There is an old saying that says where there is smoke, there
is fire. These days, if Russia was smoke, the Trump Administration would be a
four-alarm blaze. The question is why Russia is a recurring subject within the
Trump Administration.
The rumors of Russian influence within the Trump
Administration go back as far as Trump’s announcement of his candidacy. Rumors
surfaced quickly about Trump’s longstanding business
ties to Russia and The
Hill noted that the Kremlin had funded nationalist opposition groups in
several countries, such as Marine Le Pen’s National Front in France, which recently
came close to winning the presidency.
Several of Trump’s former advisors were linked to Russia and
Vladimir Putin. First to go was Paul Manafort, Trump’s first campaign manager.
Manafort was a political consultant for Ukrainian
dictator and Putin ally, Viktor Yanukovych, for 10 years until he was
toppled by a revolution in 2014. Trump fired Manafort in August 2016.
Carter Page was a foreign policy advisor to the Trump
campaign. Page was forced to take a leave of absence from the Trump campaign
after allegations that he met with Russian officials on a trip to Moscow. Page
was apparently the
target of FBI surveillance for his links to Russia.
Roger Stone, another Trump campaign aide, claimed to have
communicated with WikiLeaks founder, Julian Assange, and may have had foreknowledge
of the WikiLeaks dump of Podesta emails in October 2016. WikiLeaks is
widely believed to be a Russian
front organization. Stone claims that he resigned from the Trump campaign,
while Trump says he was fired.
Michael Flynn survived the campaign to become National
Security Advisor. Unfortunately, shortly after Trump took office, Flynn was forced
to resign for lying about contacts that he had with the Russian ambassador.
Amid the rumors of Trump campaign officials’ links to
Russia, candidate Trump called upon Russia to “find the 30,000 emails that are
missing” from Hillary Clinton’s server. When Trump made the statement, it was common
knowledge that Russian fingerprints were all over the first hack of the
Democratic National Committee a month earlier. The hack of John Podesta’s email
account has also been traced
to Russia.
After the election, when briefed on the evidence for Russian
interference in the election, President-elect Trump finally admitted
that “Russian entities” were responsible for the hacking in January, a
conclusion that most other observers had long since reached. Even then, he
denied that the interference was aimed at helping his campaign.
While there is so far no smoking gun that members of the
Trump campaign conspired with the Russians on the hacking and election
tampering, Lawfare
Blog notes that “cooperation [between the Trump campaign and Russian
hackers] was an open and public feature of the campaign. It included open
encouragement of the Russians to hack Democratic targets; denial that they had
done so; encouragement of WikiLeaks, which was publicly known to be effectively
a publishing arm of the Russian operation, in publishing the fruits of the
hacks; and publicly trumpeting the contents of stolen emails.”
Writing for Just
Security, Julian Sanchez argues that secret contacts between the campaign
and the Putin government were not needed. “Russia’s efforts on Trump’s behalf
were, for the most part, pretty open, even if Trump affected not to notice
them,” he says. “Trump’s praise of Vladimir Putin—grounded in an affection that
long predates his political career—was public, as was his gleeful exploitation
of the fruits of hacks against his opponents and encouragement of more of the
same, as was his attempt to exculpate Russia long after the intelligence
community had reached consensus about their responsibility, as was his use on
the campaign trail of stories pushed out by Russian state media. Trump could see they were helping him, they
could see he appreciated it and was reciprocating. What, exactly, would have
been the marginal benefit of some further secret communication making this
happy symbiosis a matter of explicit agreement?
Collusion would have been redundant.”
At this point, it is Trump himself keeping the Russia
scandal alive. After the firing of FBI Director James Comey, Trump told NBC’s
Lester Holt, “And in fact when I decided to just do it, I said to myself, I
said 'you know, this Russia thing with Trump and Russia is a made-up story,
it's an excuse by the Democrats for having lost an election that they should
have won'.” This shocking statement confirmed charges by the critics that the
firing was at least partly due to Comey’s handling of the investigation of
Russia’s election interference and contacts with the Trump campaign.
When President Trump
defended rather than denied his sharing of classified material with the
Russian ambassador and foreign minister, it was simply the latest in a long
line of contacts between the two organizations. Like many of the other
contacts, Trump’s sharing of classified material was probably legal, but
ethically questionable and almost certainly unwise.
Why does Russia keep popping up in the Trump Administration?
Because Donald Trump encouraged the Russian interference in the campaign and –
knowingly or unknowingly – hired a plethora of pro-Putin advisors. The
president’s clumsy attempts to deflect the investigation into the campaign’s
Russia ties and ensure that the subject won’t go away anytime soon.
Originally published
on The Resurgent
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