Ten Problems with the Anti-Russia Obsession
by Rick Sterling / July 6th, 2017
Western media and Democratic Party
politicians have made a major campaign accusing Russia of “meddling” in the
U.S. election, colluding with and helping Trump win the Presidency. The charges
began as “allegations” but now are routinely asserted as facts. The Washington Post recently ran a long
article claiming all the above plus saying the operation was directed by
Russian President Putin himself and implying not enough has been done to
“punish” Russia. The July-August 2017 edition of Mother Jones magazine features an article
headlined “The Russian Connection:
Collusion? Maybe. Active Enablers? Definitely. Trump Knew the Truth, but he
Remained on the Side of the Enemy.”
Is this campaign based on facts or
political opportunism? Does it help or hurt the progressive cause of peace with
justice? Following are major problems with the “anti-Russia” theme,
starting with the lack of clear evidence.
1)
Evidence from Crowdstrike is dubious.
Accusations that Russia stole and
released the Democratic National Committee (DNC) emails are based on the
findings of the private company Crowdstrike. The DNC did not allow the
FBI to scan the computers but relied on a hired private company which claims to
have found telltale Russian alphabet characters (cyrrilic) in the computer
memory. However, Crowdstrike is known to be political
biased, connected to the Clintons and to make false accusations such as
this one documented by Voice of America. Recently the Wikileaks “Vault7” findings reveal that
the CIA has developed software which purposely leaves foreign language
characters in memory, casting further doubt on the Crowdstrike evidence.
2)
The Steele Dossier looks fictitious.
The accusations of Trump-Russia
collusion, Putin direction etc are significantly based on the so-called “Steele
Dossier”. This is the 35
page compilation of “intelligence reports” produced by a former MI6
officer, Robert Steele. The research and reports by Steele were contracted by
anti-Trump Republicans in the primary race, then by the Clinton campaign in the
presidential race. There is no supporting evidence or verification of the
claims; the reports are essentially that a Kremlin source says such-and-such.
It has since been revealed that Steele was not in direct contact but collected
the information via Russians in the UK who in turn received it from Kremlin
insiders. The reports were viewed skeptically by media, politicians and the
intelligence community through the summer and fall of 2016. But then, just
prior to the election, the dossier was leaked to the public with sensational
stories of “golden showers” by prostitutes urinating at Trump’s request to
“defile” the bed where the Obamas previously slept. Is the Steele dossier
accurate or was it a PR dirty trick designed to damage Trump? The latter seems
at least if not more likely. This Newsweek article, “Thirteen
things that don’t add up in the Russia-Trump intelligence dossier“, lists
some of the reasons to be skeptical.
3)
The “assessment” from Intel Agencies gives no evidence and seems politically
biased.
On 6 January 2017 the office of the
Director of National Intelligence (DNI) released a 14
page document titled “Background to ‘Assessing Russian Activities and
Intentions in Recent US Elections”. The report says Russian President Putin
ordered a campaign including cyber activity along with “overt efforts” to
influence the election through official media (RT) and social media. Half of
the report (7 pages) is devoted to describing the effectiveness and growth of
Russian sponsored media known as “RT”. The report gives no evidence,
acknowledging that is “does not and cannot include the full supporting
information, including specific intelligence and sources and methods”.
Should this report be accepted
uncritically? Not if you consider past performance. The CIA has a long history
of deception and disinformation. “Intelligence” is sometimes directed to support
political goals. One clear example is the false claims about Iraq that led to
the U.S. invasion in 2003. In addition, the intelligence leadership is known to
lie under oath. For example, DNI Director James Clapper
lied in his testimony before Congress regarding the extent of monitoring
and recording private communications of American citizens. The truth was later
revealed by Edward Snowden. In short, there is no good reason to uncritically
accept the statements and assertions of the U.S. intelligence community. There
is every reason to be skeptical and require credible and verifiable evidence.
This is compounded by the conflict between
Trump and the intelligence agencies where they may be seeking retribution
against him. Even Democratic Senator Schumer warned Trump about the dangers of
bucking the CIA and other agencies: “They have seven ways to Sunday to get back
at you.” What better way than shining a bright light on the Steele dossier and
giving credence to the third hand accusations? It has recently been acknowledged
by the NY Times that the assessment
was made by four not seventeen intelligence agencies. DNI Director Clapper has
admitted the assessment was by a hand picked group of analysts. Finally, it is
significant that the NSA would only grant “moderate confidence” to the
accusation that “Putin and the Russian Government aspired to help
President-elect Trump’s election chances”. By their own definition on page 13,
moderate confidence means that the information is “plausible but not of
sufficient quality or corroborated sufficiently to warrant a higher level of
confidence.”
4)
The counter-evidence seems stronger and more factual.
Veteran intelligence professionals,
including a former technical director of the NSA, say the DNC email release was
caused by a leak
not a “hack”. The distinction is important: a hack is done over the
internet; a leak is done transferring files onto a memory stick with little or
no record. VIPS believes the emails were taken by an insider who transferred
the files onto a thumb drive. If the files had been transferred over the
internet, the National Security Agency (NSA) would have a record of that since
virtually every packet is stored. In addition, the publisher of the DNC and
Podesta emails, Wikileaks, says they did not receive the emails from Russia.
Wikileaks founder Julian Assange has offered a reward for the discovery of the
murderer of Seth Rich, the young DNC Director of Voter Expansion who was
mysteriously murdered on July 22. When asked if Seth
Rich was the source of the DNC emails, he does not reply directly but it is
implied. In addition, the former UK Ambassador Craig Murray has suggested that
he was involved in a later (Podesta) transfer of the files from Washington DC
to Wikileaks. Meanwhile, there appears to be an effort to discredit and denigrate
research or investigation into the Seth Rich theory. If DNC insiders such as
Seth Rich transferred the emails to Wikileaks, the anti-Russia campaign
collapses.
Since Trump’s November victory, there
have been accusations of “Russian interference” in European elections. But in
each case, subsequent investigation shows the opposite. In Germany,
France
and the UK,
security services found no evidence in contrast with the reports. The French security
chief dismissed the claims of the Macron campaign saying the hack“was so
generic and simple that it could have been practically anyone.”
5)
The purported “crimes” have been wildly inflated.
The leaking of DNC and Podesta emails
has been inflated into an “attack on US democracy” and “act of war”. Not to be
outdone in the hyperbole department, the Washington
Post article calls this “the crime of the century”. It’s quite astounding;
even if Russia was guilty of hacking the DNC servers and promoting anti-Clinton
campaign on social media, which is debatable, the notion that this was an “act
of war” is preposterous. These events were secondary problems for the Clinton
campaign. The FBI closing and then re-opening the criminal investigation of
Clinton’s use of her private computers for public work was a bigger factor.
There are many real problems with the democratic process in the USA and talking
about them, whether on RT or elsewhere, is good not bad. Even a former U.S.
President, Jimmy Carter, questions whether the U.S. is a democracy saying:
Now it’s just an oligarchy, with
unlimited political bribery being the essence…
6)
The anti-Russia hysteria has reduced resistance to reactionary changes in
domestic policy.
There is an immediate need to build
maximum opposition to Trump policies including the loss of net neutrality,
increase in military spending, reductions in environmental protection,
education and health care budgets, etc.. The anti-Russia and “hate Trump”
campaigns have reduced the credibility of liberals and progressives with
conservatives and make it harder to build resistance to changes which hurt the
working class and poor.
7)
The DNC and Podesta leaks were not bad; they were good.
Far from being an “attack on
democracy”, the leaks of DNC and Podesta emails were positive. They exposed
that the DNC itself was preventing the will of Democratic Party members in choosing
their candidate. The releases exposed how the Democratic National Committee
(DNC) leadership conspired and acted to boost Clinton and prevent a successful
challenge by Sanders. If there was an “attack on democracy” it was by the DNC
leadership itself not the public release of authentic emails.
8)
Social media criticizing Clinton was not bad; much of the criticism was
accurate.
The intelligence agency assessment
blames Russia for undermining “public faith in the US democratic process”,
denigrating Secretary Clinton and harming “her electability and potential
presidency”. They suggest Russia was responsible for anti-Clinton online
messages, tweets, facebook posts, etc.. This is silly. It was predictable that
Hillary Clinton would generate a lot of opposition during the Presidential
campaign. She is a magnet for right and left wing criticism. She is strongly
disliked by many progressives for good and real reasons. From her aggressive
and warlike foreign policy to the horrible role of the Clinton Foundation in
Haiti, there are many deep and profound things to criticize. Social media was
alive with tweets, pages, posts and campaigns against Clinton. It is
self-deception to think this was initiated or controlled in any substantial way
by Moscow. The criticism and opposition to Hillary Clinton was sincere and home
grown. While some criticism may have been undeserved, much of the criticism of
Clinton was accurate and well founded.
9)
The anti-Russia hysteria distracts from an objective evaluation of why the Democratic
Party lost.
Instead of doing an honest and
objective assessment of the election failure, the Democratic Party has invested
enormous time and resources in promoting the narrative of Russian “meddling”
and collusion with Trump. If they want to regain popularity, they need to
review their leadership which has changed very little in over 15 years. They
need to re-assess unpopular policies and their prioritization of Wall Street.
If the DNC had run a clean primary race, Sanders probably would have prevailed
over Clinton in the primary race and gone on to beat Donald Trump for
president. The Democratic Party leadership has nobody to blame but themselves
for their defeat.
10)
The anti-Russia hysteria reduces resistance to neoconservative forces pushing
for more war.
Neoconservatives and the military
industrial complex are campaigning for another war in the Middle East. The
immediate flashpoint is Syria where the Syrian government and allies are making
slow but steady progress defeating tens of thousands of foreign funded
extremists. In response, the US and allies are escalating intervention and
aggression trying to prolong the conflict and/or grab territory to block a
Syrian victory. The situation is potentially disastrous with the neocons
threatening war on Iran and even Russia. The Democratic and liberal hysteria
around Russia has confused huge numbers of people about the situation who now
think Russia is the ‘enemy’. The anti-Russia hysteria is leading liberals to
ally with the CIA and war hawks instead of confronting them as the danger of
confrontation keeps rising.
Conclusion
Democrats and liberals in the U.S. are
making a huge mistake uncritically accepting and promoting the anti-Russia
demonization. The accusations of Russian “meddling” are either exaggerated or
false. There is an urgent need to resist Trump’s assault on positive domestic
policies and oppose the slide towards a new war in the Middle East. If this is
not stopped, there is a real risk of global and possibly nuclear war.
Rick Sterling is an investigative
journalist. He lives in the SF Bay Area and can be contacted at rsterling1@gmail.com. Read other articles by
Rick.
This article was posted on Thursday,
July 6th, 2017 at 6:00pm and is filed under Democrats, Disinformation,
Donald Trump, Espionage/"Intelligence",
Fake News, Media, Middle East, Narrative, Propaganda, Russia, Syria.
Ten
Problems with the Anti-Russia Obsession by Rick Sterling / July 6th, 2017
Western media and Democratic Party politicians have made a major campaign
accusing Russia of “meddling” in the U.S. election, colluding with and helping
Trump win the Presidency. The charges began as “allegations” but now are
routinely asserted as facts. The Washington Post recently ran a long article
claiming all the above plus saying the operation was directed by Russian
President Putin himself and implying not enough has been done to “punish”
Russia. The July-August 2017 edition of Mother Jones magazine features an
article headlined “The Russian Connection: Collusion? Maybe. Active Enablers?
Definitely. Trump Knew the Truth, but he Remained on the Side of the Enemy.” Is
this campaign based on facts or political opportunism? Does it help or hurt the
progressive cause of peace with justice? Following are major problems with the
“anti-Russia” theme, starting with the lack of clear evidence. 1) Evidence from
Crowdstrike is dubious. Accusations that Russia stole and released the
Democratic National Committee (DNC) emails are based on the findings of the
private company Crowdstrike. The DNC did not allow the FBI to scan the
computers but relied on a hired private company which claims to have found
telltale Russian alphabet characters (cyrrilic) in the computer memory.
However, Crowdstrike is known to be political biased, connected to the Clintons
and to make false accusations such as this one documented by Voice of America.
Recently the Wikileaks “Vault7” findings reveal that the CIA has developed
software which purposely leaves foreign language characters in memory, casting
further doubt on the Crowdstrike evidence. 2) The Steele Dossier looks
fictitious. The accusations of Trump-Russia collusion, Putin direction etc are
significantly based on the so-called “Steele Dossier”. This is the 35 page
compilation of “intelligence reports” produced by a former MI6 officer, Robert
Steele. The research and reports by Steele were contracted by anti-Trump
Republicans in the primary race, then by the Clinton campaign in the
presidential race. There is no supporting evidence or verification of the
claims; the reports are essentially that a Kremlin source says such-and-such.
It has since been revealed that Steele was not in direct contact but collected
the information via Russians in the UK who in turn received it from Kremlin
insiders. The reports were viewed skeptically by media, politicians and the
intelligence community through the summer and fall of 2016. But then, just
prior to the election, the dossier was leaked to the public with sensational
stories of “golden showers” by prostitutes urinating at Trump’s request to
“defile” the bed where the Obamas previously slept. Is the Steele dossier
accurate or was it a PR dirty trick designed to damage Trump? The latter seems
at least if not more likely. This Newsweek article, “Thirteen things that don’t
add up in the Russia-Trump intelligence dossier“, lists some of the reasons to
be skeptical. 3) The “assessment” from Intel Agencies gives no evidence and
seems politically biased. On 6 January 2017 the office of the Director of
National Intelligence (DNI) released a 14 page document titled “Background to
‘Assessing Russian Activities and Intentions in Recent US Elections”. The
report says Russian President Putin ordered a campaign including cyber activity
along with “overt efforts” to influence the election through official media
(RT) and social media. Half of the report (7 pages) is devoted to describing
the effectiveness and growth of Russian sponsored media known as “RT”. The
report gives no evidence, acknowledging that is “does not and cannot include
the full supporting information, including specific intelligence and sources
and methods”. Should this report be accepted uncritically? Not if you consider
past performance. The CIA has a long history of deception and disinformation.
“Intelligence” is sometimes directed to support political goals. One clear
example is the false claims about Iraq that led to the U.S. invasion in 2003.
In addition, the intelligence leadership is known to lie under oath. For
example, DNI Director James Clapper lied in his testimony before Congress
regarding the extent of monitoring and recording private communications of
American citizens. The truth was later revealed by Edward Snowden. In short,
there is no good reason to uncritically accept the statements and assertions of
the U.S. intelligence community. There is every reason to be skeptical and
require credible and verifiable evidence. This is compounded by the conflict
between Trump and the intelligence agencies where they may be seeking
retribution against him. Even Democratic Senator Schumer warned Trump about the
dangers of bucking the CIA and other agencies: “They have seven ways to Sunday
to get back at you.” What better way than shining a bright light on the Steele
dossier and giving credence to the third hand accusations? It has recently been
acknowledged by the NY Times that the assessment was made by four not seventeen
intelligence agencies. DNI Director Clapper has admitted the assessment was by
a hand picked group of analysts. Finally, it is significant that the NSA would
only grant “moderate confidence” to the accusation that “Putin and the Russian
Government aspired to help President-elect Trump’s election chances”. By their
own definition on page 13, moderate confidence means that the information is
“plausible but not of sufficient quality or corroborated sufficiently to
warrant a higher level of confidence.” 4) The counter-evidence seems stronger
and more factual. Veteran intelligence professionals, including a former technical
director of the NSA, say the DNC email release was caused by a leak not a
“hack”. The distinction is important: a hack is done over the internet; a leak
is done transferring files onto a memory stick with little or no record. VIPS
believes the emails were taken by an insider who transferred the files onto a
thumb drive. If the files had been transferred over the internet, the National
Security Agency (NSA) would have a record of that since virtually every packet
is stored. In addition, the publisher of the DNC and Podesta emails, Wikileaks,
says they did not receive the emails from Russia. Wikileaks founder Julian
Assange has offered a reward for the discovery of the murderer of Seth Rich,
the young DNC Director of Voter Expansion who was mysteriously murdered on July
22. When asked if Seth Rich was the source of the DNC emails, he does not reply
directly but it is implied. In addition, the former UK Ambassador Craig Murray
has suggested that he was involved in a later (Podesta) transfer of the files from
Washington DC to Wikileaks. Meanwhile, there appears to be an effort to
discredit and denigrate research or investigation into the Seth Rich theory. If
DNC insiders such as Seth Rich transferred the emails to Wikileaks, the
anti-Russia campaign collapses. Since Trump’s November victory, there have been
accusations of “Russian interference” in European elections. But in each case,
subsequent investigation shows the opposite. In Germany, France and the UK,
security services found no evidence in contrast with the reports. The French
security chief dismissed the claims of the Macron campaign saying the hack“was
so generic and simple that it could have been practically anyone.” 5) The
purported “crimes” have been wildly inflated. The leaking of DNC and Podesta
emails has been inflated into an “attack on US democracy” and “act of war”. Not
to be outdone in the hyperbole department, the Washington Post article calls
this “the crime of the century”. It’s quite astounding; even if Russia was
guilty of hacking the DNC servers and promoting anti-Clinton campaign on social
media, which is debatable, the notion that this was an “act of war” is
preposterous. These events were secondary problems for the Clinton campaign.
The FBI closing and then re-opening the criminal investigation of Clinton’s use
of her private computers for public work was a bigger factor. There are many
real problems with the democratic process in the USA and talking about them,
whether on RT or elsewhere, is good not bad. Even a former U.S. President,
Jimmy Carter, questions whether the U.S. is a democracy saying: Now it’s just
an oligarchy, with unlimited political bribery being the essence… 6) The
anti-Russia hysteria has reduced resistance to reactionary changes in domestic
policy. There is an immediate need to build maximum opposition to Trump
policies including the loss of net neutrality, increase in military spending,
reductions in environmental protection, education and health care budgets,
etc.. The anti-Russia and “hate Trump” campaigns have reduced the credibility
of liberals and progressives with conservatives and make it harder to build
resistance to changes which hurt the working class and poor. 7) The DNC and
Podesta leaks were not bad; they were good. Far from being an “attack on democracy”,
the leaks of DNC and Podesta emails were positive. They exposed that the DNC
itself was preventing the will of Democratic Party members in choosing their
candidate. The releases exposed how the Democratic National Committee (DNC)
leadership conspired and acted to boost Clinton and prevent a successful
challenge by Sanders. If there was an “attack on democracy” it was by the DNC
leadership itself not the public release of authentic emails. 8) Social media
criticizing Clinton was not bad; much of the criticism was accurate. The
intelligence agency assessment blames Russia for undermining “public faith in
the US democratic process”, denigrating Secretary Clinton and harming “her
electability and potential presidency”. They suggest Russia was responsible for
anti-Clinton online messages, tweets, facebook posts, etc.. This is silly. It
was predictable that Hillary Clinton would generate a lot of opposition during
the Presidential campaign. She is a magnet for right and left wing criticism.
She is strongly disliked by many progressives for good and real reasons. From
her aggressive and warlike foreign policy to the horrible role of the Clinton
Foundation in Haiti, there are many deep and profound things to criticize.
Social media was alive with tweets, pages, posts and campaigns against Clinton.
It is self-deception to think this was initiated or controlled in any
substantial way by Moscow. The criticism and opposition to Hillary Clinton was
sincere and home grown. While some criticism may have been undeserved, much of
the criticism of Clinton was accurate and well founded. 9) The anti-Russia
hysteria distracts from an objective evaluation of why the Democratic Party
lost. Instead of doing an honest and objective assessment of the election
failure, the Democratic Party has invested enormous time and resources in
promoting the narrative of Russian “meddling” and collusion with Trump. If they
want to regain popularity, they need to review their leadership which has
changed very little in over 15 years. They need to re-assess unpopular policies
and their prioritization of Wall Street. If the DNC had run a clean primary
race, Sanders probably would have prevailed over Clinton in the primary race
and gone on to beat Donald Trump for president. The Democratic Party leadership
has nobody to blame but themselves for their defeat. 10) The anti-Russia
hysteria reduces resistance to neoconservative forces pushing for more war.
Neoconservatives and the military industrial complex are campaigning for
another war in the Middle East. The immediate flashpoint is Syria where the
Syrian government and allies are making slow but steady progress defeating tens
of thousands of foreign funded extremists. In response, the US and allies are
escalating intervention and aggression trying to prolong the conflict and/or
grab territory to block a Syrian victory. The situation is potentially
disastrous with the neocons threatening war on Iran and even Russia. The
Democratic and liberal hysteria around Russia has confused huge numbers of
people about the situation who now think Russia is the ‘enemy’. The anti-Russia
hysteria is leading liberals to ally with the CIA and war hawks instead of
confronting them as the danger of confrontation keeps rising. Conclusion
Democrats and liberals in the U.S. are making a huge mistake uncritically
accepting and promoting the anti-Russia demonization. The accusations of
Russian “meddling” are either exaggerated or false. There is an urgent need to
resist Trump’s assault on positive domestic policies and oppose the slide
towards a new war in the Middle East. If this is not stopped, there is a real
risk of global and possibly nuclear war. Rick Sterling is an investigative
journalist. He lives in the SF Bay Area and can be contacted at
rsterling1@gmail.com. Read other articles by Rick. This article was posted on
Thursday, July 6th, 2017 at 6:00pm and is filed under Democrats,
Disinformation, Donald Trump, Espionage/"Intelligence", Fake News,
Media, Middle East, Narrative, Propaganda, Russia, Syria.
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