How
‘New Cold Warriors’ Cornered Trump
The U.S. intelligence community’s extraordinary
campaign of leaks claiming improper ties between
President Trump’s team and Russia seeks to
ensure a lucrative New Cold War by blocking
detente.
By Gareth Porter
February
25, 2017 "Information
Clearing House"
- "Consortium
News" -
Opponents
of the Trump administration have generally
accepted as fact the common theme across
mainstream media that aides to Donald Trump were
involved in some kind of illicit communications
with the Russian government that has compromised
the independence of the administration from
Russian influence.
But
close analysis of the entire series of leaks
reveals something else that is equally sinister
in its implications: an unprecedented campaign
by Obama administration intelligence officials,
relying on innuendo rather than evidence, to
exert pressure on Trump to abandon any idea of
ending the New Cold War and to boost the
campaign to impeach Trump.
A
brazen and unprecedented intervention in
domestic U.S. politics by the intelligence
community established the basic premise of the
cascade of leaks about alleged Trump aides’
shady dealing with Russia. Led by CIA Director
John Brennan, the CIA, FBI and NSA issued a
25-page assessment
on Jan. 6 asserting for the first time that
Russia had sought to help Trump win the
election.
Brennan had circulated a CIA memo concluding
that Russia had favored Trump and had
told CIA staff
that he had met separately with Director of
National Intelligence James Clapper and FBI
Director James Comey and that they had agreed on
the “scope, nature and intent of Russian
interference in our presidential election.”
In the
end, however, Clapper refused to associate
himself with the document and the NSA, which
agreed to do so, was only willing to express
“moderate confidence” in the judgment that the
Kremlin had sought to help Trump in the
election. In intelligence community parlance,
that meant that the NSA considered the idea the
Kremlin was working to elect Trump was merely
plausible, not actually supported by reliable
evidence.
In
fact, the intelligence community had not even
obtained evidence that Russia was behind the
publication by Wikileaks of the e-mails
Democratic National Committee, much less that it
had done so with the intention of electing
Trump. Clapper had testified before Congress in
mid-November and again in December that the
intelligence community did not know who had
provided the e-mails to WikiLeaks and when they
were provided.
The
claim – by Brennan with the support of Comey –
that Russia had “aspired” to help Trump’s
election prospects was not a normal intelligence
community assessment but an extraordinary
exercise of power by Brennan, Comey and NSA
Director Mike Rogers.
Brennan and his allies were not merely providing
a professional assessment of the election, as
was revealed by their embrace of the the dubious
dossier
compiled by a private intelligence firm
hired by one of Trump’s Republican opponents and
later by the Clinton campaign for the specific
purpose of finding evidence of illicit links
between Trump and the Putin regime.
Salacious
Gossip
When the three intelligence agencies gave the
classified version of their report to senior
administration officials in January they
appended a two-page summary
of the juiciest bits from that dossier –
including claims that Russian intelligence had
compromising information about Trump’s personal
behavior while visiting Russia. The dossier was
sent, along with the assessment that Russia was
seeking to help Trump get elected, to senior
administration officials as well as selected
Congressional leaders.
Among
the claims in the private intelligence dossier
that was summarized for policymakers was the
allegation of a deal between the Trump campaign
and the Putin government involving full Trump
knowledge of the Russian election help and a
Trump pledge – months before the election – to
sideline the Ukraine issue once in office. The
allegation – devoid of any verifiable
information – came entirely from an unidentified
“Russian emigre” claiming to be a Trump insider,
without any evidence provided of the source’s
actual relationship to the Trump camp or of his
credibility as a source.
After the story of the
two-page summary leaked
to the press,
Clapper publicly expressed “profound dismay”
about the leak
and said the intelligence community “has not
made any judgment that the information in this
document is reliable,” nor did it rely on it any
way for our conclusions.”
One
would expect that acknowledgment to be followed
by an admission that he should not have
circulated it outside the intelligence community
at all. But instead Clapper then justified
having passed on the summary as providing
policymakers with “the fullest possible picture
of any matters that might affect national
security.”
By that
time, U.S. intelligence agencies had been in
possession of the material in the dossier for
several months. It was their job to verify the
information before bringing it to the attention
of policymakers.
A
former U.S. intelligence official with decades
of experience dealing with the CIA as well other
intelligence agencies, who insisted on anonymity
because he still has dealings with U.S.
government agencies, told this writer that he
had never heard of the intelligence agencies
making public unverified information on a U.S.
citizen.
“The
CIA has never played such a open political
role,” he said.
The CIA
has often tilted its intelligence assessment
related to a potential adversary in the
direction desired by the White House or the
Pentagon and the Joint Chiefs of Staff, but this
is the first time that such a slanted report
impinges not only on domestic politics but is
directed at the President himself.
The
egregious triple abuse of the power in
publishing a highly partisan opinion on Russia
and Trump’s election, appending raw and
unverified private allegations impugning Trump’s
loyalty and then leaking that fact to the media
begs the question of motive. Brennan, who
initiated the whole effort, was clearly
determined to warn Trump not to reverse the
policy toward Russia to which the CIA and other
national security organizations were firmly
committed.
A
few days after the leak of the two-page summary,
Brennan publicly warned
Trump about his policy toward Russia. In an
interview on Fox News, he said, “I think Mr.
Trump has to understand that absolving Russia of
various actions that it’s taken in the past
number of years is a road that he, I think,
needs to be very, very careful about moving
down.”
Graham
Fuller, who was a CIA operations officer for 20
years and was also National Intelligence Officer
for the Middle East for four years in the Reagan
administration, observed in an e-mail, that
Brennan, Clapper and Comey “might legitimately
fear Trump as a loose cannon on the national
scene,” but they are also “dismayed at any
prospect that the official narrative against
Russia could start falling apart under Trump,
and want to maintain the image of constant and
dangerous Russian intervention into affairs of
state.”
Flynn in
the Bull’s Eye
As
Trump’s National Security Adviser, Michael Flynn
presented an easy target for a campaign to
portray the Trump team as being in Putin’s
pocket. He had already drawn heavy criticism not
only by attending a Moscow event celebrating the
Russian television RT in 2016 but sitting next
to Putin and accepting a fee for speaking at the
event. More importantly, however, Flynn had
argued that the United States and Russia could
and should cooperate in their common interest of
defeating Islamic State militants.
That idea was anathema to the Pentagon and the
CIA. Obama’s Defense Secretary Ashton Carter had
attacked Secretary of State John Kerry’s
negotiating a Syrian ceasefire that included a
provision for coordination of efforts against
Islamic State. The official investigation of the
U.S. attack on Syrian forces on Sept. 17
turned up evidence
that CENTCOM had deliberately targeted the
Syrian military sites with the intention of
sabotaging the ceasefire agreement.
The campaign to bring down Flynn began with a
leak from a “senior U.S. government official”
to Washington Post columnist David Ignatius
about the now-famous phone conversation between
Flynn and Russian Ambassador Sergei Kislyak on
Dec. 29. In his column on the leak, Ignatius
avoided making any explicit claim about the
conversation. Instead, he asked “What did Flynn
say, and did it undercut the U.S. sanctions?”
And
referring to the Logan Act, the 1799 law
forbidding a private citizen from communicating
with a foreign government to influence a
“dispute” with the United States, Ignatius
asked, “Was its spirit violated?”
The
implications of the coy revelation of the Flynn
conversation with Kislyak were far-reaching. Any
interception of a communication by the NSA or
the FBI has always been considered one of the
most highly classified secrets in the U.S.
intelligence universe of secrets. And officers
have long been under orders to protect the name
of any American involved in any such intercepted
communication at all costs.
But the
senior official who leaked the story of
Flynn-Kislyak conversation to Ignatius –
obviously for a domestic political purpose – did
not feel bound by any such rule. That leak was
the first move in a concerted campaign of using
such leaks to suggest that Flynn had discussed
the Obama administration’s sanctions with
Kislyak in an effort to undermine Obama
administration policy.
The revelation brought a series of articles
about denials by the Trump transition team,
including Vice President-elect Mike Pence, that
Flynn had, in fact, discussed sanctions with
Kislyak and continued suspicions that Trump’s
aides were covering up the truth. But the day
after Trump was inaugurated,
the Post itself reported
that the FBI had begun in late December go back
over all communications between Flynn and
Russian officials and “had not found evidence of
wrongdoing or illicit ties to the Russian
government….”
Two weeks later, however, the Post reversed its
coverage of the issue,
publishing a story
citing “nine current and former officials, who
were in senior positions at multiple agencies at
the time of the calls,” as saying that Flynn had
“discussed sanctions” with Kislyak.
The
story said Flynn’s conversation with Kislyak was
“interpreted by some senior U.S. officials as an
inappropriate and potentially illegal signal to
the Kremlin that it could expect a reprieve from
sanctions that were being imposed by the Obama
administration in late December to punish Russia
for its alleged interference in the 2016
election.”
The
Post did not refer to its own previous reporting
of the FBI’s unambiguous view contradicting that
claim, which suggested strongly that the FBI was
trying to head off a plan by Brennan and Clapper
to target Flynn. But it did include a crucial
caveat on the phrase “discussed sanctions” that
few readers would have noticed. It revealed that
the phrase was actually an “interpretation” of
the language that Flynn had used. In other
words, what Flynn actually said was not
necessarily a literal reference to sanctions at
all.
Only a few days later, the Post
reported a new development:
Flynn had been interviewed by the FBI on Jan. 24
– four days after Trump’s inauguration – and had
denied that he discussed sanctions in the
conversation. But prosecutors were not planning
to charge Flynn with lying, according to several
officials, in part because they believed he
would be able to “parse the definition of the
word ‘sanctions’.” That implied that the
exchange was actually focused not on sanctions
per se but on the expulsion of the Russian
diplomats.
Just hours before his resignation on Feb. 13,
Flynn
claimed in an interview
with the Daily Caller that he had indeed
referred only to the expulsion of the Russian
diplomats.
“It
wasn’t about sanctions. It was about the 35 guys
who were thrown out,” Flynn said. “It was
basically, ‘Look, I know this happened. We’ll
review everything.’ I never said anything such
as, ‘We’re going to review sanctions,’ or
anything like that.”
The
Russian Blackmail Ploy
Even as
the story of the Flynn’s alleged transgression
in the conversation with the Russian Ambassador
was becoming a political crisis for Donald
Trump, yet another leaked story surfaced that
appeared to reveal a shocking new level of the
Trump administration’s weakness toward Russia.
The Post
reported on
Feb. 13 that Acting Attorney General Sally
Yates, an Obama holdover, had decided in late
January – after discussions with Brennan,
Clapper and FBI Director James Comey in the last
days of the Obama administration – to inform the
White House Counsel Donald McGahn in late
January that Flynn had lied to other Trump
administration officials – including Vice
President Mike Pence – in denying that he
discussed sanctions with Kislyak. The Post cited
“current and former officials” as the sources.
That
story, repeated and amplified by many other news
media, led to Flynn’s downfall later that same
day. But like all of the other related leaks,
the story revealed more about the aims of the
leakers than about links between Trump’s team
and Russia.
The
centerpiece of the new leak was that the former
Obama administration officials named in the
story had feared that “Flynn put himself in a
compromising position” in regard to his account
of the conversation with Kislyak to Trump
members of the Trump transition.
Yates
had told the White House that Flynn might be
vulnerable to Russian blackmail because of the
discrepancies between his conversation with the
Ambassador and his story to Pence, according to
the Post story.
But
once again the impression created by the leak
was very different from the reality behind it.
The idea that Flynn had exposed himself to a
potential Russian blackmail threat by failing to
tell Pence exactly what had transpired in the
conversation was fanciful in the extreme.
Even
assuming that Flynn had flatly lied to Pence
about what he had said in the meeting – which
was evidently not the case – it would not have
given the Russians something to hold over Flynn,
first because it was already revealed publicly
and second, because the Russian interest was to
cooperate with the new administration.
The ex-Obama
administration leakers were obviously citing
that clumsy (and preposterous) argument as an
excuse to intervene in the internal affairs of
the new administration. The Post’s sources also
claimed that “Pence had a right to know that he
had been misled….” True or not, it was, of
course, none of their business.
Pity for
Pence
The
professed concern of the Intelligence Community
and Justice Department officials that Pence
deserved the full story from Flynn was obviously
based on political considerations, not some
legal principle. Pence was a known supporter of
the New Cold War with Russia, so the tender
concern for Pence not being treated nicely
coincided with a strategy of dividing the new
administration along the lines of policy toward
Russia.
All
indications are that Trump and other insiders
knew from the beginning exactly what Flynn had
actually said in the conversation, but that
Flynn had given Pence a flat denial about
discussing sanctions without further details.
On Feb.
13, when Trump was still trying to save Flynn,
the National Security Adviser apologized to
Pence for “inadvertently” having failed to give
him a complete account, including his reference
to the expulsion of the Russian diplomats. But
that was not enough to save Flynn’s job.
The
divide-and-conquer strategy, which led to
Flynn’s ouster, was made effective because the
leakers had already created a political
atmosphere of great suspicion about Flynn and
the Trump White House as having had illicit
dealings with the Russians. The normally
pugnacious Trump chose not to respond to the
campaign of leaks with a detailed, concerted
defense. Instead, he sacrificed Flynn before the
end of the very day the Flynn “blackmail” story
was published.
But
Trump’s appears to have underestimated the
ambitions of the leakers. The campaign against
Flynn had been calculated in part to weaken the
Trump administration and ensure that the new
administration would not dare to reverse the
hardline policy of constant pressure on Putin’s
Russia.
Many in
Washington’s political elite celebrated the fall
of Flynn as a turning point in the struggle to
maintain the existing policy orientation toward
Russia. The day after Flynn was fired the Post’s
national political correspondent, James Hohmann,
wrote that the Flynn “imbroglio” would now make
it “politically untenable for Trump to scale
back sanctions to Moscow” because the “political
blowback from hawkish Republicans in Congress
would be too intense….”
But the
ultimate target of the campaign was Trump
himself. As neoconservative journalist Eli Lake
put it, “Flynn is only the appetizer. Trump is
the entree.”
Susan Hennessey, a well-connected former lawyer
in the National Security Agency’s Office of
General Counsel who writes the “Lawfare” blog at
the Brookings Institution, agreed. “Trump may
think Flynn is the sacrificial lamb,” she
told The Guardian,
“but the reality is that he is the first domino.
To the extent the administration believes
Flynn’s resignation will make the Russia story
go away, they are mistaken.”
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The Phony
“Constant Contacts” Story
No
sooner had Flynn’s firing been announced than
the next phase of the campaign of leaks over
Trump and Russia began. On Feb. 14, CNN and the
New York Times published slight variants of the
same apparently scandalous story of numerous
contacts between multiple members of the Trump
camp with the Russian at the very time the
Russians were allegedly acting to influence the
election.
There
was little subtlety in how mainstream media
outlets made their point. CNN’s headline was,
“Trump aides were in constant touch with senior
Russian officials during campaign.” The Times
headline was even more sensational: “Trump
Campaign Aides Had Repeated Contacts with
Russian Intelligence.”
But the
attentive reader would soon discover that the
stories did not reflect those headlines. In the
very first paragraph of the CNN story, those
“senior Russian officials” became “Russians
known to U.S. intelligence,” meaning that it
included a wide range Russians who are not
officials at all but known or suspected
intelligence operatives in business and other
sectors of society monitored by U.S.
intelligence. A Trump associate dealing with
such individuals would have no idea, of course,
that they are working for Russian intelligence.
The
Times story, on the other hand, referred to the
Russians with whom Trump aides were said to be
in contact last year as “senior Russian
intelligence officials,” apparently glossing
over a crucial distinction that sources had had
made to CNN between intelligence officials and
Russians being monitored by U.S. intelligence.
But the
Times story acknowledged that the Russian
contacts also included government officials who
were not intelligence officials and that the
contacts had been made not only by Trump
campaign officials but also associates of Trump
who had done business in Russia. It further
acknowledged it was “not unusual” for American
business to come in contact with foreign
intelligence officials, sometimes unwittingly in
Russia and Ukraine, where “spy services are
deeply embedded in society.”
Even
more important, however, the Times story made it
clear that the intelligence community was
seeking evidence that Trump’s aides or
associates were colluding with the Russians on
the alleged Russian effort to influence the
election, but that it had found no evidence of
any such collusion. CNN failed to report that
crucial element of the story.
The
headlines and lead paragraphs of both stories,
therefore, should have conveyed the real story:
that the intelligence community had sought
evidence of collusion by Trump aides with Russia
but had not found it several months after
reviewing the intercepted conversations and
other intelligence.
Unwitting
Allies of the War Complex?
Former
CIA Director Brennan and other former Obama
administration intelligence officials have used
their power to lead a large part of the public
to believe that Trump had conducted suspicious
contacts with Russian officials without having
the slightest evidence to support the contention
that such contacts represent a serious threat to
the integrity of the U.S. political process.
Many
people who oppose Trump for other valid reasons
have seized on the shaky Russian accusations
because they represent the best possibility for
ousting Trump from power. But ignoring the
motives and the dishonesty behind the campaign
of leaks has far-reaching political
implications. Not only does it help to establish
a precedent for U.S. intelligence agencies to
intervene in domestic politics, as happens in
authoritarian regimes all over the world, it
also strengthens the hand of the military and
intelligence bureaucracies who are determined to
maintain the New Cold War with Russia.
Those
war bureaucracies view the conflict with Russia
as key to the continuation of higher levels of
military spending and the more aggressive NATO
policy in Europe that has already generated a
gusher of arms sales that benefits the Pentagon
and its self-dealing officials.
Progressives in the anti-Trump movement are in
danger of becoming an unwitting ally of those
military and intelligence bureaucracies despite
the fundamental conflict between their economic
and political interests and the desires of
people who care about peace, social justice and
the environment.
Gareth Porter is an independent
investigative journalist and winner of the 2012
Gellhorn Prize for journalism. He is the author
of the newly published Manufactured
Crisis: The Untold Story of the Iran Nuclear
Scare.