A secret hidden in plain sight
By Pat Bagley, Salt Lake Tribune |
In the wake of the recently revealed Russian cyberattack on the U.S. -- apparently unprecedented in its danger to national security -- it's time for Congress, the media and the incoming Biden administration to move beyond the question of "if" Trump was helping his overt ally, Russian President Vladimir Putin.
The relevant questions are why and how.
With the nation
preoccupied with removing Trump from the White House without force, the timing
might not seem ideal. But the results of Putin's engagements with Trump are too
many and too obvious: Someone needs to connect the dots.
Today's 24/7 news cycles are not suited for this task. They rely upon the instant gratification of breaking news stories as they present themselves, not analysis of how events might fit into a pattern of conduct.
When Trump
outrageously refused to condemn Russia this week for its massive hacking crime,
the general reaction was puzzlement and outrage among the chattering class. It
should have been a sense of confirmation followed by a timeline.
Trump leaves office with an unknown number of Russian spies and
intelligence experts in possession of an unknown treasure trove of sensitive
private information held -- for starters -- on federal systems
at departments including Homeland Security, Treasury, Commerce and the National
Nuclear Security Administration, CNBC reports.
"Susan Gordon,
former principal deputy director of national intelligence, told CNBC that the
massive cyberattack targeting federal agencies 'will take years to overcome' as
senior intelligence officials report there is little doubt the Russians
were the perpetrators and that they're still at it."
That has a "mission accomplished" feel about it for the folks back home in Moscow. So rather than wonder why Trump isn't acting upset, perhaps the media should be asking, "What did Trump know about this hacking and when did he know it?"
An American president's
refusal to push back publicly and strongly against a major hostile act by an
adversary is more than a matter of bad optics. At best it's a display of
humiliating weakness. At worst, it's an act of surrender and -- in Trump's case
with Russia -- a strong suggestion of complicity.
What's fascinating is that the reporting is all out there on this topic, but the cohesion of a clear narrative doesn't hold from one major story to the next.
On October 25, the
Washington Post published an epic piece documenting Trump's history with Russia headlined
"Tumult at home, ailing alliances abroad: Why Trump's America has been a
'gift' to Putin."
The Post's reporting was hardly unique. In 2019, CNN recounted "37 times Trump was soft on Russia." The New York Times published a definitive op-ed piece in 2018 from national security expert Susan Rice headlined "How Trump Helps Putin." On and on it goes.
So why the stunned
indignation today when Trump wouldn't even criticize Putin -- much less condemn
him -- for what was essentially an act of war on the nation he's sworn to
protect?
There's no mystery here.
Trump's fealty to Putin has been an ongoing national scandal in full public
view, perhaps so blatantly that the nation is numbed to its traitorous essence.
Here's a list of
"Trump's Greatest Hits as a Russian Asset" assembled from a variety
of sources. The ordering is subjective, but not the facts:
- Trump has mounted -- and maintains -- a vicious attack on the legitimacy of American democracy and the integrity of its elections. That has topped Putin's anti-American wish list beyond his wildest imagination.
- On Trump's watch, Russia has launched possibly the most damaging cyber-attack in American history, an act of war that might prove lasting enough in its damage to supplant #1 above.
- Trump seriously degraded America's NATO alliances -- arguably Putin's top international priority -- by feuding with the organization over dues and petty differences and weakening its resolve to treat Russia as a threat.
- Trump handed Putin undeserved international legitimacy at a Helsinki summit by publicly siding with him over the unanimous U.S. intelligence community with regard to his denials of Russian meddling in the 2016 election on Trump's behalf.
- Trump held foreign aid to Ukraine hostage -- aid it needed to defend itself against Russia -- as part of a failed extortion scheme to muddy Joe Biden.
- Trump failed to raise a whimper of protest when it was revealed the Russia had placed bounties on the heads of U.S. soldiers in Afghanistan.
- Trump pulled the U.S. from the Paris Climate Accord, isolating the nation from the world community and creating a void for Russia and others to fill.
- Trump pulled the U.S. out of the World Trade Organization. See item 7.
- Trump pulled the U.S. out of the Iran Nuclear Deal. See item 7.
- Trump pulled U.S. troops from Syria, a major strategic victory for Putin and his client, Syrian President Bashar al-Assad. That was beyond item 7 in value to Russia, which swiftly filled the void left by the U.S.
- Trump weakened the European Union -- as he did with NATO -- by supporting Brexit and sending Steve Bannon to Europe to support anti-government movements.
- Trump supported Putin with silence over the poisoning of Russian Alexei Navalny with the same nerve agent used to poison ex-Russian spy Sergei Skripal and his daughter in 2018. Trump stayed silent for as long as possible on that one as well.
- Trump shared highly classified intelligence information about ISIS with two top Russian officials in an infamous Oval Office meeting.
- Trump has met repeatedly in person and by phone with Putin without allowing independent note-taking and documentation customarily included in meetings with foreign leaders.
- Trump lifted sanctions from Russian oligarch Oleg Deripaska, a Putin ally, over 2016 election interference, prompting bipartisan outrage from the U.S. Senate.
- Trump defended Putin's 2014 invasion and annexation of Crimea, which had caused Russia to be kicked out of the Group of Eight (G8). Trump has led a one-man effort to bring Russia back into the G8 with no concessions. (Europeans are calling it G6 + 1 as long as Trump is around.)
- Trump's continual support for dictators across the globe has aided the ascent -- with his support -- of pro-Putin autocrats in Europe.
- Trump has consistently resisted the implementation (and reduced the size) of U.S. sanctions aimed at punishing various Russian misdeeds.
- The Trump administration last year pressured the Office of the Director of National Intelligence to delete part of a report concluding that Russia was aiming to help Donald Trump win reelection in 2020.
- Trump even went out of his way at a Cabinet meeting to laud Russia's 1979 invasion of Afghanistan in which U.S.-backed Afghan militants had fought the Russians.
This list could on for
quite a while. Perhaps for those not willing to see it as proof of his
complicity with Putin, the question might better be worded: "If Trump isn't
a Russian asset, why did he do all these things to help Putin?"
Still, the story hasn't come together in its fullness. It's a bitterly ironic note that media have become hamstrung by one of the biggest of Trump's Big Lies: That all the investigations into his sleazy and criminal interactions with Russia were nothing more than a "hoax."
There's no reason for
self-consciousness by the media, nor for holding back on "the Russia,
Russia, Russia" story, but strangely that is what has happened.
For example, the much-maligned Mueller Report is treated like it never existed. Yes, it fizzled as grounds for impeachment for reasons of process and politics utterly unrelated to its damning substance.
But it broadly torpedoed Trump and his conduct for anyone
who read it. That he has been able to use Mueller fatigue to escape scorn for
what it contains is a testament to the power of disinformation.
The Mueller report
remains totally relevant as context for the Trump-as-Russian-asset story. I've
separated it here from the main list of examples, not because many of its
findings don't belong there, but because it serves best as a baseline for
understanding the rest.
To refresh
memories, here are some key conclusions of the Mueller report -- as
recounted by the Guardian -- which provide a baseline from which one might jump
to understand Trump's relationship as president with Russia:
- The Russians had led a campaign to swing the 2016 election in Trump's favor and committed crimes to achieve that goal
- The Trump campaign was receptive to help from the Russians
- Donald Trump Jr said he would "love" to receive dirt on Hillary Clinton from the Russian government
- As a candidate, Trump publicly urged the Russians to hack Clinton's emails
- Trump pursued a lucrative Trump Tower project in Moscow during the campaign
- Multiple top Trump campaign and administration officials were convicted of lying to investigators about their contacts with Russians
Mueller also pointed out
at least 10 instances in which Trump acted in a way that might have led to
obstruction of justice charges were he not president. And let's not forget this
passage from the Mueller Report:
"[T]he
investigation established that the Russian government perceived it would
benefit from a Trump presidency and worked to secure that outcome, and that the
campaign expected it would benefit electorally from information stolen and
released through Russian efforts."
Add to all this Trump's countless relationships with shady figures such as Paul Manafort with their Russian connections, and those hazy efforts at business dealings -- including the fateful 2013 Miss Universe visit to Moscow -- and the refusal to release tax returns that might show some of Trump's Russian business affairs.
It's not a pretty picture. If Trump owes Russian interests as
part of the gigantic foreign debts facing him after office, it's downright
ugly.
Now, return to the
current news that somehow, some way, Putin's hackers managed to pull off one of
the greatest espionage coups in history, at U.S. expense, on Donald Trump's
watch. And Trump, it turns out, is the only one in the U.S. unfazed by it all
as he focuses instead on staying in office by military coup.
If all those dots cannot
be connected, someone needs a new Sharpie.