017, meaning about half came
after the election), had been engulfed in a vast
ocean of more than 33 trillion Facebook posts in
people’s news feeds – 413 million times more than
the IRA posts. Not to mention the lack of evidence
that the IRA was the Russian government, as Mueller
claimed.
In exposing that chicanery, prize-winning
investigative reporter Gareth Porter
commented:
“The descent of The New York Times into this
unprecedented level of propagandizing for the
narrative of Russia’s threat to U.S. democracy
is dramatic evidence of a broader problem of
abuses by corporate media … Greater awareness of
the dishonesty at the heart of the Times’
coverage of that issue is a key to leveraging
media reform and political change.”
Nothingburgers With Russian Dressing: the
Backstory
“It’s too much; it’s just too much, too much”, a
sedated, semi-conscious Robert Parry kept telling me
from his hospital bed in late January 2018 a couple
of days before he died. Bob was founder of
Consortium News.
It was already clear what Bob meant; he had taken
care to see to that. On Dec. 31, 2017 the reason for
saying that came in what he
titled “An Apology & Explanation” for “spotty
production in recent days.” A stroke on Christmas
Eve had left Bob with impaired vision, but he was
able to summon enough strength to write an Apologia
— his vision for honest journalism and his dismay at
what had happened to his profession before he died
on Jan. 27, 2018. The dichotomy was “just too much”.
Parry rued the role that journalism was playing in
the “unrelenting ugliness that has become Official
Washington. … Facts and logic no longer mattered. It
was a case of using whatever you had to diminish and
destroy your opponent … this loss of objective
standards reached deeply into the most prestigious
halls of American media.”
What bothered Bob most was the needless, dishonest
tweaking of the Russian bear. “The U.S. media’s
approach to Russia,” he wrote, “is now virtually 100
percent propaganda. Does any sentient human being
read The New York Times’ or The Washington
Post’s coverage of Russia and think that he or
she is getting a neutral or unbiased treatment of
the facts? … Western journalists now apparently see
it as their patriotic duty to hide facts that
otherwise would undermine the demonizing of Putin
and Russia.”
Parry, who was no conservative, continued:
“Liberals are embracing every negative claim
about Russia just because elements of the CIA,
FBI and National Security Agency produced a
report last Jan. 6 that blamed Russia for
‘hacking’ Democratic emails and releasing them
to WikiLeaks.”
Bob noted that the ‘hand-picked’ authors “evinced no
evidence and even admitted that they weren’t
asserting any of this as fact.”
It was just too much.
Robert Parry’s Last Article
Bob posted his last substantive article on Dec. 13,
2017, the day after text exchanges between senior
FBI officials Peter Strzok and Lisa Page were made
public. (Typically, readers of The New York Times
the following day would altogether
miss the importance of the
text-exchanges.)
Bob Parry rarely felt any need for a “sanity check.”
Dec. 12, 2017 was an exception. He called me about
the Strzok-Page texts; we agreed they were
explosive. FBI Agent Peter Strzok was on Special
Counsel Robert Mueller’s staff investigating alleged
Russian interference, until Mueller removed him.
Strzok reportedly was a “hand-picked” FBI agent
taking part in the Jan 2017 evidence-impoverished,
rump, misnomered “intelligence community” assessment
that blamed Russia for hacking and other election
meddling. And he had helped lead the investigation
into Hillary Clinton’s misuse of her computer
servers. Page was Deputy Director Andrew McCabe’s
right-hand lawyer.
His Dec. 13, 2017
piece would be his fourth related article in
less than two weeks; it turned out to be his last
substantive article. All three of the earlier ones
are worth a re-read as examples of fearless,
unbiased, perceptive journalism. Here
arethelinks.
Bob began his
article on the Strzok-Page bombshell:
“The disclosure of fiercely anti-Trump text
messages between two romantically involved
senior FBI officials who played key roles in the
early Russia-gate inquiry has turned the
supposed Russian-election-meddling “scandal”
into its own scandal, by providing evidence that
some government investigators saw it as their
duty to block or destroy Donald Trump’s
presidency.?
“As much as the U.S. mainstream media has mocked
the idea that an American ‘deep state’ exists
and that it has maneuvered to remove Trump from
office, the text messages between senior FBI
counterintelligence official Peter Strzok and
senior FBI lawyer Lisa Page reveal how two
high-ranking members of the government’s
intelligence/legal bureaucracy saw their role as
protecting the United States from an election
that might elevate to the presidency someone as
unfit as Trump.”
Not a fragment of Bob’s or other Consortium
News analysis made any impact on what Bob
used to call the Establishment media. As a matter of
fact, eight months later during a talk in Seattle
that I titled “Russia-gate: Can You Handle the
Truth?”, only three out of a very progressive
audience of some 150 had ever heard of Strzok and
Page.
And so it goes.
Lest I am accused of being “in Putin’s pocket,” let
me add the explanatory note that we Veteran
Intelligence Professionals for Sanity included in
our
most explosive Memorandum for President Trump,
on “Russian hacking.”
Full Disclosure: Over recent decades the
ethos of our intelligence profession has eroded in
the public mind to the point that agenda-free
analysis is deemed well nigh impossible. Thus, we
add this disclaimer, which applies to everything we
in VIPS say and do: We have no political agenda; our
sole purpose is to spread truth around and, when
necessary, hold to account our former intelligence
colleagues.
We speak and write without fear or favor.
Consequently, any resemblance between what we say
and what presidents, politicians and pundits say is
purely coincidental. The fact we find it is
necessary to include that reminder speaks volumes
about these highly politicized times.
Ray McGovern works with Tell the Word, a
publishing arm of the ecumenical Church of the
Saviour in inner-city Washington. A CIA analyst for
27 years, he served as Chief of the Soviet Foreign
Policy Branch and as a downtown morning briefer of
the President’s Daily Brief. -
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