It appears some people are getting nervous in D.C.
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Trump’s foes call it ‘stunning and scary.’ Here’s what they have to be scared about.
By
Kimberley A. Strassel
April 11, 2019
Attorney General
William Barr says he believes that the Trump presidential campaign was
spied on, and that he wants to make sure the subsequent investigation
was "adequately predicated."
The most inadvertently
honest reaction to Attorney General William Barr’s congressional
testimony this week came from former Director of National Intelligence
James Clapper. Mr. Barr had bluntly called out the Federal Bureau of
Investigation for “spying” on the Trump campaign in 2016. Mr. Clapper
said that was both “stunning and scary.” Indeed.
No doubt a lot of former
Obama administration and Hillary Clinton campaign officials, opposition
guns for hire, and media members are stunned and scared that the Justice
Department finally has a leader willing to address the FBI’s behavior
in 2016 They worked very hard to make sure such an accounting never
happened. Only in that context can we understand the frantic new
Democratic-media campaign to tar the attorney general.
Bill Barr Digs Into 2016 Trump Campaign
Bill Barr digs into the 2016 spying on the Trump campaign, and Netanyahu wins again.
Mr. Barr told the Senate
Wednesday that one question he wants answered is why nobody at the FBI
briefed the Trump campaign about concerns that low-level aides might
have had inappropriate contacts with Russians. That’s “normally” what
happens, Mr. Barr said, and the Trump campaign had two obvious people to
brief—Rudy Giuliani and Chris Christie, both former federal
prosecutors.
It wasn’t only the Trump
campaign that the FBI kept in the dark. The bureau routinely briefs
Congress on sensitive counterintelligence operations. Yet former
Director James Comey admits he deliberately hid his work from both the
House and the Senate. And the FBI kept information from yet another
overseer, the judicial branch, failing to tell the Foreign Intelligence
Surveillance Court that the Clinton campaign and Democratic National
Committee had paid for the dossier it presented as a basis for a
surveillance warrant against Carter Page, a U.S. citizen.
Why the secrecy? Mr.
Comey testified that the Trump probe was simply too sensitive for
members of congressional intelligence committees to know about—an
unbelievable statement given the heavy publicity he gave the
investigation of Mrs. Clinton’s improper handling of classified
information. Here’s a more plausible explanation: Mr. Comey and his crew
have also testified that they were all convinced Mrs. Clinton would win
the election. That would have meant that no politician other than the
incoming Democratic president would have known the FBI had spied on the
Trump team. Nor would the public. A Clinton presidency would have
ensured no accountability.
Mr. Trump’s victory
destroyed that scenario, and it became clear that the new Republican
president would soon know that the former Democratic administration had
surveilled his campaign on the basis of information from his rival, At that point two things happened. Neither was accidental, and both were aimed, again, at forestalling accountability.
First, Mr. Comey and
other intelligence officials, including Mr. Clapper, engineered the
public release of all the scandalous claims against Mr. Trump, to
provide some cover. As liberal commentator Matt Taibbi notes in his new
book, “Hate Inc.” Mr. Comey’s Jan. 6, 2017, briefing of the
president-elect about the dossier was a classic Washington “trick.” It
served as the “pretext” to get the details out, a “news hook” to allow
the press to publish the dossier—with its salacious fictions about
prostitutes and Moscow hotel rooms—and go wild.
Democrats used the furor
in their successful push for a special counsel, which gave greater
legitimacy to the FBI’s probe. The appointment of a special counsel also
froze other oversight. Congress can’t have access to certain documents
or ask witnesses certain questions, since that might interfere with the
probe. The White House can’t demand answers, because that too would
interfere. Mr. Trump’s adversaries got to hide behind Robert Mueller for
nearly two years.
Second, Democrats
mobilized against the other big threat, incoming Attorney General Jeff
Sessions, who had the authority to conduct an internal review. Don’t
forget, the dossier wasn’t delivered only to the FBI. Its ultimate
owners were the Clinton campaign and the DNC. And one huge outstanding
question is just how many Democrats pushing for Mr. Sessions’ recusal in
early 2017 did so with full knowledge of the FBI-Clinton tie-up.
Certainly no Republicans were aware, and thus they were clueless to the
bigger consequences of the unnecessary Sessions recusal.
Namely, that no outsider
would take a hard look at the FBI. The Russia question fell to Deputy
Attorney General Rod Rosenstein, an institutionalist who would go on to
sign the final application for a surveillance warrant against Mr. Page.
Again, no accountability. Meantime, wonder why Democrats tried so hard
to mau-mau Mr. Barr into also recusing himself? The goal all along has
been to deep-six any discovery until a Democrat returns to the White
House
Mr. Barr didn’t merely
refuse to recuse; he’s made clear he plans to plumb the FBI’s actions
thoroughly. That makes him Threat No. 1 to everyone who participated in
these abuses, and it’s why the liberal media establishment is now
disparaging his integrity. They are stunned and scared—that
accountability has returned to the Justice Department.
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