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U.S. Intelligence: GOP Is Accepting Russian Help for Trump

  

Category:  News & Politics

Via:  jbb  •  4 years ago  •  17 comments

By:   Jonathan Chait (Intelligencer)

U.S. Intelligence: GOP Is Accepting Russian Help for Trump
Counterintelligence director William Evanina published a warning that Russia is actively working to help reelect Trump. Its method is to spread information appearing to denigrate Joe Biden to Republican sources. Senator Ron Johnson is cooperating.

S E E D E D   C O N T E N T



Photo: Samuel Corum/Getty Images

Two weeks ago, William Evanina, director of the United States National Counterintelligence and Security Center, published a somewhat vague warning about various forms of foreign interference in the upcoming election. On Friday, he followed up with a more direct and incriminating one, specifically warning that Russia is working to help reelect Donald Trump. Even more important is what this warning unmistakably implies: that Trump and his Republican allies in Congress are actively cooperating with Russia's campaign.

Trump obviously tends to respond with rage at the suggestion that Russia wants him to win, let alone that he is accepting the assistance. So Evanina's summary delicately surrounds the revelations about Trump and Moscow with superficially balancing material. The report highlights three countries that want to influence the election: Russia, China, and Iran. The report notes that the latter two want Trump to lose, while Russia wants him to win.

This seems intended to let Republicans claim that there is foreign interference on both sides. And it's true, as far as it goes.

But the comparisons end there. What is China doing to defeat Trump? Its government has "grown increasingly critical of the current Administration's COVID-19 response, closure of China's Houston Consulate, and actions on other issues." And Iran's efforts "probably will focus on on-line influence, such as spreading disinformation on social media and recirculating anti-U.S. content."

In others words, Iran and China are undermining Trump by criticizing him in public remarks, possibly including some mean tweets.

Russia's efforts to help Trump include all that. In addition, the statement notes, "pro-Russia Ukrainian parliamentarian Andriy Derkach is spreading claims about corruption — including through publicizing leaked phone calls — to undermine former Vice President Biden's candidacy and the Democratic Party."

Derkach and his Russian allies despise Biden, who spearheaded the administration's efforts to reform Ukraine, rein in its oligarchs, and diminish Russian influence. They have attempted to depict Biden's reform efforts as a corrupt plot to enrich his son Hunter.

Derkach has been working openly with Trump's lawyer, Rudy Giuliani. None of this is a secret. Here are the two of them meeting in Kiev in December:

Giuliani told the Washington Post earlier this summer that Derkach "doesn't seem pro-Russian to me." In case that ruse was fooling anybody, U.S. intelligence has now officially described Derkach as an organ of Russian political interference.

Meanwhile, Senate Republicans on the Homeland Security Committee are holding hearings in an attempt to substantiate this charge — or, more realistically, to insinuate it. They have produced no evidence to advance their charge. The Russians have given Republicans stolen tapes of secret conversations Biden held with Ukrainians during his tenure as vice-president, and pro-Trump media outlets have hyped up the material, but nothing they have is inconsistent with the narrative that mainstream news organizations found. Biden was working to clean up Ukraine.

Senate Republicans tried to be cagey about their activities. After pro-Russian Ukrainians said they'd passed materials on to Republican officials, a Johnson staffer told NBC News in July that it was "'false' the committee has received any 'oppo,' or opposition research, without responding directly to whether that covers any materials from foreign sources."

The Washington Postreported that Homeland Security Committee chairman Ron Johnson received secret documents from Ukrainians. And former Giuliani associate Lev Parnas has confessed to putting Devin Nunes, the top Republican on the House Intelligence Committee and perhaps Trump's most energetic defender on all things Russia, in touch with one of the Ukrainians releasing documents in the United States.

There is hardly any secret to what they're up to. Johnson says he plans to release his report on Biden in September. It hardly matters if the information Russia gives him actually substantiates his allegations, or even whether it is authentic. The obvious plan is to splash some headlines into news screens in the heat of the campaign that seem to connect Biden to some kind of wrongdoing.

In reality, it is not a scandal about Biden at all. It's a scandal about Republican cooperation with a Russian propaganda campaign.

What makes Evanina's statement on Friday so significant is that it makes clear that the passing of information, real or otherwise, from various Ukrainian figures to various Trump allies is part of a Russian-directed scheme to help Trump win. Republicans could tell Russia that Russian-controlled media are free to say anything they want, but Republicans aren't going to launder their propaganda for them. Instead, they are doing everything in their power to exploit it.

Update: The unanswered question of why Evanina followed his first, vague statement with a second, more specific one has an answer. On Saturday morning, the New York TimesMagazine published a long, devastating story by Robert Draper about Trump's politicization of intelligence. Draper's reporting forced Friday night's release, which directly acknowledged Russia's active preference to help Trump win.

Draper's story also helps contextualize the essentially decorative mentions of China and Iran. Intelligence officials are terrified of enraging Trump by confirming that Russia wants him to win, even though the conclusion is obvious. If you want to understand why officials added references to China and Iran to create the illusion of balance — even though those two countries don't seem to be taking any steps to help Biden, and Biden certainly isn't cooperating with them — Draper's narrative explains the intense pressure they're facing.


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JBB
Professor Principal
1  seeder  JBB    4 years ago

Is it any wonder that the once Grand Old Party of Abraham Lincoln is now known merely as the gop?

 
 
 
Texan1211
Professor Principal
1.1  Texan1211  replied to  JBB @1    4 years ago

Just one thing worth wondering about--where do you get your "knowledge" of the GOP?

 
 
 
JBB
Professor Principal
1.1.1  seeder  JBB  replied to  Texan1211 @1.1    4 years ago

Read articles before asking stupid questions.

 
 
 
Texan1211
Professor Principal
1.1.2  Texan1211  replied to  JBB @1.1.1    4 years ago

I guess it IS a stupid question, as your comments prove that you have little to no knowledge of the GOP.

I will stand corrected!

 
 
 
Ozzwald
Professor Quiet
1.1.3  Ozzwald  replied to  Texan1211 @1.1.2    4 years ago
I guess it IS a stupid question, as your comments prove that you have little to no knowledge of the GOP.

Where do you get YOUR knowledge of the GOP Texan?

Spam folder?  Breitbart?  InfoWars?

 
 
 
Texan1211
Professor Principal
1.1.4  Texan1211  replied to  Ozzwald @1.1.3    4 years ago

deflection shields engaged!

 
 
 
Ozzwald
Professor Quiet
1.1.5  Ozzwald  replied to  Texan1211 @1.1.4    4 years ago
deflection shields engaged!

So in this case you chose #2.  FYI, that's Deflector Shields.  If you're going to quote Star Trek in your deflections, at least phrase it correctly.

  1. Provide that proof (very unlikely, but there could be a 1st time).
  2. Deflect to a different topic.
  3. Claim that you have already provided proof (you've tried that before).
  4. Tuck your tail between your legs and run away to hide.
  5. Just plain outright lie. 
 
 
 
Texan1211
Professor Principal
1.1.6  Texan1211  replied to  Ozzwald @1.1.5    4 years ago

sosdd

 
 
 
Ozzwald
Professor Quiet
1.1.7  Ozzwald  replied to  Texan1211 @1.1.6    4 years ago

[deleted]

 
 
 
Sean Treacy
Professor Principal
1.2  Sean Treacy  replied to  JBB @1    4 years ago

Maybe, after you post that for the 1,000,000 time, someone will think it's clever. Maybe.

 
 
 
Texan1211
Professor Principal
1.2.1  Texan1211  replied to  Sean Treacy @1.2    4 years ago

th?id=OIP.UXhTtYuH48SfPxAgslQEDwHaEc&w=253&h=160&c=8&rs=1&qlt=90&dpr=1.25&pid=3.1&rm=2

Not a snowball's chance in hell!

 
 
 
Dismayed Patriot
Professor Quiet
1.3  Dismayed Patriot  replied to  JBB @1    4 years ago

There is no more Republican party, it ceased to exist after the Trump hostile takeover. Now there is just the Trump party filled with Trump loyalists who not only don't care about Russian aid in the election, they want it, they support it and they feel a stronger connection to the white nationalist authoritarian government of Putin than they do their fellow liberal and progressive Americans. And nothing anyone says, no facts and evidence that is presented to them will ever change their minds. We can only defeat them at the ballot box and even when that happens this November, they won't go quietly. They have picked up the golden Trump cow idol on their shoulders and will die before admitting their false God is actually an immoral mortal con-man and failure for to do so would be admitting they themselves were the most foolish gullible morons in the nation. Self-reflection, humility, logic and reason are not strong suits among his believers.

 
 
 
Texan1211
Professor Principal
1.3.1  Texan1211  replied to  Dismayed Patriot @1.3    4 years ago
There is no more Republican party,

To see such denial from a grown-ass adult is truly amazing.

 
 
 
Dismayed Patriot
Professor Quiet
1.3.2  Dismayed Patriot  replied to  Texan1211 @1.3.1    4 years ago
To see such denial from a grown-ass adult is truly amazing.

Thanks for once again displaying your lack of any rational rebuttal. I do not deny that the Republican party still uses the name, they just aren't anything close to the party they once were and any objective observer would conclude they are now exclusively the party of Trump.

 
 
 
Texan1211
Professor Principal
1.3.3  Texan1211  replied to  Dismayed Patriot @1.3.2    4 years ago

objective observer??!!

Whoo boy. that is rich!

 
 
 
Sean Treacy
Professor Principal
2  Sean Treacy    4 years ago

Russian created a fake left wing left wing propaganda site to attack America and Trump.

"Articles that PeaceData appears to have commissioned from genuine English-speaking writers portrayed Trump as unreliable, meddling in the International Criminal Court, rigging the 2020 election, and “unstable and unhinged.”

The funny thing about it is when the Russians wanted to attack and sow discord in America, they just stole the work of left wing journalists, who are doing their work for them. 

 
 
 
Vic Eldred
Professor Principal
3  Vic Eldred    4 years ago

"On Friday, he followed up with a more direct and incriminating one, specifically warning that Russia is working to help reelect Donald Trump. Even more important is what this warning unmistakably implies: that Trump and his Republican allies in Congress are actively cooperating with Russia's campaign."

How does this warning on what Russia is doing imply that Trump and congressional Republicans are actively cooperating with Russia?

Where is the evidence of that outrageous statement in the article?

And where oh where is our famous critical thinker with his blue ink, to question the claim?

 
 

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