Posted on 05/17/2018 9:58:39 AM PDT by Para-Ord.45
The younguns may not believe it, but back before it was known as classic rock, you couldnt just play your crossfire hurricane on Spotify. You had to spin it. Fittingly, that is exactly what the New York Times has done in Wednesdays blockbuster report on the origins of the Trump-Russia probe.
The quick take on the 4,100-word opus is that the Gray Lady buried the lede. Fair enough: You have to dig pretty deep to find that the FBI ran at least one government informant against the Trump campaign and to note that the Times learned this because current and former officials leaked to reporters the same classified information about which, just days ago, the Justice Department shrieked Extortion! when Congress asked about it.
But thats not even the most important of the buried ledes. What the Times story makes explicit, with studious understatement, is that the Obama administration used its counterintelligence powers to investigate the opposition partys presidential campaign.
That is, there was no criminal predicate to justify an investigation of any Trump-campaign official. So, the FBI did not open a criminal investigation. Instead, the bureau opened a counterintelligence investigation and hoped that evidence of crimes committed by Trump officials would emerge. But it is an abuse of power to use counterintelligence powers, including spying and electronic surveillance, to conduct what is actually a criminal investigation.
The Times barely mentions the word counterintelligence in its saga. Thats not an accident. The paper is crafting the media-Democrat narrative. Here is how things are to be spun: The FBI was very public about the Clinton-emails investigation, even making disclosures about it on the eve of the election. Yet it kept the Trump-Russia investigation tightly under wraps, despite intelligence showing that the Kremlin was sabotaging the election for Trumps benefit. This effectively destroyed Clintons candidacy and handed the presidency to Trump.
Its also bunk. Just because the two FBI cases are both referred to as investigations does not make them the same kind of thing.
The Clinton case was a criminal investigation that was predicated on a mountain of incriminating evidence. Mrs. Clinton does have one legitimate beef against the FBI: Then-director James Comey went public with some (but by no means all) of the proof against her. In is not proper for law-enforcement officials to publicize evidence from a criminal investigation unless formal charges are brought.
In the scheme of things, though, this was a minor infraction. The scandal here is that Mrs. Clinton was not charged. She likes to blame Comey for her defeat; but she had a chance to win only because the Obama Justice Department and the FBI tanked the case against her in exactly the manner President Obama encouraged them to do in public commentary.
By contast, the Trump case is a counterintelligence investigation. Unlike criminal cases, counterintelligence matters are classified. If agents had made public disclosures about them, they would have been committing crimes and violating solemn agreements with foreign intelligence services agreements without which those services would not share information that U.S. national-security officials need in order to protect our country.
The scandal is that the FBI, lacking the incriminating evidence needed to justify opening a criminal investigation of the Trump campaign, decided to open a counterintelligence investigation. With the blessing of the Obama White House, they took the powers that enable our government to spy on foreign adversaries and used them to spy on Americans Americans who just happened to be their political adversaries.
The Times averts its eyes from this point although if a Republican administration tried this sort of thing on a Democratic candidate, it would be the only point.
Like the Justice Department and the FBI, the paper is banking on Russia to muddy the waters. Obviously, Russia was trying to meddle in the election, mainly through cyber-espionage hacking. There would, then, have been nothing inappropriate about the FBIs opening up a counterintelligence investigation against Russia. Indeed, it would have been irresponsible not to do so. Thats what counterintelligence powers are for.
But opening up a counterintelligence investigation against Russia is not the same thing as opening up a counterintelligence investigation against the Trump campaign.
The media-Democrat complex has tried from the start to conflate these two things. That explains the desperation to convince the public that Putin wanted Trump to win. It explains the stress on contacts, no matter how slight, between Trump campaign figures and Russians. They are trying to fill a gaping void they hope you dont notice: Even if Putin did want Trump to win, and even if Trump-campaign advisers did have contacts with Kremlin-tied figures, there is no evidence of participation by the Trump campaign in Russias espionage.
That is the proof that would have been needed to justify investigating Americans. Under federal law, to establish that an American is acting as an agent of a foreign power, the government must show that the American is purposefully engaging in clandestine activities on behalf of a foreign power, and that it is probable that these activities violate federal criminal law. (See FISA, Title 50, U.S. Code, Section 1801(b)(2), further explained in the last six paragraphs of my Dec. 17 column.)
But of course, if the FBI had had that kind of evidence, they would not have had to open a counterintelligence investigation. They would not have had to use the Clinton campaigns opposition research the Steele dossier to get FISA-court warrants. They would instead have opened a criminal investigation, just as they did on Clinton when there was evidence that she committed felonies.
To the contrary, the bureau opened a counterintelligence investigation in the absence of any (a) incriminating evidence, or (b) evidence implicating the Trump campaign in Russian espionage. At the height of the 2016 presidential race, the FBI collaborated with the CIA to probe an American political campaign. They used foreign-intelligence surveillance and informants.
Thats your crossfire hurricane.
It’s a gas gas gas.
Of course they did. They had to. Losing to PDJT was a national security threat.
It's perfectly obvious that when Democrats are in charge of any part of government, they think they literally own that part of government. When Hillary ran the State Department, she owned the State Department, and she owned every employee of the State Department, along with every record, document, and computer of the State Department.
“Obviously, Russia was trying to meddle in the election, mainly through cyber-espionage hacking.”
I haven’t seen proof of this. Or is this the facebook “news” stories seen by 6 thousand people?
So no it’s not obvious to me.
If Russia was meddling in the election, wouldn’t Obama know about it?
If a story is not reported on 95% of the Media, did it still happen?
Who goes to jail?
The FBI was busy spying on the Trump campaign trying to find a crime.
That’s besides the point I made. The article states that it was obvious that the Russians were interfering with our election. I have yet to see definitive proof of this charge. Just vague statements.
bookmark
FBI Officials Admit They Spied On Trump Campaign:
Depends on how you define “interfering”. If it’s vote tampering, then they haven’t even been accused of it. If it’s retweeting fake news stories, then yeah, they probably did it . . . along with half of the world’s population.
If its retweeting fake news stories, then yeah, they probably did it . . . along with half of the worlds population.
Thanks to Travis Mcgee for the above.
A sitting President abusing his powers to spy on an opposition party candidate.
Good thing they gave their crime a memorable name.
They do it every election. So yes it is obvious. What is a crime is the democrats weapoized this info against the US.
*
HuffingtonPost:
"My Life as a Secret Back Channel in Iran" Excerpt:
"In the case of Obama, the secret contacts began during the election campaign of 2008, when William Miller, a former diplomat and staff director of the Senate Select Committee on Intelligence, flew back and forth between Washington and Tehran. He was an ideal choice: an Obama loyalist, a believer in the possibility of a US-Iranian modus vivendi, and a trained diplomat..."
The silent coup gets its voice.
So, the FBI did not open a criminal investigation. Instead, the bureau opened a counterintelligence investigation and hoped that evidence of crimes committed by Trump officials would emerge.
And worse, in their absence the FBI attempted to manufacture them. The second take-home is that this FBI counter-intelligence investigation broached a number of fairly significant bounds: operating in a foreign country, entrapment, and assiduously hiding the details from Congressional oversight. This is not even yet to address the connection to FISA abuses.
One thing about the intelligence business is that there is often a very fine line between "improper" and clearly and outrageously illegal, and one of the functions of an ethical operator - and that is, after all, one reason we give them security clearances - is to steer carefully clear of the latter. When one gleefully steers into the criminal he or she needs to go. And that appears to encompass no small part of the entire leadership structure of the CIA and the FBI. If we don't take this seriously, they won't.
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