Obama
Official Ben Rhodes Admits Biden Camp is Already Working With Foreign Leaders:
Exactly What Flynn Did
In late 2016, the FBI investigated Gen. Michael
Flynn when he was a transition official for the possible "crime" of
talking to Russia about foreign policy. Why can Biden do this?
Nov. 10/2020
https://greenwald.substack.com/p/obama-official-ben-rhodes-admits
Two weeks after Donald
Trump won the 2016 election,
the President-elect named
Gen. Michael Flynn to be
his National Security Advisor in both the transition and the new
administration. Flynn, who had previously served as President Obama’s Director
of the Defense Intelligence Agency and then campaigned for Trump, quickly got to
work in his new position by reaching out to his counterparts in foreign
governments, as is customary for national security transition team officials.
One of the calls Flynn made, in late December, was
to Russian Ambassador Sergey Kislyak, after the Obama administration has imposed a series of
sanctions on Moscow in response
to pressure to punish the Russians for interference in the 2016 election,
including the expulsion of diplomats. Gen. Flynn — fearful of an excessively
retaliatory response from Moscow that could provoke what he saw as unnecessary
confrontation, particularly given the growing anti-Russian sentiment in the
U.S. — sought to persuade the Russians that there was no need for them to
retaliate because the new administration, which was only three weeks away from
taking over, would reset its relations with Moscow and try to forge a more
constructive engagement. Flynn’s efforts were successful: Russian president
Vladimir Putin announced on December
30 that they would not expel diplomats in
response.
It is customary for post-election transition officials
to work with their counterparts in foreign governments to lay the groundwork
for relations with the new administration. As The Washington Post said about
Flynn’s call: “it would not be uncommon for incoming administrations to
interface with foreign governments with whom they will soon have to work.”
Despite its normalcy, Flynn’s call, which was recorded by the National
Security Agency that had been targeting Russian officials, prompted the FBI —
under the leadership of then-Director James Comey and Deputy Director Andrew
McCabe — to decide to criminally investigate Flynn’s
conversations with Kislyak.
Although the mid-2016 FBI investigation into Flynn’s possible corrupt
connections to Moscow had been ordered closed for
lack of evidence, the FBI manufactured a possible ground
of criminality to justify its investigation of Flynn for this call: namely,
possible violations of the Logan Act, a 150-year-old law that purports to
criminalize attempts by a private citizen to conduct foreign policy at odds
with official U.S. foreign policy which (a) has never been
used to prosecute anyone; (b) is almost certainly unconstitutional, and (c) has
been ignored — properly so — in countless more blatant cases, such as when
then-House Minority Leader Nancy Pelosi undermined Bush administration policy
to isolate Syrian leader Bashar al-Assad for helping Iraqi insurgents kill the U.S.
troops in Iraq by visiting Assad in 2007, infuriating the Bush
White House and leading to frivolous calls from
fringe right-wing voices for Pelosi’s prosecution under the Logan Act.
But Flynn’s ordinary call with the Russian ambassador
became the pretext for further abuse of FBI and NSA powers as part of the
security state’s ongoing efforts to interfere in the 2016 election and then
sabotage the Trump administration before it even began. One way this corrupt
agenda was carried out was by attempting to
criminalize officials of the Trump campaign and then the new government with blatantly political motives.
First, agents within the security state committed the most serious leaking
crimes that exist under U.S. law — revealing the
contents of intercepted communications with foreign officials — by leaking the
contents of Flynn’s calls to The Washington Post’s
long-time CIA spokesman David Ignatius, which Ignatius reported on
January 12. Two weeks later, on January 24, McCabe
— acting on Comey’s orders but without notifying the White House Counsel, angering outgoing
Acting Attorney General Sally Yates — called
Flynn and told him that FBI agents would visit him to interrogate him about
this call.
Documents finally made public
earlier this year show that the FBI agents who
visited Flynn did not believe he was
lying to them, and that they openly discussed their
intent to entrap Flynn into lying so that they could concoct a crime. Although
Flynn said he could not remember having spoken to Kislyak about sanctions, the
FBI agents, as well as FBI Director Comey himself, said that they believed this
might have been a by-product of honest lack of recollection, not intent to
deceive. After all, what motive would Flynn have for concealing a perfectly
normal, customary, and legal call as a transition official with this Russian
counterpart other than, perhaps, a desire to avoid triggering what had became
the insanely intense anti-Russian political obsession in the
Democratic-friendly press?
Despite doubts by the FBI itself that Flynn had lied when saying he did
not recall talking with Kislyak about sanctions, the Mueller team negotiated a
deal with Flynn in which he would plead guilty to one count of lying to the FBI
about his call with Kislyak. Mueller recommended no jail time for Flynn.
Like so many guilty pleas that prosecutors coerce, it seems that Flynn pled
guilty in large part due to threats by the Mueller team to prosecute his son if
he refused.
One irony of the Flynn prosecution was that —
while authoritarian liberals now insist that of course lying
to the FBI is and should be a crime without any other underlying crime required
— it has long been a steadfast
view in liberal jurisprudence that
it should not be a crime to lie to the FBI at all absent
some underlying crime, so as to prevent the FBI from having the power to
convert people into criminals through interrogations.
The seminal opinion on that was written by Ruth Bader Ginsburg, who now
resides in heaven. Writing in dissent in the 1997 case Brogan v. The United States,
Justice Ginsburg insisted that federal law does not criminalize a
false denial of a crime to the FBI — because people have the right to try to
exculpate themselves rather than comply with some non-existent duty to confess
crimes to agents of the state. The then-Justice Ginsburg, now a heavenly angel,
also warned of “the dubious propriety of bringing felony prosecutions for bare
exculpatory denials informally made to Government agents” (two other liberal
justices, Stevens and Breyer, wrote separately to warn of the dangers that “an
overzealous prosecutor or investigator — aware that a person has committed some
suspicious acts, but unable to make a criminal case — will create a crime by
surprising the suspect, asking about those acts, and receiving a false
denial.”
Once the new documents were released earlier this year showing that even
FBI agents had doubts that Flynn was lying and that the interrogation seemed
designed to entrap him, the DOJ moved to dismiss the criminal case, infuriating
law-and-order liberals who are morally outraged that a citizen would fail to
obediently confess non-existent crimes to the FBI. As a result of the release
of those new documents, I produced a 90-minute video
program exploring all the reasons why the Flynn
prosecution is such a profound abuse of power and sham.
One of the primary arguments I made there was that there should never
have been an FBI interrogation of Flynn about his completely proper call with
the Russian ambassador in the first place:
There was no valid reason for the FBI to have
interrogated Flynn about his conversations with Kislyak in the first place.
There is nothing remotely untoward or unusual — let alone criminal — about an
incoming senior national security official, three weeks away from taking over,
reaching out to a counterpart in a foreign government to try to tamp down
tensions.
That was always the most shocking part of this abusive prosecution by a
radically politicized FBI: the blatantly improper attempt to convert a normal
conversation by a transition official into a form of treason.
Any doubts about how customary it is for such calls to be made by
transition officials were unintentionally obliterated on Monday night by former
Obama national security official Ben Rhodes, who is almost certain to occupy a
high-level national security position in a Biden administration. Speaking on
MSNBC — of course — Rhodes, while amicably chatting with former Bush/Cheney
Communications Director turned-beloved-by-liberals-MSNBC-host Nicolle Wallace,
admitted in passing that “foreign leaders are already having phone
calls with Joe Biden talking about the agenda they’re going to pursue in January
20,” all to ensure “as seamless a transition as possible,” adding:
“the center of political gravity in this country and the world is shifting to
Joe Biden.”
That Joe Biden — despite Donald Trump still being the
only U.S. President — is “already having phone calls” with foreign officials to
“talk about the agenda they’re going to pursue January 20” is completely
normal: something we should want a President-elect and his transition team to
do. That’s what made the FBI’s attempt to convert Gen. Flynn’s identical
transition activities in 2016 into a crime so corrupt: just
one more instance of the abuse of power that plagued
the security state throughout the 2016 election and into the new administration.
No hay comentarios:
Publicar un comentario