We
Need the Truth About Trump and Russia Now.
Over the holidays, John Farrell, author of an upcoming biography of Richard Nixon, wrote an op-ed piece in The New York Times confirming what many of us have known for nearly 50 years: In the fall of 1968, Nixon, the Republican candidate for president, deliberately torpedoed President Lyndon Johnson’s efforts to cease the bombing of North Vietnam and begin peace talks to end the Vietnam war.
Johnson was not
running for re-election, but his vice president, Hubert Humphrey, was the
Democratic candidate for the White House — and Nixon was determined to keep
Humphrey from reaping the benefits of good news from Southeast Asia.
In the course of researching
his Nixon book, Farrell found a cache of notes from Nixon aide H.R. Haldeman
showing “that Nixon directed his campaign’s efforts to scuttle the peace talks…
On Oct. 22, 1968,
he ordered Haldeman to ‘monkey wrench’ the initiative.”
Nixon won the election
and until the end of his life denied he had interfered. But, Farrell notes,
“Nixon had cause to lie. His actions appear to violate federal law, which prohibits
private citizens from trying to ‘defeat the measures of the United States.’”
Johnson believed Nixon
had committed treason, but at the time he and his aides decided they lacked
sufficient proof. History has since provided the evidence.
Now we face another
electoral crisis of perhaps even greater significance. As the former diplomat
James Bruno sums it up in Washington Monthly, “The
United States has just endured a carefully planned, well-orchestrated assault
against its democratic form of government in the form of a grand cyber-theft of
information and targeted release of that information.”
“Russian President Vladimir Putin ordered an influence campaign in 2016 aimed at the US presidential election. Russia’s goals were to undermine public faith in the US democratic process, denigrate Secretary Clinton, and harm her electability and potential presidency. We further assess Putin and the Russian government developed a clear preference for President-elect Trump. We have high confidence in these judgments.”
Read that again slowly
and carefully: The intelligence community is saying that a foreign country,
Russia, deliberately interfered with and corrupted our electoral process to
favor the election of Donald Trump.
Further, aides to
Trump are said to have been in contact with Russian officials throughout the
campaign and the presidential transition.
In the Jan. 12 Washington
Post, columnist David
Ignatius reported, “According to a senior US government official,
[national security adviser Michael] Flynn phoned Russian Ambassador Sergey
Kislyak several times on Dec. 29, the day the Obama administration announced the
expulsion of 35 Russian officials as well as other measures in
retaliation for the hacking. What did Flynn say, and did it undercut the US
sanctions?”
Of course, Trump and
his allies say the intelligence community not only is wrong but should not be
trusted.
Nevertheless, the die
is cast: Either Trump and friends have engaged in treasonous acts or America’s
intelligence officials are guilty of a colossal lapse in judgment — or worse, a
conspiracy against Trump.
Either way — whether
any of these allegations are true or false — the entire matter must be investigated
thoroughly and immediately.
The dark clouds
hovering over American politics must be cleared up. Left unresolved, the
allegations present a clear and present danger, a ticking time bomb that could
explode and bring an end to America’s nearly 250-year experiment in
self-government.
While there have been
plans announced for Senate and House hearings into this constitutional crisis,
these easily can be stalled and manipulated for partisan purposes.
Given the Republican
Party’s hardcore will to power and that it will soon exercise monopoly control
over all three branches of government — not to mention their track record over
the past eight years — it is hard to identify which GOP members of Congress are
likely to put country ahead of party and let an investigation go where the
facts lead.
In addition, with some
notable exceptions, the minority Democratic Party appears dispirited and
disorganized, if not feckless, and unable to thwart Republicans determined to
bulldoze a serious investigation.
No, this crisis
requires a more thorough, bipartisan and select committee or commission — not
unlike the 9/11 Commission — that has adequate staff, funding and subpoena
power to conduct as thorough a probe as possible.
Perhaps even better,
before Friday’s inauguration, there is still time for Attorney General Loretta
Lynch to appoint a special prosecutor. Fordham legal historian Jed Shugerman
notes, “A special prosecutor’s term does not end with an
administration. It is open-ended, so the special prosecutor would continue to
serve during the Trump administration… unless the new Attorney General fired
him or her, [but] only for ‘good cause.’”
In whatever form it
takes, said investigation also must include a careful examination of action —
or inaction — by the Federal Bureau of Investigation. The Justice Department’s
inspector general has begun a probe but it also should be within the purview of
a select committee, commission or special prosecutor.
Why did the FBI seem to
favor pursuing Hillary Clinton’s emails over tracking down whatever could be
learned about Russia’s involvement in our election?
Why did it drag its
feet when it had evidence that the Democratic National Committee was being
hacked — was it the agency’s fault or the DNC’s?
How the FBI notified
the DNC in the first place — with a phone call to an outside tech vendor — is
right out of a Marx Brothers comedy.
And why did FBI
Director Comey fail to take action when he had in his hands the dossier ex-MI6
intelligence operative Christopher Steele had assembled on rumors that Russia
possessed incriminating evidence on Trump’s business dealings and private life?
If real, they could be
used to pressure — blackmail — Trump into obeisance.
If not real, was
Russia deliberately feeding Steele false information – “a carefully constructed
attempt,” in the words of conservative journalist and Russia expert David Satter in National
Review, “to disrupt American political life for years to come.”
Trump’s tax returns
should be included in the investigation as well. He can no longer use the
flimsy excuse of an audit. They must be subpoenaed and released, for within
them may be evidence of whether or not the president-elect’s company has
sizable debt with Russian banks and investors that could be used as leverage
against him.
Trump denies Russian
investments but as his son, Donald Jr., famously told a
2008 real estate conference, “Russians make up a pretty disproportionate
cross-section of a lot of our assets… We see a lot of money pouring in from
Russia.”
What’s more, Megan Twohey and
Steve Eder at The New York Times reported late
Monday, “Mr. Trump repeatedly sought business in Russia as far back as 1987,
when he traveled there to explore building a hotel. He applied for his
trademark in the country as early as 1996.
And his children and
associates have appeared in Moscow over and over in search of joint ventures,
meeting with developers and government officials.” Trump told biographer
Michael D’Antonio, “I know the Russians better than anybody.”
Common sense suggests
one reason Trump has so doggedly and furiously attacked the intelligence
community — and persisted in flattering Vladimir Putin — is that he doesn’t
want known the extent to which he is financially embroiled with Russian
oligarchs.
Or perhaps he really
is serious about wanting to draw the Russians into a closer embrace so that
they cease and desist from efforts to disrupt the Western alliance.
Yet how are we ever
going to know without an independent investigation? We may never learn the
complete truth, but if allegations are proven false, the inquiry may help clear
Trump and his associates of the taint that has marked his election and
transition and which certainly will be the elephant in the Oval Office once
Trump occupies it.
Then it will need to
be determined who set out to smear his record and why. Someone — perhaps among
his Republican opponents in the primaries, or among Democrats eager to cripple
him once he got the nomination — went to great lengths to tie Trump to some
nasty stuff.
But what if much that
has been claimed is true? Then we will have in the White House a president who
has betrayed the American people and whose every motive and action must be
challenged. Impeachment is not out of the question.
This is deadly serious
business. It is a heinous threat not only to America’s future but to other
Western democracies, fragile as they are just now.
Putin and his
kleptocrat cronies aren’t limiting their cyberwarfare and other meddling to the
United States but encouraging right-wing populism that actively undermines
member nations of the European Union and the NATO alliance as well.
So far, Trump seems to
be acquiescing to this and to other Russian encroachments around the world. And
several people around him — close aides such as Gen. Mike Flynn, his national
security adviser; and “The King of K
Street,” Paul Manafort, his onetime campaign manager — are reported
to have had business ties to Putin’s world.
The truth must be
known. Left to fester in the dark, lingering suspicions will hang over our
politics like a poisonous smog.
We will become a
society marked by permanent and penetrating distrust, by whispered allegations
and rumors, by ill will and a lust for unbridled power.
We do not exaggerate
when we say this is the most critical moment for the United States since
politics failed in the 1850s and the thunderclouds of civil war spread north
and south until the nation was engulfed and split asunder.
We cannot wait for
history’s judgment. We must find out now. Who in Washington today are the men
and women of courage who will rise above partisanship and join as patriots in
calling for a thorough and honorable public scrutiny of these disturbing
events?
Bill Moyers is
the managing editor of Moyers
& Company and BillMoyers.com.
His previous shows on PBS included NOW with Bill Moyers and Bill
Moyers Journal. Over the past three decades he has become an icon of
American journalism and is the author of many books, including Bill Moyers
Journal: The Conversation Continues, Moyers on
Democracy, and Bill Moyers: On
Faith & Reason. He was one of the organizers of the
Peace Corps, a special assistant for Lyndon B. Johnson, a publisher of Newsday,
senior correspondent for CBS News and a producer of many groundbreaking series
on public television. He is the winner of more than 30 Emmys, nine Peabodys,
three George Polk awards.
Michael Winship,
senior writing fellow at Demos and president of the Writers Guild of
America-East, was senior writer for Moyers &
Company and Bill Moyers’ Journal and is senior writer of
BillMoyers.com.