THIS WEEK; McConnell is giving Georgey Steponallofus the what for on all counts; the revenues generated, and the dems complaining about rushing. Not squishy. Mitch is backing down on Moore, too...won't committ to tossing him out.
all channels key in on Flynn,Kushner,only people on our side even though there are hundreds of Mueller arrest docs out there and no one knows who they are for. Gay boy goober now talking bad on CBS about Roy Moore and how bad he is for the Senate. Now Lindsay is talking bad about the President, it never ends with the rino banda de los ochos.
The more I hear read and take in about Flynn he looks like a classic spy.
I think we go too far saying Flynn “worked for Obama.” He was director of the DIA.
I used to work at the DIA. Did a four year tour there.
The director is a three-star appointed officer of the US Military, and revolves between a Navy Admiral, and Air Force, Army and Marines Lt Generals. While all senior flag officers are appointed by the president, it is really Sec-Def and the respective service chiefs who calls it in.
Appointments to the joint agencies like DIA are also done from the White House, but still upon recommendation of the DoD. I don’t think any president or administration that’s not DoD knows who’s who in the military anyway.
From any president or his andministration’s perspective, it’s easier to fire or NOT promote an officer who is politically or strategically opposed than to find one who is a Quisling and appoint him/her.
It has always been my contention that the Intel Community did not want Flynn as the NSC advisor considering him to be a loose cannon and not a team player. The Russian collusion narrative was used as a pretext to take down Flynn.
Flynn was interviewed by the FBI long before Mueller was named. The Trump campaign investigation started in July 2016. It appears that a FISA warrant was issued based on the Steele dossier. Hence the "monitoring" of the Trump campaign team by the intel community began then and continued during the transition after the election. The FBI had recordings of the Flynn conversations with the Russian Ambassador and with other members of the Trump transition team. Flynn's unmasking was the real crime along with others that we will learn about.
IMO Flynn's "lies" about the conversation primarily had to do with protecting Trump's desire to have better relations with the Russians. Obama's increased sanctions against the Russians during the last few weeks of his Presidency were meant to tie Trump's hands on our relations with Russia. It was all part of the narrative to de-legitimize Trump's election using the phony Russian collusion narrative. In regard to Russia, Flynn did nothing illegal.
As Andrew McCarthy posited about why the FBI decided to investigate Flynn,
I believe the explanation is threefold: (1) to punish Flynn, and derivatively the incoming Trump administration, for opposing Obamas anti-Israel legerdemain in the Security Council; (2) to promote the political narrative that RussiaTrump collusion had cheated Clinton out of her rightful election victory; and (3) to tie this collusion narrative to sanctions relief, thereby making it politically impossible for Trump to roll back Obamas sanctions once he was sworn in a boon for the Democrats collusion narrative since the sanctions stand as a reminder of Russias election meddling.
The ongoing Mueller probe is not a good-faith investigation of suspected espionage or other crime. It is the exploitation of the executives intelligence-gathering and law-enforcement powers in order to (a) criminalize Trump political policies with which the Obama administration disagreed and (b) frame Clintons electoral defeat as the product of a traitorous scheme rather than a rejection of Democratic-party priorities.
We can stipulate that General Flynn is a very foolish man. He was not required to speak to the FBI when agents came to interview him on January 24. He is, moreover, the former head of the Defense Intelligence Agency: He had every reason to know that the FBI must have been monitoring Kislyak (and perhaps other foreign officials with whom Flynn was in contact). He had every reason to know that the Bureau must have had recordings of the conversations the agents wanted to ask him about. Astonishingly, he chose to submit to the interview anyway, and to lie. It is fair enough to say that he has no one to blame but himself, and that a person of such poor judgment should not be the presidents principal adviser on national-security matters.
It should also be noted that Flynn did not have a lawyer present when being interviewed by the FBI. I find that astonishing given the circumstances. His failure to report his private relationship with the Turkish government was the most egregious mistake he made.