The
attempted Clinton-CIA coup against Donald Trump
The
CIA's latest report implicating Russia in the DNC and Podesta leaks
is not founded on any evidence. Coming a few weeks before Donald
Trump's inauguration it is more dangerous meddling by the US
intelligence community in the US political process
Alexander
Mercouris
11
Deccember, 2016
In
light of the CIA’s
allegations today,
which are being assiduously spread by Obama administration officials
speaking anonymously to the news media, that Russia materially
assisted Donald Trump to win the US Presidential election, I will
repeat here something I wrote on 31st October 2016.
Note
that this was written a week before the US Presidential election, and
that the title of the article in
which it was written was “Hillary Clinton just planted a bomb under
American Democracy”
“By
far the most irresponsible and dangerous Hillary Clinton has done is
however to accuse a foreign power – Russia – of meddling in the
election in order to prevent her winning, and to impose Donald Trump
on the American people.
This
is dangerous and irresponsible at so many levels that it is difficult
to know where to start.
Firstly,
it is not true. There is no evidence Donald Trump is a
Russian agent or has any connection to Russia, or that Russia backs
him. All the ‘evidence’ cited to prove he is and
that it does – down to the misquotation of a single comment of
Putin’s and the claims about Trump’s supposed Russian business
connections – has proved to be so unconvincing that even Hillary
Clinton has stopped talking about it.
Secondly,
it is polluting the US political system by using agencies of the US
government to spread this false story.
I
have previously put
on record my own strong doubts that
Russia is behind the DNC and Podesta leaks. Now Craig
Murray – a former British ambassador who (unlike me) is a personal
friend of Julian Assange – has come forward to say that he knows
100% as fact that Russia is not behind the leaks (see here).
Craig
Murray is a man of proven integrity who as a former senior diplomat
has handled classified intelligence material and who therefore knows
how to separate fact from fiction. If he says he knows
100% for sure that Russia is not responsible for the DNC and Podesta
leaks, then given the sources he has that is good enough for me, as
it should be for all reasonable people.
What
that must means is that the recent statement by US intelligence that
Russia is behind the leaks is untrue. I have previously
discussed the
deeply manipulative language used in this statement, which in fact
proves that US intelligence does not have the evidence to back up
what it says.
I
have also pointed out that it is actually
unprecedented for
US intelligence to interfere in a US election in this way.
Now
that we have Craig Murray’s confirmation that the claim of Russian
responsibility for the leaks made in the statement is untrue, we can
judge even more clearly what a deeply dishonest document this
statement is.
The
big question is what persuaded US intelligence to make this
statement? Based on everything we know, the suspicion has
to be that Hillary Clinton and her campaign, almost certainly with
the help of senior officials in the Obama administration, somehow
persuaded US intelligence to put out this statement in order to swing
the election in her favour.
If
so then it should be said clearly that using the nation’s
intelligence services to spread a false story in order to defeat a
political opponent in a democratic election is a far worse thing than
anything Richard Nixon ever did, whether during the 1972 election
campaign or at any other point in his career.
Thirdly,
these false claims about Russia are corrupting public debate, making
a proper discussion of the US’s vital relationship with Russia –
a nuclear superpower – all but impossible.
The
result is that the ‘realist’ positions that are now becoming
associated with Donald Trump – which have a long and respectable
history in US foreign policy (they were the policies of John F.
Kennedy in the months immediately before he was assassinated, of
Lyndon Johnson, of Nixon and Kissinger, of Ronald Reagan in his
second term, and of George H.W. Bush) – are no longer being taken
seriously, since they are being associated with a man who has all but
been called a traitor.
Fourthly,
these false claims complicate relations with Russia almost beyond
reason.
How
can either Donald Trump or Hillary Clinton now negotiate with Putin
when the first has been publicly all but accused of being Putin’s
agent and the other is being presented as the President that Putin
tried to stop? How – if Hillary Clinton becomes
President and tries to make a deal with Putin – does she explain it
to her supporters after all the things she has said about him?
Fifthly,
and most dangerous of all, making this completely false claim is
planting a bomb under the legitimacy of whoever is going to be the
next President of the United States.
If
that person is Donald Trump, then he will have to contend with the
fact that he is the candidate Hillary Clinton, her campaign, most of
the political establishment, nearly all the media, and the US
intelligence community, have publicly claimed Russia is helping to
win.
How in
that case, if Trump does win, would he as President be able to
command the respect and loyalty of the foreign policy bureaucracy, of
the intelligence community, of the military, of the media, and of
Congress, when they have all been told that he is the preferred
candidate and quite possibly the agent of a foreign power? Would
they not see it as their duty to obstruct and disobey him at every
turn, so as to stop him selling out the country to his foreign
puppet-masters?
How
does Trump contend with the insinuation, which will be hanging over
his Presidency from the first day if he is elected, that it was only
because of Russian help (right down to the hacking of voting
machines) that he won, and that he is not therefore the true choice
of the American people? Would not Trump have to fear possible
impeachment proceedings in the event that he made the smallest
mistake, with many Americans feeling that any steps were justified to
remove a President who they had been told was the agent of a hostile
power?”
The
latest story circulated
about the CIA report into Russia’s role in the election confirms
every point that I made.
To
be clear the CIA is saying nothing new. It is not claiming
that Russia hacked voting machines and manipulated the voting because
despite Jill Stein’s and the Hillary Clinton Campaign’s efforts
to find evidence of this through the vote recounts in Michigan,
Wisconsin and Pennsylvania, evidence of that there is one.
The
whole case still rests on entirely on the allegation that Russia was
behind the DNC and Podesta leaks. No more evidence of that
has however been provided than was provided before, for the simple
reason that no such evidence exists.
I previously
pointed out that
the manipulative language in the statement made during the election
by the US intelligence community accusing Russia of leaking the DNC
and Podesta emails in fact confirmed that no evidence against Russia
existed.
I also
asked what
the FBI – the agency with competence to determine this question –
thought about the “evidence” the US intelligence community was
relying on and whether it had been shown it. It
subsequently turned out that the FBI had been shown the “evidence”
and that it refused
to co-author the statement.
It
now turns that the CIA in fact has no evidence against Russia, that
the entire case against Russia is inferential, and that some sections
of the US intelligence community are now starting to have
doubts. That all this is so is confirmed by the following
passage in the Washington Post report of
the CIA’s report
“The
CIA presentation to senators about Russia’s intentions fell
short of a formal U.S. assessment produced by all 17 intelligence
agencies. A senior U.S. official
said there were minor disagreements among
intelligence officials about the agency’s assessment, in part
because some questions remain unanswered.
For
example, intelligence agencies do not have specific
intelligence showing officials in the Kremlin “directing” the
identified individuals to pass the Democratic emails to WikiLeaks,
a second senior U.S. official said. Those actors, according to the
official, were “one step” removed from the Russian government,
rather than government employees. Moscow has in the past used
middlemen to participate in sensitive intelligence operations so it
has plausible deniability.
Julian
Assange, the founder of WikiLeaks, has said in a television interview
that the “Russian government is not the source.””
(bold
italics dded)
The
“identified individuals” – who are not officials of the Russian
government – are of course not identified, though the careful
placing of Julian Assange’s name at the end of this passage appears
to be intended to suggest that he is one of them. If so,
then even to hint that Julian Assange may be ““one step”
removed from the Russian government” is an outrageous and untrue
slur.
Regardless
this passage confirms that the “identified individuals” –
whoever they are – are not officials of the Russian government and
– since they are referred to as “middlemen” – that they have
no confirmed connection to it. Indeed the wording suggests they
may not even be Russians.
Putting
all this aside, Donald Trump obviously did not win the election
because of help from Russia, and the CIA’s report actually falls
short of saying he did.
As
I have discussed previously, Donald Trump won because Hillary
Clinton was a terrible candidate and
because a great many Americans believe he
will make their lives better.
The
CIA statement however shows what Donald Trump is up against.
Already
the Hillary Clinton Campaign has been actively lobbying electors on
the Electoral College to switch support to Hillary Clinton from
Donald Trump. Though this campaign is apparently meeting
with little success, the CIA and the media are now assisting it, just
as before the election the US intelligence community was trying to
help Hillary Clinton win.
In
both cases the method used is the same: the spreading of false
stories and paranoia about Russia. The implication
is that Donald Trump is in some way the agent of Russia, making any
step to prevent him becoming President a patriotic duty.
I
need hardly say that this is playing with fire. Never
before in US history has there been an orchestrated campaign against
an individual elected President in order to prevent him from being
inaugurated. Never before has the US intelligence
community involved itself in such a campaign.
Though
I expect this attempt to fail, no-one should be in any doubt as to
the huge anger of the tens of millions who voted for Donald Trump
were it to succeed.
Though
I expect this attempt to fail and Donald Trump to be inaugurated
President on 20th January 2017, there is no doubt the campaign to
destabilise him by painting him a Russian agent will continue after
he is inaugurated.
Probably
the only way he can stop it is if he publicly renounces his policy of
rapprochement towards Russia, as some
are already demanding.
Regardless
of what eventually happens, it is both sinister and unprecedented for
US intelligence to interfere in the US political process in this
way.
As
I said at the end of my 31st October 2016 article,
the American Republican is living through dark times. Perhaps
given that the political situation in Washington is starting to bear
the hallmarks of what in other countries would be called a pre-coup
environment, it is not so surprising if Donald Trump is choosing
to surround himself with generals.
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