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Showing posts with label perjury. Show all posts
Showing posts with label perjury. Show all posts

10 March 2017

One Simple Question That Could Break the Trump-Russia Scandal Wide Open 7MAR17



ON Russian hacking of the Clinton / Kaine campaign's and other's e mails and releasing them through wikileaks the drumpf/trump-pence campaign now administration is dirty. Whether directly involved or not is yet to be determined though drumpf/trump did encourage the Russians to hack the Clinton / Kaine campaign. michael flynn, jeff sessions and others with the drumpf/trump-pence campaign had contact, meetings, conversations and business dealings with putin and the ruling oligarchs of Moscow. An independent council needs to be established to work in conjunction with the U.S. Congress and the U.S. Dept of Justice to find out what was discussed (U.S. sanctions, Russian hegemony, dividing up Eastern Europe and the Baltics a la the hitler-stalin non-aggression pact?). This is not something that can be let go now that the election is over and drumpf/trump is (NOT MY) president. There are issues involving America's national security, NATO, the Ukraine and Baltic States and the integrity of our electoral process that need to be addressed. fotze michael flynn should be barred from any future government position forever, and fotze a.g. jeff sessions should resign because he lied during his Senate confirmation hearings proving he can not be trusted to tell the truth about his contacts with the Russians. This from +Mother Jones .....

One Simple Question That Could Break the Trump-Russia Scandal Wide Open

The answer might not be too hard to find.

MAR. 7, 2017 7:31 AM
The Trump-Russia scandal keeps widening. Former national security adviser Michael Flynn resigned after revelations that he had privately talked to Russian Ambassador Sergey Kislyak about the sanctions imposed on Russia as punishment for its hacking of political targets during the 2016 election to aid Donald Trump. Attorney General Jeff Sessions was forced to recuse himself from Justice Department or FBI investigations involving Russia and the Trump campaign after he was caught falsely claiming he had not interacted with Russian officials during the campaign, when he was a top Trump adviser. (He, too, had met with Kislyak.) News reports keep yielding more information indicating Trump associates were in contact with Russian officials and possibly Russian intelligence. Reportedly there is at least one FBI investigation on this front; the House and Senate intelligence committees have each launched their own probes. And this past weekend, Trump had a Twitter meltdown and hurled the unsubstantiated Breitbart-born accusation that Obama had illegally spied on him in Trump Tower. It is becoming tough to track all the developments, as the story becomes more complicated and the prospects for a long and complex investigation increase. But there is a simple question that might be easy to answer and that could cut to the chase.
What happened during Flynn's conversations with Kislyak before the election?
One fundamental issue in this scandal is what interactions occurred between Trump and his associates and Vladimir Putin's regime and its agents. Trump and his political aides have repeatedly insisted there were no communications between the Trump camp and Russians during the campaign. Days after the election—in response to news reports quoting Russian Deputy Foreign Minister Sergei Ryabkov saying that "there were contacts" between the Trump team and the Kremlin—Trump spokeswoman Hope Hicks claimed the campaign had "no contact with Russian officials" before the election. After the conclusion of a January 11 press conference, Trump insisted his campaign had no contact with Russia. At a February 14 White House briefing, press secretary Sean Spicer asserted there had been no communications between the Trump campaign and Russians. And Trump has frequently declared—as he did at a press conference last month—"I have nothing to do with Russia." (That is false. Trump has repeatedly tried to do business in Russia, and he held the Miss Universe contest, which he owned until 2015, in Moscow, in partnership with oligarch Aras Agalarov, with whom Trump was pursuing other deals in Russia.)
The public record contradicts the denials of the Trump crew. Flynn, Sessions, onetime Trump foreign policy advisers Carter Page and J.D. Gordon, and former campaign manager Paul Manafort each had some degree of contact with Russian officials during the campaign. Perhaps the most intriguing interaction involved Flynn.
When the Washington Post broke the news that Flynn had spoken with Kislyak during the transition, the newspaper's reporters spoke to the Russian ambassador, who revealed a fact that has not received sufficient public attention: Flynn and Kislyak were in communication prior to Election Day. This statement belied all the Trump camp claims that there had been no hobnobbing with the Russians during the campaign. But the implications run deeper.
Beginning in early June, there were news reports that the Russians were behind the hacking of Democratic targets that led to the public release, through WikiLeaks and other outlets, of emails stolen from the Democratic National Committee. (In October, emails swiped from Clinton campaign CEO John Podesta would be released.) In late July, Obama said that "experts have attributed this [hack] to the Russians." In mid-August, Trump, as the GOP nominee, received an intelligence briefing that noted that Moscow was behind the hacks and leaks. Flynn attended that briefing. On September 7, James Clapper, the director of national intelligence, pointed to Obama's July statement and added, "The Russians hack our systems all the time, not just government but also corporate and personal systems." A month later, Clapper's office and the Department of Homeland Security released a statement stating that Moscow was definitely the culprit.
So from the start of June until Election Day, it was widely noted that the Russians were either the likely perps or the guilty party—that is, Putin's government had conducted a secret operation to influence an American election. Though it would take the intelligence community until after the election to reach the conclusion that this scheme was mounted to benefit Trump, it did seem obvious throughout the campaign season that Clinton was being harmed by the operation and Trump was being helped.
All this means that when Flynn was talking to Kislyak—or any other Russian government officials—during the campaign, he was in contact with a foreign power waging political warfare against the United States and had reason to suspect or know this. And throughout the summer and fall campaign, Flynn, who was already cozy with Moscow (having accepted a speaking fee to hang out with Putin at a Moscow gala for RT in December 2015), was Trump's most senior foreign policy aide. (He was given a prime speaking spot at the Republican National Convention.)
What was Flynn, this prominent and important Trump adviser, saying to Kislyak during this stretch? The ambassador refused to tell the Washington Post what he and Flynn discussed. Was Flynn firmly telling the Russians to cease meddling in US politics? Did they discuss the hacking at all? Or perhaps Flynn was signaling to Moscow that Putin would get a better deal if Trump were elected. If Flynn uttered to Kislyak anything of that nature—or even if he ducked the issue of the hacking—Moscow could have read this as encouragement for its covert operation to undermine the US election.
There has been speculation that the Trump campaign colluded with Moscow on the hacking/leaking plot. (Clapper this weekend said he had seen no evidence of such collusion but noted it was possible evidence might have emerged since he left the government in January.) But communications between the Trump camp and the Russian government need not have been so explicit to qualify as outrageous and improper. On the campaign trail, Trump had praised Putin, refused to acknowledge the Russian hack, and raised the possibility of easing the sanctions imposed on Russia for its invasion of Ukraine. If Flynn was reinforcing Trump's pro-Putin message in his private chats with Kislyak, that would have been reassuring for Moscow and might possibly have emboldened a regime as it was assaulting the US electoral system.
Flynn's pre-election communications with Kislyak could be far more significant than his conversations during the transition about the Obama sanctions that prompted his firing. Investigators working the Trump-Russia beat should zero in on this. Flynn should be asked when exactly he was gabbing with the Russian ambassador during the campaign. Phone and text records ought to be reviewed. There might be transcripts of these discussions, for Kislyak was routinely spied on by the US intelligence community. (That's why Flynn got caught lying about his talks with the Russian ambassador during the transition.)
There is plenty of muck for investigators and reporters to be raking regarding the Trump team's interactions with Russia. It is evident that there were contacts during the campaign—and that Trump and his lieutenants have repeatedly dissembled about this. And Flynn may well be one key to figuring out what was going on. In recent days, Sessions' two acknowledged interactions with Kislyak have drawn much notice. As much scrutiny should be applied to Flynn's pre-election communications with the Russian. It might just offer a path to solving the riddle wrapped in a mystery inside an enigma.

09 March 2017

Jeff Sessions Gump Cold Open - SNL 5MAR17

Jeff Sessions Gump Cold Open - SNL
Published on Mar 5, 2017
Attorney General Jeff Sessions (Kate McKinnon) chats with strangers (Octavia Spencer, Leslie Jones, Kyle Mooney, Aidy Bryant, Beck Bennett) at a bus stop.

06 March 2017

Why the White House defense of Trump wiretap accusation is misleading

Image result for paranoia meme
"PARANOIA STRIKES DEEP IN THE WHITE HOUSE, I THINK IT'S ALL OVERDONE. EXAGGERATING THIS, EXAGGERATING THEY DON'T HAVE NO FUN!" ( paraphrasing Paul Simon's Have A Good Time ). Only those who have already drunk the kool-aid believe any of this about Pres Obama wiretapping drumpf/trump in trump tower. He is a dangerous, deranged, paranoid, narcistic fool who is making our country the laughing stock of the democratic world. The Director of National Intelligence, James Clapper, says he is not aware of any of these alleged wire taps. james comey says he knows nothing about any of these alleged wire taps. It is all more Orwellian propaganda by the drumpf/trump-pence White House to keep the country on edge and divided, and to divert attention away form the glaring reality of a president and vice-president and administration who don't have a clue about government and leading a democracy. From +PolitiFact ......

Why the White House defense of Trump wiretap accusation is misleading

By Allison Graves 
President Donald Trump’s White House offered dubious explanations on the Sunday shows to defend Trump’s Twitter accusation that former President Barack Obama wiretapped phones at Trump Tower before the 2016 election.
The president, a spokeswoman said on ABC’s This Week, didn’t come up with the storyline out of thin air. He was echoing reports from "multiple news outlets."
"Everybody acts like President Trump is the one that came up with this idea and just threw it out there," said deputy press secretary Sarah Huckabee Sanders on March 5. "There are multiple news outlets that have reported this."
At one point in the segment, Sanders specifically named the New York Times and BBC as news outlets that have covered the wiretapping allegations. Show host Martha Raddatz pushed back and said Trump started this issue with his specific tweet.
Sanders repeated her point: "I hardly say he started this when there were multiple news reports prior to that."
If the basis of Trump's comment is media reports, he doesn't have a case. 
A White House spokesperson sent PolitiFact five articles from the BBC, HeatStreet, the New York Times, the National Review and a transcript from Fox News’ Special Report with Bret Baier as evidence of Sanders’ claim.
Before we get into those, it’s worth noting that many news outlets have suggested Trump’s remark was inspired by a March 3 post on Breitbart News. The post was not included by Trump’s team as backup, but the Breitbart article links to some of the other reports.
The Breitbart article followed up on comments by Mark Levin on a March 2 segment of his conservative radio show. During the show, Levin claimed Obama’s administration used "police state" tactics in the fall to watch over Trump’s team.
Trump sent his tweet early March 4. As of March 5, he had still not provided evidence.
"How low has President Obama gone to tapp my phones during the very sacred election process. This is Nixon/Watergate. Bad (or sick) guy!" Trump wrote.
The Breitbart article recapped 10 news events of the 2016 campaign that laid the foundation for Obama’s administration to "eavesdrop on the Trump campaign." Among the events included as an example is the Wikileaks release of emails from Hillary Clinton campaign chairman John Podesta, which the Clinton campaign used to blame "Trump and the Russians.
The Breitbart article also mentions two requests under the the Foreign Intelligence Surveillance Act, which grants a court the authority to grant (or deny) warrants for electronic surveillance. The reporting about FISA requests is taken from a Nov. 7, 2016, report from the conservative-leaning website called HeatStreet. HeatStreet published an article, it said, based on two unnamed sources. 
"The FBI sought, and was granted, a FISA court warrant in October, giving counterintelligence permission to examine the activities of ‘U.S. persons’ in Donald Trump’s campaign with ties to Russia," reads a line from the HeatStreet piece.
The story says the FISA warrant was in relation to an investigation to the "Trump campaign, and its alleged links to two banks; SVB Bank and Russia’s Alfa Bank." 
Other reports about this FISA requests come from the BBC and the Guardian. (The White House did not send the Guardian over as evidence.) Importantly, these sources do not back up Trump’s accusation that Obama himself ordered the wiretap as part of political sabotage.
On Jan. 12, the BBC reported that lawyers from the National Security Division in the Department of Justice filed applications to the court that handles intelligence matters related to the Foreign Intelligence Surveillance Act or FISA.
"A lawyer — outside the Department of Justice but familiar with the case — told me that three of Trump's associates were the subject of the inquiry," wrote Paul Wood, a British journalists who wrote the article in first person. The article did not say anything about Trump Tower.
Six months earlier, the Guardian reported that the FBI applied for a warrant to monitor members of Trump’s teams interactions with Russia from the FISA court in June. The story was light on the details. It said the June application was turned down by the court, and briefly mentioned a report that the FBI was granted a warrant in October, but that has yet to be confirmed.
Trump’s team also sent over two articles from the New York Times. These articles are about intelligence probes related to Trump associates and Russian officials.
The first article, published on Jan. 12, reported that "American law enforcement and intelligence agencies were examining communications and financial transactions as part of a broad investigation into possible links between Russian officials and associates of then- President-elect Trump."
At one point, the article indicates that intelligence reports stemming from the intercepts were given to Obama’s administration.
"One official said intelligence reports based on some of the wiretapped communications had been provided to the White House," it reads.
The other article from Jan. 12 is about the Obama’s administration expanding the powers of the National Security Agency through new rules that relaxed limits on "collecting satellite transmissions, phone calls and emails that cross network switches abroad, and messages between people abroad that cross domestic network switches."
Trump’s team also cited an article from the National Review as well as a March 3 Fox News interview between host Bret Baier and House Speaker Paul Ryan. The National Review article repeats the same information from HeatStreet. Baier asked Ryan about the report on FISA requests, which Ryan said he had not heard about. To be clear, that isn’t an example of Fox independently confirming the HeatStreet report.
It’s worth noting that Obama's director of National Intelligence, James Clapper, said on NBC’s Meet the Press he was not aware of any wiretaps that Trump alleged. And Obama, through a spokesman, has denied wiretapping Trump Tower. And Obama officials have also said a president cannot unilaterally order a wiretap. 
Our ruling
Sanders said "multiple news outlets" have reported that Obama ordered wiretaps on Trump, including high-profile sources such as the New York Times and BBC.
Trump’s team cited multiple reports to back up this claim, but it’s clear only one is at the root of Trump’s claim: a November 2016 blog post based on anonymous sources that has not been corroborated by independent U.S. journalists. 
Trump's spokeswoman made it sound as if Trump was merely following a well-documented string of reports, but that is not the case. A few of the reports allude to the FBI requesting permission from FISA to eavesdrop on Trump’s associates, but none (minus the anonymously sourced website) definitively said the probes centered on Trump himself or came directly from Obama.
We rate this claim False.

About this statement:

Published: Sunday, March 5th, 2017 at 5:01 p.m.
Researched by: Allison Graves
Edited by: Katie Sanders
Subjects: Homeland Security

Sources:

Email interview, Steven Cheung, White House spokesperson, March 5, 2017.
New York Times, "N.S.A. Gets More Latitude to Share Intercepted Communications," Jan. 12
New York Times, "Intercepted Russian Communications Part of Inquiry Into Trump Associates," Jan. 19
The National Review, "FISA and the Trump Team," Jan 11
HeatStreet, "EXCLUSIVE: FBI ‘Granted FISA Warrant’ Covering Trump Camp’s Ties To Russia," Nov. 7, 2016.
BBC, "Trump 'compromising' claims: How and why did we get here?" Jan. 12
The Guardian, "John McCain passes dossier alleging secret Trump-Russia contacts to FBI," Jan. 11
Breitbart News, "Mark Levin to Congress: Investigate Obama’s ‘Silent Coup’ vs. Trump," March 3
ABC News, "Everything you need to know about FISA wiretaps," March 4
The Washington Post, "Trump’s ‘evidence’ for Obama wiretap claims relies on sketchy, anonymously sourced reports," March 5.
Donald Trump, tweet

04 March 2017

President Trump Accuses Obama Of 'Wire Tapping,' Provides No Evidence 4MAR17


THE president is a sick individual, tweeting bull at all hours of the day and night, nothing of substance, nothing one would expect from the president of the United States. The investigations by the media into the drumpf/trump-pence Russia scandal must be getting to him. The truth will be found and it just might be the end of pres drumpf/trump and hopefully ag jeff sessions too. I am so glad Pres Obama did not respond by twitter, refused to lower himself to drumpf/trump's level. Here is the latest insanity from the drumpf/trump-pence White House from +NPR Politics .....

President Trump Accuses Obama Of 'Wire Tapping,' Provides No Evidence


President Donald Trump looks on as he meets with parents and teachers at Saint Andrew Catholic School in Orlando, Florida, on March 3, 2017.
Nicholas Kamm/AFP/Getty Images
Updated at 1:04 p.m. ET with Obama spokesman's statement
In a string of tweets posted early Saturday morning, President Trump let loose a barrage of accusations at his predecessor. He alleged that former President Obama had his "wires tapped" in Trump Tower before Election Day last year, accusing Obama of "McCarthyism" and being a "bad (or sick) guy."
Trump, who is under significant scrutiny for his administration's contacts with Russia before he took office, offered no evidence to support his claims Saturday morning. The White House has not responded immediately to NPR's requests for comment.
Obama spokesman Kevin Lewis dismissed the allegation in a statement, which you can read below.
Trump opened his volley on Twitter Saturday morning with a defense of his embattled attorney general, Jeff Sessions, who recused himself earlier this week from any investigations into Russian intervention in the presidential election. Sessions has been embroiled in controversy for two meetings he held with the Russian ambassador to the U.S. last year, which appear to contradict a statement he made to the Senate in his confirmation hearings.


"The first meeting Jeff Sessions had with the Russian Amb was set up by the Obama Administration under education program for 100 Ambs," Trump tweeted. Later, Trump added that the same Russian ambassador, Sergey Kislyak, visited the White House under Obama "22 times, and 4 times last year alone."
In the midst of these defenses, the sitting president accused the former president of " 'wire tapping' a race for president prior to an election."
"Terrible!" Trump tweeted. "Just found out that Obama had my 'wires tapped' in Trump Tower before the victory. Nothing found. This is McCarthyism!"
Lewis, Obama's spokesman, rejected the allegation that the former president was involved in surveillance:
"A cardinal rule of the Obama Administration was that no White House official ever interfered with any independent investigation led by the Department of Justice. As part of that practice, neither President Obama nor any White House official ever ordered surveillance on any U.S. citizen. Any suggestion otherwise is simply false."
Trump did not produce evidence to support his assertions, nor did he cite the source of his information — though on Weekend Edition Saturday, NPR's Ron Elving notes the fact that Trump says he "just found out":
"It appears perhaps to be a response to a narrative in Breitbart.com, the right-wing website that was previously published by Steve Bannon, the president's senior adviser.
"There, you will find a narrative about how the Obama administration was so intent on thwarting Donald Trump last fall that they had much of the intelligence community doing everything it could to gather skullduggery and information about Donald Trump.
"And that would have included, according to Donald Trump, wiretapping his phones. But there does not seem to be any direct evidence of that."
"That is an extraordinary thing to hear from a sitting president about his predecessor," NPR's Mary Louise Kelly notes on Weekend Edition Saturday. For our Newscast unit, Mary Louise adds: "Tapping his phones would require a warrant from the foreign intelligence surveillance court."
She also says the director of national intelligence is declining comment.
The FBI has opened an investigation into allegations of Russian interference in the 2016 election to boost Trump's campaign. Congressional intelligence committees are currently reviewing documents related to possible links between Russian officials and the campaign, as well as recent leaks of classified information.
Shortly after his final tweet about Obama, which says "this is Nixon/Watergate," Trump turned his attention to other matters, berating Arnold Schwarzenegger, his successor on Celebrity Apprentice. Schwarzenegger announced Friday he was leaving the show, blaming the show's recent poor ratings on Trump.