POTOMAC WATCH
By Kimberley A. Strassel
The
Trump Russia sleuthers have been back in the news, again giving
Americans cause to doubt their claims of nonpartisanship. Last week it
was Federal Bureau of Investigation agent Peter Strzok testifying to
Congress that he harbored no bias against a president he still describes
as “horrible” and “disgusting.” This week it was former FBI Director
Jim Comey tweet-lecturing Americans on their duty to vote Democratic in
November.
But
the man who deserves a belated bit of scrutiny is former Central
Intelligence Agency Director John Brennan. He’s accused President Trump
of “venality, moral turpitude and political corruption,” and berated GOP
investigations of the FBI. This week he claimed on Twitter that Mr.
Trump’s press conference in Helsinki was “nothing short of treasonous.”
This is rough stuff, even for an Obama partisan.That’s what Mr. Brennan
is—a partisan—and it is why his role in the 2016 scandal is in some ways
more concerning than the FBI’s. Mr. Comey stands accused of flouting
the rules, breaking the chain of command, abusing investigatory powers.
Yet it seems far likelier that the FBI’s Trump investigation was a
function of arrogance and overconfidence than some partisan plot. No
such case can be made for Mr.Brennan.
\Before
his nomination as CIA director, he served as a close Obama adviser. And
the record shows he went on to use his position—as head of the most
powerful spy agency in the world—to assist Hillary Clinton’s campaign
(and keep his job).Mr. Brennan has taken credit for launching the Trump
investigation. At a House Intelligence Committee hearing in May 2017, he
explained that he became “aware of intelligence and information about
contacts between Russian officials and U.S. persons.” The CIA can’t
investigate U.S. citizens, but he made sure that “every information and
bit of intelligence” was “shared with the bureau,” meaning the FBI. This
information, he said, “served as the basis for the FBI investigation.”
My sources suggest Mr. Brennan was overstating his initial role, but
either way, by his own testimony, he as an Obama-Clinton partisan was
pushing information to the FBI and pressuring it to act.
More
notable, Mr. Brennan then took the lead on shaping the narrative that
Russia was interfering in the election specifically to help Mr. Trump—
which quickly evolved into the Trump-collusion narrative. Team Clinton
was eager to make the claim, especially in light of the Democratic
National Committee server hack. Numerous reports show Mr. Brennan
aggressively pushing the same line internally. Their problem was that as
of July 2016 even then-Director of National Intelligence James Clapper
didn’t buy it. He publicly refused to say who was responsible for the
hack, or ascribe motivation.
Mr. Brennan also couldn’t get the FBI to sign on to the view;
the bureau continued to believe Russian cyberattacks were aimed at
disrupting the U.S. political system generally, not aiding Mr. Trump.
The
CIA director couldn’t himself go public with his Clinton spin—he lacked
the support of the intelligence community and had to be careful not to
be seen interfering in U.S. politics. So what to do? He called Harry
Reid. In a late August briefing, he told the Senate minority leader that
Russia was trying to help Mr. Trump win the election, and that Trump
advisers might be colluding with Russia. (Two years later, no public
evidence has emerged to support such a claim.)
But
the truth was irrelevant. On cue, within a few days of the briefing,
Mr. Reid wrote a letter to Mr. Comey, which of course immediately became
public. “The evidence of a direct connection between the Russian
government and Donald Trump’s presidential campaign continues to mount,”
wrote Mr. Reid, going on to float Team Clinton’s Russians are-
helping-Trump theory. Mr. Reid publicly divulged at least one of the
allegations contained in the infamous Steele dossier, insisting that the
FBI use “every resource available to investigate this matter.”The Reid
letter marked the first official blast of the Brennan- Clinton collusion
narrative into the open. Clinton opposition- research firm Fusion GPS
followed up by briefing its media allies about the dossier it had
dropped off at the FBI.
On
Sept. 23, Yahoo News’s Michael Isikoff ran the headline: “U.S. intel
officials probe ties between Trump adviser and Kremlin.” VoilĂ . Not only
was the collusion narrative out there, but so was evidence that the FBI
was investigating.In their recent book “Russian Roulette,” Mr. Isikoff
and David Corn say even Mr. Reid believed Mr. Brennan had an “ulterior
motive” with the briefing, and “concluded the CIA chief believed the
public needed to know about the Russia operation, including the
information about the possible links to the Trump campaign.” (Brennan
allies have denied his aim was to leak damaging information.)
Clinton
supporters have a plausible case that Mr. Comey’s late-October
announcement that the FBI had reopened its investigation into the
candidate affected the election. But Trump supporters have a claim that
the public outing of the collusion narrative and FBI investigation took a
toll on their candidate. Politics was at the center of that outing, and
Mr. Brennan was a ringmaster. Remember that when reading his
next“treason”tweet.
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