Is
Trump About to Debunk the Media’s ‘Putin-gate’ Conspiracy Theory?
Cold war drama fizzling fast
by Justin Raimondo,
January 02, 2017
Antiwar.
Com
“It
wouldn’t be a bad opening for a Tom Clancy novel about the Cold War” – that’s
how the Los Angeles Times described the
sequence of events leading up to the expulsion of 35 Russian diplomats
(“spies”) and the latest face-off between Washington and Moscow. Indeed the
whole episode of has about it a fictional aura, which is, after all, only
appropriate, since the entire basis of this latest cold war drama is pure
invention.
The Russian “spy nest” had supposedly been in use since 1972 –
but our Keystone Kops were just now getting around to dismantling it. Oh well,
better late than never! It’s a 45-acre compound on the Maryland shore, about 60
miles from Washington, a place where Russian diplomats went to relax with their
families: neighbors said they never saw anything the least bit off, and that
the Labor Day picnics to which they were invited featured plenty of really good
vodka. The head of the town council, a retired Marine, told the Los Angeles Times: “They’re
good neighbors, and have been the whole time they’ve been there.” On New York’s
Long Island a similar scenario unfolded: an estate long the site of Russian
diplomats relaxing with their families is raided by the feds, and impounded,
while baffled locals look on.
It’s all
part of the security theater performed by Obama’s dead-enders, as they do their
best to cast a long shadow over the incoming Trump administration. And like any
performance, it comes with a little booklet explaining the provenance of the
piece, in this case a “report” reiterating in a most unconvincing manner the assertions we’ve been hearing
since Election Day: that Trump’s victory was the culmination of an elaborate
Russian conspiracy, a remake of “The Manchurian Candidate,” only this time with
computers.
And just to
add a little extra frisson to the mix, as the clock ticked toward 2017 the Washington Post ran a story alleging
that those omnipotent Russkies had hacked into Vermont’s electricity grid – and
were about to turn out the lights! Except they didn’t, they weren’t, and it was all a bit of that
“fake news” WaPo has been warning us about. The “Russian malware” was found on
a laptop that wasn’t even connected
to the internet. And it wasn’t Russian malware, it was Ukrainian.
Oh, the
drama! Except there wasn’t any – at least, not enough for a Tom Clancy novel.
Instead we saw a series of anti-climaxes: no break into the grid, no evidence
of a Vast Russian-Trumpian Conspiracy (as promised), and no Russian retaliation
for the expulsion of their diplomats. Instead, Russian President Vladimir Putin
announced that he would ignore the childish antics of the outgoing
administration and instead wait for the adults to enter the room.
You could hear the gnashing of teeth in Washington, D.C., all
the way to California.
Oh, but that
didn’t mean the propaganda campaign abated. We haven’t seen one like this since
the march to war against Iraq in 2003: the entire media-governmental-academic
axis has been spinning full thrust in an effort to convince us that the
President-elect of the United States won his office by dint of a foreign
power’s exertions. It hasn’t worked: the public doesn’t believe it.
Indeed, by reiterating this nonsense 24/7, the “mainstream” media is making
itself more an object of derision than it already is: even Mrs. Clinton’s
partisans think they’re biased.
My favorite
part of this whole business is the role being played by Donald J. Trump. Unlike
some of his spokesmen, and of course very much unlike the media, the
President-elect has refused to swallow this Putin conspiracy theory for so much
as a single minute. He’s shown more understanding of the difficulty of
attributing cyber-attacks than most reporters, and he’s been skeptical from the
beginning of the idea that it was the Russian state that hacked the DNC and
John Podesta’s emails. In response to the latest barrage of hot air that’s
slowly hardening into “fact,” Trump had this to say:
“’I just want them to be sure because it’s a pretty serious
charge,’ Mr. Trump said of the intelligence agencies. ‘If you look at the weapons
of mass destruction, that was a disaster, and they were wrong,’ he added,
referring to intelligence cited by the George W. Bush administration to support
its march to war in 2003. ‘So I want them to be sure,’ the president-elect
said. ‘I think it’s unfair if they don’t know.’
“He added: ‘And I know a lot about hacking. And hacking is a
very hard thing to prove. So it could be somebody else. And I also know things
that other people don’t know, and so they cannot be sure of the situation.’
“When asked what he knew that others did not, Mr. Trump
demurred, saying only, ‘You’ll find out on Tuesday or Wednesday.’”
The national
security “Deep State” has naturally been opposed to Trump: his
“no-regime-change” “America First” foreign policy would effectively put them
out of business. However, that doesn’t mean the intelligence community is
uniformly anti-Trump: far from it. Indeed, there are those who believe that the
DNC/Podesta hacks were the work, not of the Russians, but of some inside our own intelligence communitywho were loath to see
Hillary Clinton in the White House. And there is a whole school of thought,
including Craig Murray, former UK diplomat, who maintain that the “hack” was in
reality a leak, and that it came from American insiders rather than via the GRU. Murray is
quite close to WikiLeaks founder Julian Assange: asked to comment on Murray’s
statements, Assange said “I don’t want to go there.” Assange has stoutly denied
any Russian involvement in the publication of the DNC/Podesta emails.
Is Trump about to blow this whole phony “Put did it” scam wide
open?
It wouldn’t surprise me in the least. What we are seeing playing
out is the reaction of the swamp creatures as Trump proceeds to drain their
natural habitat. That screeching roaring sound you hear is their collective
outrage as the implications of Trump’s triumph become apparent.
So get out the popcorn, and put your feet up: the entertainment
is about to begin!
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