Burying
The Other Russia Story: WSJ Editors Expose The House Democrats' Real
Plan
10
November, 2018
With
impeachment headlines rotating hourly from the Democrats' liberal
media and subpoenas already flying across the aisle, The Wall Street
Journal's Editorial Board seems to have decided some 'fair and
balanced' perspective on what comes next is warranted and just how
easy it will be for Adam Schiff to bury the 'real' Russiagate
story...
Adam
Schiff will shut down the probe that found FBI abuses.
Arguably
the most important power at stake in Tuesday’s election was
Congressional oversight, and the most important change may be Adam
Schiff at the House Intelligence Committee. The
Democrat says his top priority is re-opening the Trump-Russia
collusion probe, but more important may be his intention to stop
investigating how the FBI and Justice Department abused their power
in 2016. So let’s walk through what we’ve learned to date.
Credit
for knowing anything at all goes to Intel Chairman Devin Nunes and
more recently a joint investigation by Reps. Bob Goodlatte
(Judiciary) and Trey Gowdy (Oversight). Over 18 months of reviewing
tens of thousands of documents and interviewing every relevant
witness, no Senate or House Committee has unearthed evidence that the
Trump campaign colluded with Russia to win the presidential election.
If Special Counsel Robert Mueller has found more, he hasn’t made it
public.
But
House investigators have uncovered
details of a Democratic scheme to prod the FBI to investigate the
Trump campaign. We
now know that the Hillary Clinton campaign and the Democratic
National Committee hired Fusion GPS, which hired an
intelligence-gun-for-hire, Christopher Steele, to write a “dossier”
on Donald Trump’s supposed links to Russia.
Mr.
Steele fed that document to the FBI, even as he secretly alerted the
media to the FBI probe that Team Clinton had helped to initiate.
Fusion, the oppo-research firm, was also supplying its dossier info
to senior Justice Department official Bruce Ohr, whose wife, Nellie,
worked for Fusion.
House
investigators have also documented the FBI’s lack of judgment in
using the dossier to obtain a Foreign Intelligence Surveillance Act
(FISA) warrant against former Trump aide Carter Page. The
four FISA warrants against Mr. Page show that the FBI relied almost
exclusively on the unproven Clinton-financed accusations, as well as
a news story that was also ginned up by Mr. Steele.
The
FBI told the FISA court that Mr. Steele was “credible,” despite
Mr. Steele having admitted to Mr. Ohr that he passionately opposed a
Trump Presidency. The
FBI also failed to tell the FISA court about the Clinton campaign’s
tie to the dossier.
This
abuse of the FBI’s surveillance powers took place as part of a
counterintelligence investigation into a presidential campaign—which
the FBI also hid from Congress. Such
an investigation is unprecedented in post-J. Edgar Hoover American
politics, and it included running informants into the Trump campaign,
obtaining surveillance warrants, and using national security letters,
which are secret subpoenas to obtain phone records and documents.
Mr.
Nunes and his colleagues also found that officials in Barack Obama’s
White House “unmasked” Trump campaign officials to learn about
their conversations with foreigners; that FBI officials exhibited
anti-Trump bias in text messages; and that the FBI team that
interviewed then Trump National Security Adviser Michael Flynn
reported that they did not think Mr. Flynn had lied about his Russian
contacts. Mr. Mueller still squeezed Mr. Flynn to cop a guilty plea.
All
of this information had to be gathered despite relentless opposition
from Democrats and their media contacts. Liberal
groups ginned up a phony ethics complaint against Mr. Nunes,
derailing his committee leadership for months.
Much of the media
became Mr. Schiff’s scribes rather than independent reporters.
Meanwhile, the FBI and Justice continue to stonewall Congress,
defying subpoenas and hiding names and information behind heavy
redactions.
There
is still much more the public deserves to know. This
includes how and when the FBI’s Trump investigation began, the
extent of FBI surveillance, and the role of Obama officials and
foreigners such as Joseph Mifsud, a Maltese academic who in spring
2016 supposedly told Trump campaign adviser George Papadopoulos that
Russia held damaging Clinton emails. When
he takes over the committee, Mr. Schiff will stop asking these
questions and bless the FBI-Justice refusal to cooperate.
Senate
Republicans could continue to dig next year, but Mr. Mueller seems
uninterested. Attorney General Jeff Sessions in March asked Utah U.S.
Attorney John Huber to look into FBI misconduct, but there has been
little public reporting of what he is finding, if he is even still
looking. Justice Inspector General Michael Horowitz is investigating,
though that report is likely to take many more months.
* * *
All
of which puts an additional onus on Mr. Trump to declassify key FBI
and Justice documents sought by Mr. Nunes and other House
investigators before Mr. Schiff buries the truth. A
few weeks ago Mr. Trump decided to release important documents, only
to renege under pressure from Deputy AG Rod Rosenstein and members of
the intelligence community.
Mr.
Sessions resigned this week and perhaps Mr. Rosenstein will as well.
Meantime, Mr. Trump should revisit his decision and help Mr. Nunes
and House Republicans finish the job in the lame duck session of
revealing the truth about the misuse of U.S. intelligence and the
FISA court in a presidential election.
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