.
If "contact" with Russians is criminal, "scores of American corporations doing
business in Russia today are engaged in criminal enterprise."...It also suggests "that any quest for better relations with Russia, or détente, is somehow
suspicious, illegitimate, or impossible, as expressed recently by Andrew Weiss in The Wall Street Journal and by The Washington Post, in an editorial."
12/15/17, "The Scary Void Inside Russia-gate," Stephen F. Cohen, Consortium News
"Despite a lack of evidence at its core – and the risk of nuclear
conflagration as its by-product– Russia-gate remains the go-to
accusation for “getting” the Trump administration, explains Russia
scholar Stephen F. Cohen."
"The foundational accusation of Russia-gate was, and remains, charges
that Russian President Putin ordered the hacking of Democratic National
Committee e-mails and their public dissemination through WikiLeaks in
order to benefit Donald Trump and undermine Hillary Clinton in the 2016
presidential election, and that Trump and/or his associates colluded
with the Kremlin in this “attack on American democracy.”
As no actual evidence for these allegations has been produced after
nearly a year and a half of media and government investigations, we are
left with Russia-gate without Russia. (An apt formulation perhaps first
coined in an e-mail exchange by Nation writer James Carden.)
Special counsel Mueller has produced four indictments: against retired
Gen. Michael Flynn, Trump’s short-lived national-security adviser, and
George Papadopolous, a lowly and inconsequential Trump “adviser,” for
lying to the FBI; and against Paul Manafort and his partner Rick Gates
for financial improprieties. None of these charges has anything to do
with improper collusion with Russia, except for the wrongful
insinuations against Flynn.
Instead, the several investigations, desperate to find actual
evidence of collusion, have spread to “contacts with Russia” —
political, financial, social, etc. — on the part of a growing number of
people, often going back many years before anyone imagined Trump as a
presidential candidate. The resulting implication is that these
“contacts” were criminal or potentially so.
This is unprecedented, preposterous, and dangerous, potentially more
so than even Joe McCarthy’s search for “Communist” connections. It would
suggest, for example, that scores of American corporations doing
business in Russia today are engaged in criminal enterprise.
More to the point, advisers to U.S. policy-makers and even media
commentators on Russia must have many and various contacts with Russia
if they are to understand anything about the dynamics of Kremlin
policy-making. I myself, to take an individual example, was an adviser
to two (unsuccessful) presidential campaigns, which considered my
wide-ranging and longstanding “contacts” with Russia to be an important
credential, as did the one sitting president whom I advised.
To suggest that such contacts are in any way criminal is to slur
hundreds of reputations and to leave U.S. policy-makers with advisers
laden with ideology and no actual expertise. It is also to suggest that
any quest for better relations with Russia, or détente, is somehow
suspicious, illegitimate, or impossible, as expressed recently by Andrew Weiss in The Wall Street Journal and by The Washington Post, in an editorial. This is one reason why I have, in a previous commentary, argued that Russia-gate and its promoters have become the gravest threat to American national security.
Russia-gate began sometime prior to June 2016, not after the
presidential election in November, as is often said, as an anti-Trump
political project. (Exactly why, how, and by whom remain unclear, and
herein lies the real significance of the largely bogus “dossier” and the
still murky role of top U.S. intel officials in the creation of that
document.)
That said, the mainstream American media have been largely
responsible for inflating, perpetuating, and sustaining the sham
Russia-gate as the real political crisis it has become, arguably the
greatest in modern American presidential and thus institutional
political history. The media have done this by increasingly betraying
their own professed standards of verified news reporting and balanced
coverage, even resorting to tacit forms of censorship by systematically
excluding dissenting reporting and opinions.
(For inventories of recent examples, see Glenn Greenwald at The Intercept and Joe Lauria at Consortiumnews.
Anyone interested in exposures of such truly “fake news” should visit
these two sites regularly, the latter the product of the inestimable
veteran journalist Robert Parry.)
Still worse, this mainstream malpractice has spread to some
alternative-media publications once prized for their journalistic
standards, where expressed disdain for “evidence” and “proof” in favor
of allegations without any actual facts can sometimes be found. Nor are
these practices merely the ordinary occasional mishaps of professional
journalism.
As Greenwald points out, all of the now retracted stories, whether by
print media or cable television, were zealous promotions of Russia-gate
and virulently anti-Trump.
They, too, are examples of Russia-gate
without Russia.
Flynn and the FBI
Leaving aside possible financial improprieties on the part of General
Flynn, his persecution and subsequent prosecution is highly indicative.
Flynn pled guilty to having lied to the FBI about his communications
with the Russian ambassador, Sergey Kislyak, on behalf of the incoming
Trump administration, discussions that unavoidably included some
references, however vague, to sanctions imposed on Russia by President
Obama in December 2016, just before leaving office.
Those sanctions were highly unusual — last-minute, unprecedented in
their seizure of Russian property in the United States, and including a
reckless veiled threat of unspecified cyber-attacks on Russia. They gave
the impression that Obama wanted to make even more difficult Trump’s
professed goal of improving relations with Moscow.
Still more, Obama’s specified reason was not Russian behavior in
Ukraine or Syria, as is commonly thought, but Russia-gate — that is,
Putin’s “attack on American democracy,” which Obama’s intel chiefs had
evidently persuaded him was an entirely authentic allegation. (Or which
Obama, who regarded Trump’s victory over his designated successor,
Hillary Clinton, as a personal rebuff, was eager to believe.)
But Flynn’s discussions with the Russian ambassador — as well as
other Trump representatives’ efforts [during the transition] to open “back-channel”
communications with Moscow – were anything but a crime. As I pointed out
in another commentary,
there were so many precedents of such overtures on behalf of
presidents-elect, it was considered a normal, even necessary practice,
if only to ask Moscow not to make relations worse before the new
president had a chance to review the relationship.
When Henry Kissinger did this on behalf of President-elect Nixon, his
boss instructed him to keep the communication entirely confidential,
not to inform any other members of the incoming administration.
Presumably Flynn was similarly secretive, thereby misinforming Vice
President Pence and finding himself trapped — or possibly entrapped —
between loyalty to his president and an FBI agent. Flynn no doubt would
have been especially guarded with a representative of the FBI, knowing
as he did the role of Obama’s Intel bosses in Russia-gate prior to the
election and which had escalated after Trump’s surprise victory.
In any event, to the extent that Flynn encouraged Moscow not to reply
in kind immediately to Obama’s highly provocative sanctions, he
performed a service to U.S. national security, not a crime. And,
assuming that Flynn was acting on the instructions of his
president-elect, so did Trump. Still more, if Flynn “colluded” in any
way, it was with Israel, not Russia, having been asked by that government to dissuade countries from voting for an impending anti-Israel U.N. resolution.
Removing Tillerson
Finally, and similarly, there is the ongoing effort by the
political-media establishment to drive Secretary of State Rex Tillerson
from office and replace him with a fully neocon, anti-Russian,
anti-détente head of the State Department. Tillerson was an admirable
appointee by Trump — widely experienced in world affairs, a tested
negotiator, a mature and practical-minded man.
Originally, his role as the CEO of Exxon Mobil who had negotiated and
enacted an immensely profitable and strategically important
energy-extraction deal with the Kremlin earned him the slur of being
“Putin’s pal.” This preposterous allegation has since given way to
charges that he is slowly restructuring, and trimming, the long bloated
and mostly inept State Department, as indeed he should do. Numerous
former diplomats closely associated with Hillary Clinton have raced to
influential op-ed pages to denounce Tillerson’s undermining of this
purportedly glorious frontline institution of American national
security. Many news reports, commentaries, and editorials have been in
the same vein. But who can recall a major diplomatic triumph by the
State Department or a Secretary of State in recent years?
The answer might be the Obama administration’s multinational
agreement with Iran to curb its nuclear-weapons potential, but that was
due no less to Russia’s president and Ministry of Foreign Affairs, which
provided essential guarantees to the sides involved. Forgotten,
meanwhile, are the more than 50 career State Department officials who
publicly protested Obama’s rare attempt to cooperate with Moscow in
Syria. Call it by what it was: the sabotaging of a president by his own
State Department.
In this spirit, there are a flurry of leaked stories that Tillerson
will soon resign or be ousted. Meanwhile, however, he carries on. The
ever-looming menace of Russia-gate compels him to issue wildly
exaggerated indictments of Russian behavior while, at the same time,
calling for a “productive new relationship” with Moscow, in which he
clearly believes. (And which, if left unencumbered, he might achieve.)
Evidently, Tillerson has established a “productive” working
relationship with his Russian counterpart, Sergey Lavrov, the two of
them having just announced North Korea’s readiness to engage in
negotiations with the United States and other governments involved in
the current crisis.
Tillerson’s fate will tell us much about the number-one
foreign-policy question confronting America: cooperation or escalating
conflict with the other nuclear superpower, a détente-like diminishing
of the new Cold War or the growing risks that it will become hot war.
Politics and policy should never be over-personalized; larger factors are always involved. But in these unprecedented times, Tillerson may be
the last man standing who represents the possibility of some kind of
détente. Apart, that is, from President Trump himself, loathe him or
not. Or to put the issue differently: Will Russia-gate continue to
gravely endanger American national security?"
"Stephen F. Cohen
is a professor emeritus of Russian studies and politics at New York
University and Princeton University and a contributing editor of The Nation, where a version of this article first appeared."
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