Well, Trump always wants to be the "greatest." Why not the greatest traitor of all time?
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Despite Donald Trump’s many campaign rally boasts that he knows “everything” about nuclear energy, he can’t tell you the difference between an atomic bomb and a hydrogen bomb. He’s a con artist, a know-nothing, without even rudimentary knowledge of nuclear weaponry (the subject of Barack Obama’s senior college thesis) or national security.
What Trump does know is this: foreign governments whose
dictatorial leaders he admires–North Korea, Russia, and Saudi Arabia among
them–would pay a fortune to acquire America’s most sensitive nuclear secrets. By Matt Davies
And what Donald knows is how to find buyers who will pay premium prices for
whatever he has to unload.
What had been the unthinkable idea that any American president would sell our national security secrets is suddenly front and center following the execution of a search warrant.
From private citizen Trump’s Florida
home, the FBI recovered extensive national security materials belonging to our
government. No previous American president has been the subject of a criminal
investigation, much less one that raises the question of disloyalty for profit.
We should view this week’s events and what follows in light of a 2019 Congressional investigation that drew only momentary attention despite a rich trove of evidence that the Trump administration was lackadaisical about Saudi and corporate efforts to obtain our government’s nuclear secrets.
Journalists covering the FBI and national security also
report that signals intelligence materials were also recovered during the
search, which adds to concern about what foul deeds Trump was up to.
Ask yourself this: what legitimate reason could Donald Trump
possibly have to take to Mar-a-Lago what’s known in spy world as SIGINT
or signals intelligence? Our National Security Agency
silently gathers SIGINT from telephone calls, emails, and heavily encrypted
electronic messaging. No private citizen has any business holding such records.
Foreign powers, especially those hostile to the United
States, would pay vast sums, potentially billions of dollars, to access our
SIGINT. They would look for details about our capacity to intercept such
signals and hints to help them identify our spies and human assets in those
countries so they could be captured, tortured, and liquidated.
The
Right Question
We don’t know for sure what, if anything, Trump sold, attempted to sell, or left open for his Mar-a-Lago guests to peruse. That’s what trial after indictment is for, although public hearings by Congress would also be a brilliant idea.
But the question to ask now is this: what in hell was he
doing with these materials? And why didn’t he turn them over when he was issued
a subpoena for them months ago?
It’s hard to imagine any other reason that Trump would take
from the White House government documents so vital to our national security
that authorized officials can examine them only in a Sensitive Compartmented Information Facility or
SCIF (pronounced skiff). The same holds for even
talking about them. These are documents that Trump has no intellectual capacity
to understand and no conceivable legitimate reason to possess.
Trump believes that while in office, he had the power to
declassify any document. If he is brought to trial by our federal government,
as I fully expect, he would almost certainly assert this as a defense. That
would be a typical Trumpian effort to muddy the waters and sow doubt about
criminal intent among jurors. The likely defense claim would be that he thought
he acted appropriately and made an honest mistake.
Crucial
1946 Law
But what Trump almost certainly doesn’t know is that
the Atomic Energy Act of 1946 governs nuclear secrets.
Under that law, a president cannot unilaterally declassify materials. Any
declassification involves a complex process requiring approval by experts in
nuclear weaponry and national security.
Should a federal grand jury indict Trump under that 1946
statute, his ignorance of the law would be no defense.
Clearly, Donald Trump had no right to take any national
security documents. He is now just another private citizen. His possession of
these secrets is a federal felony. Prosecution is necessary if he held such
documents, especially if any evidence exists showing Trump tried to sell out
America for profit.
This is true even though Trump claims he is above the law.
Claim
of Unlimited Power
“When somebody is president of the United States, the
authority is total and that’s the way it has to be,” Trump said in 2020. He instantly rejected challenging
questions from reporters who understand the limited and temporary power granted
to presidents by Article II of our Constitution. He’s also wrongly asserted
that our Constitution gives him “the
right to do whatever I want.”
Keep in mind that at issue here are not mundane documents of
no consequence but our most sensitive nuclear and intelligence secrets, which
only a handful of closely vetted individuals are allowed to see. The FBI would
never have conducted a raid over documents of little value. If these were
mundane documents, Trump would be claiming that and showing the inventory of
items taken, which FBI agents turned over as they departed Mar-a-Lago.
That 2019 Congressional investigation, cited above, showed
that Saudi Arabia was trying to buy our nuclear secrets. Astonishingly Trump
wasn’t alarmed about this. Indeed, the report indicates that Trump viewed our
relationship with that country entirely in financial terms, just as he does
everything else.
Love and Facts
At campaign rallies, Trump repeatedly praised the Saudis.
He declared his love for them because they had put so
much money in his pocket by buying apartments for tens of millions of dollars each and
staying at his hotels and golf resorts.
The little-noticed2019 Congressional investigation began
“after multiple whistleblowers came forward to warn about efforts inside the
White House to rush the transfer of U.S. nuclear technology to Saudi Arabia.”
Keep this in mind in the context of four facts:
1.
Trump’s refusal to sanction the
Saudi regime for murdering an American journalist, Jamal Khashoggi, in a Saudi
consulate. Our government concluded the de facto dictator, Prince Mohammed bin
Salman Al Saud, ordered his most trusted guards to kill.
2.
Trump’s son-in-law Jared Kushner
developed a very close relationship with MBS, as the dictator is known, during
the Trump era. Including hours-long late-night telephone calls
3.
The $2 billion that MBS gave Kushner
to manage despite warnings by numerous Saudi financial
advisors that Kushner lacked competency in money management and charged
outrageously high fees.
4.
Trump took the side of the Saudis and their friends in
the United Arab Emirates against the government of Qatar, home to America’s most
important military base in the Middle East, after the Qataris
declined to extend a risky $800 million loan to Kushner.
That Donald Trump overrode the objections of national security experts and granted security clearances to his son-in-law Kushner and his daughter Ivanka, Kushner’s wife, assumes even greater importance in light of the events this week. They repeatedly revised the SF-86 forms that all candidates for security clearances must submit. A single omission or misstatement typically results in denying a security clearance. Trump approved his daughter and son-in-law despite many revisions and against the advice of security experts.
How these facts connect, if indeed they do, won’t be known
for some time. But keeping these acts and connections in the forefront of your
mind will help you understand what happens as this case progresses.
To be clear, we don’t know what the search warrant
specified, a warrant that was calmly and professionally on Monday by FBI agents
wearing suits and in the presence of Trump lawyers. However, we know that this
search was so vital to our national security that Attorney General Garland
personally approved the search. A federal magistrate authorized the search
after being presented with an affidavit showing probable cause that Donald
Trump committed crimes against the United States.
The harsh reality is that what’s going on is worse than you think.
PS: An atomic bomb uses fission to create an explosion,
while a hydrogen bomb monetarily uses fusion, which powers our sun, to produce
a much more powerful blast.
David Cay Johnston is the Editor-in-Chief of DCReport.
He is an investigative journalist and author, a specialist in economics and tax
issues, and winner of the 2001 Pulitzer Prize for Beat Reporting.