Baby-Boom Benedict Arnold: The Six Emerging Villains of the Russia Story

LET’S BE CLEAR: Despite vociferous denials to the contrary, Donald Trump and his associates worked in concert with Russian operatives to achieve the White House. Once there, he put Putin’s aims above his own country’s, if not his own.

We now know that Jared Kushner, Trump’s son-in-law, special adviser, and slumlord-cum-bringer of peace to the Middle East, is, ahem, complicit. His clumsy and egregiously illicit attempt to implement a secret means of communication between the Trump administration and the Kremlin, along with the White House’s non-denial of this bombshell allegation—does any serious person believe Trump & Co. went to such extraordinary lengths to discuss Syria, a country whose pitiable refugees they went to equally extraordinary lengths to ban from entering the United States?—confirm what some of us have long suspected: Yes, there was collusion between the Trump campaign and Vladimir Putin.

The picture is now crystal clear, the betrayal of country impossible to wish away.

This is the worst scandal in the history of the Republic. If his actions do not match the legal definition of treason—we are not at war with Russia, at least officially—Donald Trump is a traitor to his country, a Baby-Boom Benedict Arnold. And his name should eclipse that by-gone redcoat’s in the annals of infamy.

The list of collaborators in the Russia Story is literally too long to tweet. But Roger Stone exchanging DMs with Guccifer 2.0 or Paul Ryan knowing about Russian money financing GOP campaigns, is, relatively speaking, small potatoes. The (well-done) steak in the Russia Story are the men who took meetings repeatedly with Sergei Kislyak—the Russian ambassador and chief spymaster—and his FSB associates.

We know these meetings took place, we know that these meetings were highly unusual, and we know that the Americans who participated in these meetings lied about doing so—under oath, in the case of Jeff Sessions.

Let’s take a look at the six villains whom we know for sure participated in those meetings: 

Paul Manafort is Bond-villain-level bad. He’s spent most of his adult life as a Washington-based lobbyist for unsavory foreign leaders like Mobutu Sese Seko, Jonas Savimbi, Ferdinand Marcos, and Viktor Yanukovych, as well as various Russian oligarchs and Pakistan’s ISI. He raked in a boatload of money from his recent misadventures in Ukraine, and his own daughters (allegedly) believe he’s an actual murderer. It was after he became chairman of the Trump campaign that the Russian meetings took place, so it stands to reason that he was the man who initiated the collusion, probably at the behest of his Russian whoremasters.

Mike Flynn was a lobbyist for both Turkey AND Russia throughout the campaign, which he failed to disclose. Again: highly illegal. He participated in all the known Kislyak meetings. Trump did not want to fire him despite manifold warnings of his unsuitability, and defends him to this day, texting him to “stay strong” a few weeks ago. Wherefore this loyalty to Flynn, a known crook? Perhaps the more operative question is: Was Flynn Trump’s handler, or just his consigliere? Which man was actually in charge?

Jeff Sessions, the first senator to endorse Trump, participated in the notorious meeting with Kislyak at the Mayflower Hotel, as “citizen journalist” Seth Abramson explains:

He had several encounters with Kislyak, and lied about them under oath during his confirmation hearing. Perjury is a felony, which, as an attorney—as the ATTORNEY GENERAL—he must know. Why did he misrepresent himself before Congress, if he’s not guilty of something greater?

Michael Cohen, Trump’s loquacious personal attorney, is a prominent figure in the Steele dossier (which, it should be noted, he claims is spurious). Whether or not he met with Russian operatives in Prague, as Steele reports and Cohen vehemently denies, he certainly participated in a meeting with Trump business associate Felix Sater at Trump Tower, at which the lifting of sanctions was discussed, and delivered the results of that meeting to Flynn. He’s as intimately involved with Trump/Russia as he is with his daughter’s lingerie-modeling career.

Jared Kushner took all the meetings, as well as God knows how many phone calls with Kislyak. He also met, covertly, with the CEO of Vnesheconombank, a sanctioned Russian state bank, the day after his secret Trump Tower rendezvous with Kislyak. His idea to use Russian diplomatic facilities as a “backchannel,” which he mistakenly believed would circumvent the NSA finding out, was so brazen that even the many-chinned Russian ambassador was taken aback. Either Kushner was the mastermind behind the whole operation, or, more likely, he was given an assignment by his father-in-law (“Figure out a private way for us to talk.”). The consensus among spooks is that what he did is punishable under the Espionage Act. Oh, and he also lied on his SF86twice… which is a felony…twice: 10 years in the slammer.

Whether Donald Trump is an active participant or useful idiot, whether he initiated the collusion or was talked into it by Manafort and Flynn, whether there was actual quid pro quo or just kompromat, his firing of Jim Comey (at Kushner’s behest, supposedly), his attempt to woo the directors of various intelligence agencies to disavow the Russia Story, his non-denial of Kushner’s latest backchannel attempt, and his decision to lawyer up and convene a “war room” to combat Trump/Russia allegations, are not behaviors that bespeak of innocence.

He’s already caused immeasurable harm to NATO, lifted some of the sanctions, and invited his Russian whoremasters into the Oval Office; total lifting of the sanctions is only a matter of time. The pertinent question is: What, aside from the election, did Putin give him in return?

That Trump will go down is inevitable; it’s either him or the republic, and the republic will stand. The only question now is how soon, how exactly all the moving parts fit together…and how many of his deplorable associates will come tumbling after.

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Against Active Measures: Take the Fight to the Russians

[Note: these remarks were given at the Hudson Valley Writers Resist event at the Rosendale Theatre in Rosendale, N.Y., on Saturday, May 20.]

BY NOW, you know all about Russia. You know that Trump and his collaborators are guilty, and will go down. This means Flynn, Manafort, Roger Stone, Carter Page, Rudy Giuliani, Devin Nunes, Jason Chaffetz, Steve Bannon, Jeff Sessions, Reince Priebus, Jared Kushner, Ivanka Trump, Uday and Qusay Trump, and, oh yes, Paul Ryan and Mike Pence. All of them are complicit, all of them will pay the price—eventually.

For today, though, I want to talk about active measures. Active measures are various techniques Russian intelligence uses to fuck with us. Given how successful the FSB has been, I want to make you aware of five active measures the Russians have undertaken here, as outlined by expert Clint Watts. If you know what they’re doing, you can fight back.

  1. Undermine citizen confidence in democratic governance
  2. Foment and exacerbate divisive political fractures
  3. Erode trust between citizens and elected officials and democratic institutions
  4. Popularize Russian policy agendas within foreign populations
  5. Create general distrust or confusion over information sources by blurring the lines between fact and fiction

Let’s look at them one by one:

1. Undermine citizen confidence in democratic governance
Putin tells his people that the US is just like Russia, that our democratic institutions are bullshit. We need to show him that they’re not. The protests, the calls to our representatives, the op-eds and letters to the editor—all of this runs counter to his objective. What he wants is for us to feel hopeless. Don’t take the bait. If you feel particularly bad, pick up the phone and call John Faso and scream at his aide about impeachment. Works for me!

2. Foment and exacerbate divisive political fractures
This means Dems versus GOP, but also factions within the Democratic party. Look, I could stand here and riff for 20 minutes about how Bernie Sanders is just as much of a Useful Idiot to Putin as Trump is, and it would piss most of you off, and it would also be true, but what good would it do? Forget about Hillary and why she lost. Forget about Bernie and how he would have beaten Trump. Keep your eyes on the prize—getting Orange Hitler out of the White House, and the GOP out of the House and Senate. You want to know where the good conservatives are? On Twitter, on top of the Russia story. Louise Mensch, John Schindler, Evan McMullin, Jennifer Rubin, Rick Wilson—all conservatives, all part of my team. History shows this time and again: If we are united, we cannot lose.

3. Erode trust between citizens and elected officials and democratic institutions
One of the reasons the GOP is in power—check that, THE reason—is because our election system is corrupt as all get-out. Gerrymandered districts, oppressive voting ID laws, rigged counting systems, Citizens United, and an underlying architecture that allows Missi-fucking-ssippi to have as many senators as California. You want to rail against something? Rail against that. All of this hideous stuff that Trump has done so far can be undone by a Hillary or a Biden or a President Gillebrand—ahem—in an hour. It’s all executive orders. But the voting system has to be reformed, or we’re all fucked.

4. Popularize Russian policy agendas within foreign populations
This one hasn’t worked so well here, although Fox News is trying. Sean Hannity and his Macy’s Thanksgiving Day Parade balloon-sized head was on Twitter arguing that Stalin was peachy keen because, after all, the Soviet Union was an ally during World War Two, so #MAGA. That’s such a mendacious oversimplification of actual history, but most Americans are ignorant, so this is the shit they try to pull. Don’t fall for it. NATO is good. NAFTA is good. The sanctions on Russia are working. Putin is not our friend!

5. Create general distrust or confusion over information sources by blurring the lines between fact and fiction
Fake news. Trump generates it, and then accuses legit media of disseminating it. And a third of the country believes him, because he sounds so alpha when he talks, and he played a successful businessman on TV, and isn’t he draining that swamp.

We know Fox News is Russian state propaganda now, and Breitbart, and InfoWars. But there are a lot of left-leaning outfits that are equally dubious. Take that stuff with a big grain of salt. It may also be fake news, just the kind we want to hear.

I get my news first from Twitter. Sources like Louise Mensch and Claude Taylor report stuff, and it’s like raw intelligence. Much of it bears out days weeks months later, some of it doesn’t. But it generally points me in the right direction, suggests where stuff is headed. I share it only when I think it’s valid or legit, and I make sure and indicate if it’s speculative. The big papers, the New York Times and especially the Washington Post, have been great in the last few months—ever since the Comey hearing on March 20th. They get things wrong, too, but they try to be honest. The Associated Press, my former employer, is a not-for-profit cooperative owned by every big paper in the country. It has to be objective—that’s its mission. If AP prints it, take it to the bank.

~

One more thing, before I go: the idea that Pence is worse than Trump? No no no no no. I hate Pence with the fire of a thousand suns, but he’s just a generic bad politician with incredibly unpopular ideas. There is no cult of personality built around Mike Pence. People don’t shout MIKE PENCE before committing hate crimes. Mike Pence is a dipstick, but he’s not unhinged like Donald. He won’t start a war with North Korea as a lark.

Stay strong, folks. Stay together. What we’re doing is WORKING. We will take that Orange Motherfucker down.

The author celebrates Loyalty Day.

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After Comey: Will Democracy Die in Darkness?

Our very first kiss was the first kiss goodbye.

YESTERDAY, some 24 hours after the compelling testimony of Sally Yates and James Clapper made his shady Russia ties impossible to deny, Donald Trump fired James Comey, the FBI director leading the investigation into said ties. Today, Trump will meet with Sergei Lavrov, the Russian diplomat who the Steele dossier claims is his handler for Russian intelligence.

If you still think, after the last 48 hours—after the existence of the grand juries, reported on weeks ago by Claude Taylor, was confirmed by CNN; after the Mike Flynn imbroglio was exposed as either criminal negligence or collusion on Trump’s part; after the summary dismissal of the man many believed handed Trump the election for not leaving Russia alone—then you should just move to Moscow with Edward Snowden…but even Edward Snowden has called bullshit on this!

Firing Comey was, simply put, the stuff of banana republics. If this is allowed to stand, if Republicans in Congress laugh this off, it means that we no longer live in a functioning democracy. Yesterday, a journalist was arrested in West Virginia for shouting questions to Trump’s odious HHS secretary, Tom Price. Stephen Colbert was attacked via the FCC, a fancy federal way of threatening his First Amendment rights. Laws are being written to criminalize protest, and paid alt-right goons are appearing at events to stir up trouble and create the impetus for doing so. Oh, and the New York Fucking Times now has a feature in which we’re supposed to write nice things about our Great Leader.

This is Fascism, guys. As some of us said months ago.

The next few days are going to be critical. Will the media finally wake the fuck up, abandon its “fair and balanced” dictate, and cover Trump for what he is? Or will it continue to question sources like Claude Taylor and Louise Mensch, who have been right about almost everything in this case, months before the press has caught on?

Will presumed patriots like Jeff Flake, Ben Sasse, Lindsey Graham, and John McCain pull out the stops and lead the anti-Trump GOP movement? Is anyone in the Republican party currently holding office able to take the long view, and realize that doing so will make it easier, not harder, for them to remain after Trump and his Russian circus are gone?

Will the Democrats take a page from the GOP playbook and treat this like the life-and-death situation that it is? Well-crafted public statements are nice, but this is time for drastic measures. I’m not sure what those measures may be, but this is the time to activate them.

Will the attorneys general currently working on cases against Trump, such as New York’s Eric Schneiderman, move more aggressively?

Multiple sources have reported that there are tapes, audio tapes, of the Russian ambassador offering money and help to Trump, to Jeff Sessions, and to Paul Ryan. I’ve heard there is also audio of multiple Trump family members engaging in illicit conversations, recorded by foreign intelligence services. If these tapes exist, will they be leaked? Because if I’m Estonia, and I have this sort of smoking gun, it’s in my best interests to do so, stat.

And what of Comey himself? Although he was surprised by the timing, he knew this was coming, sources say. Does he have a plan in place for such an eventuality? Can this plan be activated? What might it involve? Leakapalooza is not out of the question here. He’s supposed to testify on Tuesday…is that still on? Will he be more glib now that he is no longer FBI director? Certainly it can no longer be denied that he’s on the right side.

This is going to be the end of Trump, or the end of democracy in this country. This is not a hyperbole and not a joke. This is the gravest threat to our way of life since the Civil War.

As former NSA agent John Schindler says:

 

 

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Trump White House Succession Planning: A Loyalty Day Thought Experiment

LET US SAY, for sake of argument, that the impending FBI indictments against members of Donald Trump’s campaign are enough to make his impeachment an inevitability. Further, let’s assume that Vice President Mike Pence is also implicated, as well as Speaker of the House Paul Ryan. What would happen?

Thanks to both wishful thinking inspired by Trump’s rank awfulness, as well as shows like Designated Survivor and Battlestar Galactica that play on the ideathe presidential line of succession is now well known: First the VP, then the Speaker, then the Senate president pro tempore, then the Secretaries of State, Treasury, and Defense. The current order is Pence, Ryan, Orrin Hatch, and so on.

Here’s the thing, though: the line of succession only holds if everyone ahead on the list is eliminated at the same time. Given the deliberate pace of the Trump/Russia investigation, that is unlikely to happen here (unless the North Koreans are faking it with their lousy missile-guidance tech). On the contrary, when the shit hits the fan, Trump and his collaborators would presumably have some time, a few weeks certainly, to get their ducks in a row before the house of cards collapsed (if I may deploy the full day’s quota of cliches).

This is what I think would happen, in that case:

(1.) Once the (Cyrillic) writing on the wall became undeniable, Trump would pardon Pence and Ryan (and everyone else, probably) and then resign, blaming Obama and FAKE NEWS and the First Amendment for his woes. (When he shamelessly pardons his odious daughter and his son-in-law, perhaps the somnambulant GOP/MSM will get woke to the egregious extent of the corruption here.)

(2.) Ryan would immediately resign as Speaker.

(3.) The newly-pardoned Pence would be sworn in, only to break William Henry Harrison’s record for shortest presidential term of all time.

(4.) The House would elect a new Speaker. As we learned during John Boehner’s ouster, the Speaker of the House need not be a member of Congress. Our representatives would select a “consensus candidate,” such as John Kasich, Mitt Romney, Evan McMullin, or Condi Rice—a conservative who wasn’t actively evil, basically—as Speaker of the House…and thus, crucially, next in line to become president, when…

(5.) Pence would resign, ceding the presidency to this new dark-horse Speaker, who would serve out the rest of Trump’s term. This individual would enjoy astonishingly high approval ratings just by dint of not being a Trump-tainted Russian-compromised traitor, and would immediately unite the country.

In a simpler variation of the same idea, Pence could name the consensus candidate his VP and resign once he or she was confirmed by the Senate. Recall that Gerald Ford was not elected, but replaced the disgraced Spiro Agnew, so this is not without precedent.

Louise Mensch has wisely proposed that, should Orrin Hatch become president (as the third in line currently), he select Hillary Clinton as his vice president and resign in 2018, awarding her half a four-year term for having been the victim of election-hacking:

This is a lovely idea, but the GOP as currently constituted is incapable of such gallantry. Nor is there any other way for HRC to achieve the White House, even if the research led by Mike Farb at unhackthevote.com shows that the election results in the various swing states were, in fact, doctored. There simply is no mechanism in the Constitution for a do-over, even if the election were itself compromised.

The best we can hope for, I think, is President To-be-named-later. But this is better than any of the currently available options. Sometimes the grass on the other side really is greener—and free of snakes.

Our next president?

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Postcards from the Resistance, Vol. 8: Mother of All

 

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Postcards from the Resistance, Vol. 7: Dinner with Pence

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The Rosneft Commission: What We Should Be Looking For

MOST AMERICANS have never heard of it, but Rosneft is one of the world’s largest publicly traded oil companies, with revenues of $91 billion in 2015 ranking 23rd overall among oil and gas concerns. Its majority owner is the Government of Russia—in other words, Vladimir Putin and his circle of oligarchs, including Rosneft CEO/Putin BFF Igor Sechin.

In 2012, Rosneft entered into a $500 billion joint venture with ExxonMobil, which at the time was run by current Secretary of State Rex Tillerson; it was this mammoth joint venture, apparently, that inspired Putin to award Tillerson the Medal of Friendship in 2013. The oil reserves in the Arctic, the reason for the venture, are estimated to contain 85 billion barrels. At a conservative price of $50 a barrel, that amounts to a staggering $4.25 trillion in potential gross revenue. Trillion, with a T.

These are dizzying numbers—but Putin will not see a kopek as long as the US continues to impose sanctions on Russia. Small wonder, then, that Putin and Sechin want the sanctions lifted as soon as possible. If and when that happens, the Exxon deal would be back on, and money would begin to pour in to the depleted Kremlin coffers.

Whether or not there proves to be collusion between the Trump campaign and the Russians, Putin clearly preferred Candidate Trump, if for no other reason than the GOP nominee was, and is, much more likely to lift those pesky sanctions than was Hillary Clinton, whom Putin perceived as a mortal enemy. The question is: Were the Russian president and his cronies willing to pay to affect that result?

Christopher Steele, the ex-MI6 spy who authored the infamous “golden shower” dossier, believed so. In the intelligence report dated 18 October, 2016, Steele observes that Sechin, the aforementioned president of Rosneft, “was so keen to lift personal and corporate western sanctions imposed on the company, that he offered [Carter] PAGE/TRUMP’s associates the brokerage of up to a 19 per cent (privatized) stake in Rosneft in return.”

We do not know if Trump accepted this offer—indeed, there is no evidence to suggest that he was even aware of it—and Page has vehemently denied being the intermediary, or of engaging with Sechin at all (although as I write this, the story has emerged that the FBI thinks otherwise; also, Page’s interview yesterday with Jake Tapper did not go well).

However, Rosneft did indeed sell off a percentage of its ownership—19.5 percent, almost exactly what Steele had reported—in January. The details of the transaction are predictably murky, with shell companies selling to other shell companies, who are owned by different shell companies, and so on to infinity. One reads the names of these ersatz enterprises—Glencore, Intesa SanPaolo, QHG Shares, QHC Holding, QHC Cayman Limited—and one finds one’s eyelids getting heavier, and one falling slowly to sleep.

But the Rosneft deal, the thinking goes, is the key to Trump/Russia’s Tier 3. If indeed Trump accepted Putin’s alleged bribe, if money changed hands, the funds would have had to come from the sale. Why else would the deal have even gone down, other than to create a vast web of shell companies impossible to track, so that a payment to Trump might be facilitated?

An investigator named Alex Mohajer postulates that this grafter’s hot potato ends with the Blackstone Group, owned and operated by Trump chum Stephen A. Schwarzman. That any of Trump’s associates have their fingerprints on the deal is, to be sure, enough to raise eyebrows.

https://twitter.com/AlexMohajer/status/830718560334798848

But there are some holes in Mohajer’s theory. First, Schwarzman is not Trump; if a good friend of mine suddenly makes a business deal, that doesn’t mean that I receive any profit. Furthermore, Blackstone can acquire whatever company it wants; scooping up Rosneft shares is not illegal at all. It may well be good business, especially if the sanctions get lifted.

More crucially, Mohajer—and other citizen journalists investigating the deal—is operating on the assumption that the 19.5% stake was the payout to Trump. And that’s just balderdash. Vladimir Putin is too smart to give Trump that much money; Mike Flynn took pennies on the dollar, Paul Manafort took a few million, and it follows that Trump’s price is presumably much lower than a full fifth of Russia’s premier oil company. Moreover, this is not what Steele reported: “he offered PAGE/TRUMP’s associates the brokerage of up to a 19 per cent (privatized) stake in Rosneft….”

The brokerage on a sale is not the thing being sold.

To me, the most interesting (potential) clue is this: Steele reported that the stake would be 19 percent; the actual amount sold was 19.5 percent. Assuming Steele is correct, wherefore this extra half a percent?

Let’s crunch some numbers:

The deal for 19.5 percent of Rosneft was priced at 10.2 billion euros—again, way more than would be required to buy off Trump. This means that the company is valued at something like 52.3 billion euros. A one percent stake is 523 million euros; half of that is 261 million euros, or about 277 million USD—a quarter of a billion dollars, give or take.

What if the discrepancy between the 19 percent reported by Steele and the 19.5 percent of the actual sale is the commission of the sale? In other words, what if that 261 million euros represented the bribe to Trump to lift the sanctions? Assuming, of course, that there was a quid pro quo of some kind.

Concealing the entire proceeds of the Rosneft deal is impossible, even for Putin, no matter how many shell companies in how many unscrupulous countries are involved. There’s simply too much cash for it to all disappear; it would take money laundering on a scale that would make Wilbur Ross blush. But 261 million euros? On a sale worth 10.2 billion? That’s like worrying over a missing hubcap when the Bentley gets totaled.

As it is, reporters have not yet determined who ponied up the cash for the purchase. “Although Qatar has never publicly confirmed how much it has contributed to the deal or the size of the stake that it bought, Glencore and Rosneft say it contributed 2.5 billion euros,” per the Reuters report. “Along with the 300 million from Glencore and the 5.2 billion loaned by Intesa, that still leaves a shortfall of 2.2 billion euros.”[1. Glencore, incidentally, is run by Marc Rich, who was famously pardoned at the eleventh hour by Bill Clinton for his tax evasion charge; this is not the most moralistically cool guy on the planet.] If 2.2 billion euros remain unaccounted for, what’s a paltry 261 million?

So let’s say Putin offered Trump, through enough intermediaries for both to be able to deny it, a half a percent of the company’s market value as commission. We need to start looking for reasons why Trump would be tempted by a one-time lump-sum payment of some $277 million. Like, for example, the fact that he owes almost exactly that amount to his largest known creditor, Deutsche Bank. The same Deutsche Bank that was fined for participating in a huge Russian money laundering scheme involving “mirror trades.”

To reiterate, this is speculation on my part, based largely on reporting by Christopher Steele in a dossier the GOP loves to point out is “unverified.” It may be that Page never met with Sechin’s people, never brought an offer to Trump, was with USC’s baseball coach during the entire summer, and Trump was merely the bumbling beneficiary of Russian cyber influence, and not a treasonous opportunist. But if a quid pro quo did indeed take place, the magic number is $277 million.

Let’s find it.

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