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Trump Aided and Abetted Russia’s Attack. That Was Treachery. Full Stop. The scandal may not be a crime. It’s a betrayal.

  

Category:  Op/Ed

Via:  john-russell  •  6 years ago  •  44 comments

Trump Aided and Abetted Russia’s Attack. That Was Treachery. Full Stop.  The scandal may not be a crime. It’s a betrayal.
Trump committed what is probably the most significant political misdeed in American history. The public did not need the Mueller report to confirm this. The foundation of this scandal—Trump’s villainy—has for long resided within plain sight. 

S E E D E D   C O N T E N T



David Corn has all this material on the tip of his tongue. This is an excellent one stop shopping analysis of the Russia Trump scandal. When laid out with this clarity, it becomes obvious that trump betrayed the country. 

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Trump Aided and Abetted Russia’s Attack. That Was Treachery. Full Stop.


The scandal may not be a crime. It’s a betrayal.


On Sunday afternoon Attorney General William Barr sent a letter to Congress noting that Special Counsel Robert Mueller’s investigation “did not establish that members of the Trump Campaign conspired or coordinated with the Russian government in its election interference activities.” The message also noted that Mueller could not exonerate President Donald Trump of obstruction of justice, but that Barr himself had decided that the evidence Mueller developed was “insufficient to establish” that Trump had obstructed justice. Trump proclaimed it was “complete and total exoneration.” And Trump champions popped the cork and declared case closed, nothing to see, end of story, no need for further investigation, Trump did no wrong. 

Well, that is fake news. 

Barr’s note is clear that Mueller did not uncover evidence Trump and his gang were in direct cahoots with Russia’s covert operation to interfere with the US election and boost Trump’s odds. But the hyper-focus on this sort of collusion—as if Trump instructed Russian hackers on how to penetrate the computer network of the Democratic National Committee—has always diverted attention from a basic and important element of the scandal that was proven long before Mueller drafted his final report: Trump and his lieutenants interacted with Russia while Putin was attacking the 2016 election and provided encouraging signals to the Kremlin as it sought to subvert American democracy. They aided and abetted Moscow’s attempt to cover up its assault on the United States (which aimed to help Trump win the White House). And they lied about all this.

And, yes, there were instances of collusion—not on the specifics of the attack, but secret scheming between Trumpworld and Russia.

None of the evidence underlying this is in dispute. No matter what Mueller report contains, a harsh verdict remains: Trump and his gang betrayed the United States in the greatest scandal in American history. 

The Moscow Project


Let’s start with Trump. Shortly after he leaped into the 2016 contest, Trump began pursuing a grand project in Moscow: a sky-high tower bearing his name. It could reap him hundreds of millions of dollars. His fixer,  Michael Cohen, was the Trump Organization’s point man in the negotiations.

Trump signed a letter of intent, and the talks went on for months through the fall of 2015 and the first half of 2016. At one point, Cohen spoke to an official in Putin’s office, seeking help for the venture. And throughout this period, Trump the candidate, when asked for his opinions on Russia and Putin, issued curiously positive remarks about the thuggish and autocratic Russian leader.

Trump willingly placed himself at the mercy of a foreign adversary—as it was preparing a covert operation to corrupt an American election.

Trump also claimed throughout the campaign that he had nothing to do with Russia—no business there, nothing. And when he was asked whether he knew Felix Sater, a wheeling-dealing developer and one-time felon who was the middleman for the Moscow project negotiations, Trump claimed he was “not that familiar with him.”

That was a lie. 

The Moscow deal did fizzle at some point, but Trump had engaged in the the most significant conflict of interest in modern American politics. He was making positive statements about Putin on the campaign trail, at the same time he needed support from the Russian government for his project. Yet he hid this conflict from American voters and lied to keep it secret. (After the election, Cohen lied to Congress about this project to protect Trump, and that’s one reason Cohen is soon heading to prison.)

It’s deplorable that a presidential candidate would double-deal in this manner and deceive the public—insisting he was an America First candidate, while pursuing a secret agenda overseas to enrich himself. But Trump’s duplicity also compromised him.

Putin and the Russians obviously knew about this deal Trump was hiding from American voters. So at any time they could reveal it and expose Trump’s mendacity. He willingly placed himself at the mercy of a foreign adversary—as it was preparing a covert operation to corrupt an American election. And Trump literally and secretly signaled to the Kremlin—which was still facing harsh economic sanctions for Putin’s intervention in Ukraine—that he wanted to do business with it. Trump was betraying the public trust before being elected.

The Trump Tower Meeting


The betrayal continued after Trump became the de facto presidential nominee of the Republican Party. On June 9, 2016, Trump’s three most senior advisers—Donald Trump Jr., Paul Manafort, and Jared Kushner—met with a Russian emissary in the Trump Tower in New York City. They had been informed that she would deliver them dirt on Hillary Clinton and that this was part of a secret Kremlin initiative to assist the Trump campaign.

The meeting, the Trump team has claimed, was a bust. There was no useful derogatory information. But by this point, the Russians had already stolen tens of thousands of emails and documents from Democratic targets and were, no doubt, pondering what to do with the swiped material. This meeting was another signal conveyed to Moscow: the Trump crew didn’t mind Russian meddling in the election and was even willing to covertly collaborate with Russia on dirty tricks.

Thus, Trump’s top men were encouraging a repressive regime to clandestinely intervene in American politics. And when this meeting was revealed, long after the election, Trump concocted a false cover story for Trump Jr. to issue: this get-together had been nothing more than a conversation about the issue of adoption in Russia. Why did they lie? It seems obvious: to cover up significant misconduct. 

The Hacked Emails


Trump’s collusion with Putin’s office regarding his secret Moscow deal and the Trump advisers attempt to collude with a secret Russian scheme to help their campaign were not directly related to the hack-and-dump operation mounted by Russia that targeted the Democratic Party and the Clinton campaign. Yet when that attack happened, the Trump camp did openly assist the Kremlin by denying this assault was underway.

After more than 20,000 emails and documents stolen by Russian hackers were released by WikiLeaks at the start of the Democrats’ presidential convention in July 2016, the Clinton campaign pushed the point that its candidate—and the American election—was being assaulted by Moscow. In response, Trump Jr. and Manafort publicly proclaimed this was nonsense and a lie being promoted by the Clintonites for political gain. (A month earlier, when the Democratic Party revealed it had been hacked by Russia, the Trump campaign accused them of cooking up a hoax.) 

If anyone had reason to believe the Russians were behind an operation seeking to disrupt the Democratic convention, it was Trump Jr. and Manafort. With the Trump Tower meeting the previous month, they had been informed Moscow was aiming to intervene in the election to harm Clinton and help Trump. And the Russians were presumably aware that Trump’s inner circle knew this. With their false denials, Trump Jr. and Manafort were assisting the Moscow cover-up. (The Russian government was claiming it had nothing to do with the hack-and-dump operation.) How else could the Russians interpret the actions of the Trump campaign other than as further encouragement and a sign of approval?

Not to mention that at this time, Trump himself publicly called on Russia to keep hacking: “Russia, if you’re listening, I hope you’re able to find the 30,000 [Clinton] emails that are missing.” That night, according to a Mueller indictment, Russian hackers for the first time tried to penetrate Clinton’s personal email. They knew to take a hint. 

By echoing Russian disinformation—after being informed the Kremlin intended to mess with the presidential campaign  to assist Trump—the Trump campaign was making it easier for a foreign power to undermine a US election.

The Colluders


And there’s more: as this attack proceeded, the Trump campaign kept trying to secretly engage with Russia and Russian interests. The Mueller indictment of George Papadopoulos—the Trump campaign foreign policy adviser who met with various Russian cut-outs and who was told that Moscow had dirt on Clinton in the form of thousands of purloined emails—noted that during the summer 2016 he was trying to establish a back-channel connection between the campaign and Putin’s office. And Papadopoulos was doing this with the approval of senior campaign aides. Here was another clear signal to the Kremlin: Trump and his team had no problem with the Russian attack on the election and still desired a secret hook-up with Moscow. There was no need for Trump to conspire directly with Putin. He and his campaign were repeatedly flashing a green light at Moscow and aiding the Russian cover-up. 

Manafort, though, was directly conspiring . With Russians, including a Russian oligarch. On August 2, Manafort took time away from his duties as Trump’s campaign manager to meet at a ritzy cigar bar in Manhattan with Konstantin Kilimnik, a longtime Ukrainian-Russian business colleague who, according to several Mueller court filings, has been assessed by the FBI to be an associate of Russian intelligence.

Though much of the details about this meeting have been redacted in the relevant court filings, it seems that the rendezvous was arranged at the behest of Oleg Deripaska, a Putin-friendly Russian oligarch. At this get-together, Manafort supplied Kilimnik polling data from the campaign. (Kilimnik, according to the New York Times,  subsequently passed this information to two Ukrainian oligarchs, and it’s unclear if he shared it with others.)

Hobnobbing with the enemy, lying about it, and bolstering Moscow’s cover-up. Then Trump took it up a notch.

At this meeting, the two discussed a supposed peace plan for Ukraine that would benefit Russia. And what’s known about the meeting suggests that Manafort was signaling to the Russians that the Trump campaign was amenable to a policy that would lift the harsh economic sanctions imposed on Russia. 

This meeting was occurring at a time when cybersecurity experts and American intelligence officials were being cited in news reports saying Russia was behind the cyberwarfare being waged against Democratic targets. Any private sign from Manafort that Trump was indeed keen to remove the sanctions—a position that Trump had publicly demonstrated sympathy for—would provide more encouragement for the Russians. (A week or so before this meeting, Manafort had declared he had no connections with Russians, which was a lie: throughout the campaign he used Kilimnik to communicate with Deripaska, with whom he had done business for a decade.)

Hobnobbing with the enemy, lying about it, and bolstering Moscow’s cover-up. Then Trump took it up a notch.

In mid-August, as the official GOP nominee, Trump received a classified intelligence briefing that included the intelligence community’s assessment that Moscow was the perp in the hack-and-dump operation. Yet for the rest of the campaign, Trump repeatedly downplayed or denied Russian involvement. He did this in public statements and at the debates.

This stance turned Putin’s attack into a political dispute. Top Republicans (and Trump-cheering pundits in the media) generally followed his lead and declined to rally against the Russian assault. This prevented the coalescing of a focused national response to Putin’s war on the election. 

A candidate seeking the job of defending the United States was facilitating an attack on the nation.

That helped the Russians. Perhaps it emboldened them. On October 7, 2016, the Obama administration released a statement declaring Moscow culpable for the cyber-attacks on the Democrats. An hour or so later, the Access Hollywood video of Trump boasting of sexually assaulting women appeared. And shortly after that, WikiLeaks began releasing the personal emails of Clinton campaign chair John Podesta that were stolen by Russian operatives. For weeks, WikiLeaks dumped a new tranche of Podesta emails on practically a daily basis and hobbled the Clinton campaign in the final stretch of the race. 

Despite this attack and the official Obama announcement, Trump stuck to his false line: the Russians should not be held accountable. An overseas foe was striving mightily to undermine a US election. Trump had been told this privately by US intelligence, and the US government had issued a public declaration. Yet Trump echoed and amplified Moscow’s denials. He was siding with the enemy.

A candidate seeking the job of defending the United States was facilitating an attack on the nation. And after winning the White House, Trump would keep on protecting Putin by dismissing Russian involvement and the significance of the attack.

If neither Trump nor a Trump emissary communicated explicitly with the Russians about the specifics of the operation, that is not the end of this scandal. Trump knew the attack was happening, and he helped. So, too, did Donald Trump Jr. and Manafort—and probably others within the campaign. This is the core of the Trump-Russia scandal.

By asserting that the issue is only whether or not he directly colluded with the Kremlin plot, Trump has diverted attention from the fact that he facilitated an assault on his own country. That may or may not have been illegal. But it was betrayal. It was treachery. 

Mueller’s job was to seek out possible crimes to prosecute. It was not to evaluate actions that did not rise to the level of criminality. Nor was it his charge to tell the public the whole truth.

Yet so much of the truth is already out there. And the bottom line was established before Mueller submitted his report: Trump committed what is probably the most significant political misdeed in American history. The public did not need the Mueller report to confirm this. The foundation of this scandal—Trump’s villainy—has for long resided within plain sight. 


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JohnRussell
Professor Principal
1  seeder  JohnRussell    6 years ago
Trump had engaged in the the most significant conflict of interest in modern American politics. He was making positive statements about Putin on the campaign trail, at the same time he needed support from the Russian government for his project. Yet he hid this conflict from American voters and lied to keep it secret. (After the election, Cohen lied to Congress about this project to protect Trump, and that’s one reason Cohen is soon heading to prison.)

It’s deplorable that a presidential candidate would double-deal in this manner and deceive the public—insisting he was an America First candidate, while pursuing a secret agenda overseas to enrich himself. But Trump’s duplicity also compromised him.

Putin and the Russians obviously knew about this deal Trump was hiding from American voters. So at any time they could reveal it and expose Trump’s mendacity. He willingly placed himself at the mercy of a foreign adversary—as it was preparing a covert operation to corrupt an American election.

Plain and known truth, and an impeachable offense. 

 
 
 
JohnRussell
Professor Principal
3  seeder  JohnRussell    6 years ago

This is nutty as hell

USAToday (United States) 03/25/2019 19:16
0 views
Donald Trump Jr., the president's eldest son, fired off a number of tweets attacking Schiff, even using the hastag "#FullOfSchiff.
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Trumpsters in his inner circle are calling for Adam Schiff to resign his committee chairmanship for "lying" about purported evidence of collusion. 
They want Schiff to resign for the crime of lying. What should be done to Don Jr's dad then , if "lying " is the basis for punishment?  Throw him off the roof of Trump Tower? 
 
 
 
JohnRussell
Professor Principal
4  seeder  JohnRussell    6 years ago

Rep. Mo Brooks compares Democrats, media to Hitler

Updated Mar 25, 2:55 PM ; Posted Mar 25, 12:43 PM

In a speech Monday on the floor of the U.S. House of Representatives, Congressman Mo Brooks quoted Adolf Hitler to describe the attacks President Trump faced from “socialist Democrats and their fake news media allies” during the Mueller investigation.

Brooks’ comments came less than 24 hours after the release of a summary of Mueller’s report probing potential Trump conspiracy to work with the Russian government to influence the 2016 election. Mueller’s report found no such collusion.

"For more than two years, Socialist Democrats and their fake news media allies -- CNN, MSNBC, the New York Times, Washington Post, and countless others -- have perpetrated the biggest political lie, con, scam and fraud in American history," Brooks, R-Huntsville, said in the speech.

"Attorney General (William) Barr’s executive summary of Mueller’s Report has publicly confirmed what many of us have known for a long time. The accusations of collusion between President Trump and Russia in the 2016 elections are nothing but a Big Lie!"

Hitler wrote about the "Big Lie" in his book "Mein Kampf."

And Brooks said he expected more "big lies" from Trump opponents despite the special counsel investigation clearing him of collusion. The report left open the question of obstruction of justice by Trump, saying it did not find he committed a crime but did not exonerate him.

But more "big lies," Brooks said, would be consistent in following Hitler's philosophy.

"More likely, however, (Trump opponents) will double down and propagate even more Big Lies because doubling down is essential to 'Big Lie' theory," Brooks said. "In that vein, I quote from another Socialist who mastered 'Big Lie' propaganda to maximum, and deadly, effect."

Brooks then quoted the following excerpt from Hitler's book:

“In the big lie, there is always a certain force of credibility; because the broad masses of a nation are always more easily corrupted in the deeper strata of their emotional nature than consciously or voluntarily; and thus in the primitive simplicity of their minds they more readily fall victims to the big lie than the small lie, since they themselves often tell small lies in little matters but would be ashamed to resort to large-scale falsehoods.”

“It would never come into their heads to fabricate colossal untruths, and they would not believe that others could have the impudence to distort the truth so infamously. Even though the facts which prove this to be so may be brought clearly to their minds, they will still doubt and waver and will continue to think that there may be some other explanation."

Brooks cited an English translation by James Murphy for the “Mein Kampf” excerpt.

"America can either learn from history or be doomed to repeat it," Brooks said in concluding his speech. "When it comes to 'Big Lie' political propaganda in America, as the Mueller report confirms, America’s Socialists and their fake news media allies are experts and have no peers.

 
 
 
JohnRussell
Professor Principal
5  seeder  JohnRussell    6 years ago

What a moron. This jackass unquestionably supports the biggest liar in the history of American politics every day. 

 
 
 
1stwarrior
Professor Participates
6  1stwarrior    6 years ago

384

 
 
 
Tacos!
Professor Guide
7  Tacos!    6 years ago

This is so loony. My first thought was that this level of denial borders on some kind of psychosis, but honestly, I think that's giving the writer too much credit. He can't really, honestly believe all this stuff. It's more likely that he's just so unwilling to accept Trump as president that he - and many others, I suppose - will say and/or accept any idea that could lead to impeachment, no matter how absurd or silly. That is, it's partisanship, not honest paranoia.

 
 
 
JohnRussell
Professor Principal
7.1  seeder  JohnRussell  replied to  Tacos! @7    6 years ago

I would say I'm worried about Trump supporters ability to connect with reality but we are really far past that. 

Everything in this article is a recitation of information that is in the public sphere. None of it is based on the dossier. To call it "loony is, well super looney. 

As far as accepting Trump as president, why should anyone? He's a pathological liar. 

Just in this one article

He lied about having dealings with Russia.

He lied about not being able to recognize, or even knowing Felix Sater. (Sater was a business associate who for a time had an office a short walk down the hall  from Trump's, on the 26th floor of Trump Tower)

He lied about the Trump Tower meeting with the Russians, trying to cover up the real purpose of the meeting. 

He lied about none of his campaign officials having met with Russians. 

These are all facts, not conjecture. 

He's not fit to be president of the United States. Accept him? lol. 

 
 
 
Tacos!
Professor Guide
7.1.1  Tacos!  replied to  JohnRussell @7.1    6 years ago
As far as accepting Trump as president, why should anyone?

Because he was legally elected, that's why. You either respect our system of laws or you don't. Apparently, you don't.

 
 
 
Iamak47
Freshman Silent
7.2  Iamak47  replied to  Tacos! @7    6 years ago
This is so loony. My first thought was that this level of denial borders on some kind of psychosis

We’ve seen this sort of thing for years.  It was most evident during the George Zimmerman/ Darren Wilson era.  There is a good chunk of the population who will NEVER accept that they defended themselves despite in depth investigations.  Kinda the opposite of “hero worship”.  Some people simply will not give up on their villains.......they have too much invested.

 
 
 
Ed-NavDoc
Professor Quiet
8  Ed-NavDoc    6 years ago

All paranoid innuendos with no solid facts or proof to back it up.

 
 
 
JohnRussell
Professor Principal
8.1  seeder  JohnRussell  replied to  Ed-NavDoc @8    6 years ago

All you are doing is signaling that you have not followed this story over the months, and now years. Most of what is in this article is common knowledge at this point for people who have been paying attention. 

 
 
 
Ed-NavDoc
Professor Quiet
8.1.1  Ed-NavDoc  replied to  JohnRussell @8.1    6 years ago

And all you are doing is deflecting because you know that what I said is true. You produced no factual evidence in your post to back yourself up.

 
 
 
It Is ME
Masters Guide
9  It Is ME    6 years ago

And "Bush" took down the "twin Towers" !

jrSmiley_10_smiley_image.gif

Does this type political shit ever stop ? jrSmiley_32_smiley_image.gif

 
 
 
Jack_TX
Professor Quiet
9.1  Jack_TX  replied to  It Is ME @9    6 years ago
Does this type political shit ever stop ?

You're not going to like the answer to that question.

 
 
 
It Is ME
Masters Guide
9.1.1  It Is ME  replied to  Jack_TX @9.1    6 years ago
You're not going to like the answer to that question.

I wouldn't be "Shocked" though. 

 
 
 
Jack_TX
Professor Quiet
9.1.2  Jack_TX  replied to  It Is ME @9.1.1    6 years ago
I wouldn't be "Shocked" though.

No....I doubt very much that you would be even mildly surprised.

 
 

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