The Guardian Australia

Michael Flynn appears to have called QAnon ‘total nonsense’ despite his links

- Victoria Bekiempis in New York

Michael Flynn, Donald Trump’s first national security adviser, appears to have called QAnon “total nonsense” and a “disinforma­tion campaign” created by the CIA and the political left – despite his own extensive links to the conspiracy theory and seeming eagerness to serve as its hero.

Flynn’s apparent statement was revealed by Lin Wood, a pro-Trump attorney and QAnon supporter once allied with the disgraced former general.

QAnon followers believe in the existence of a secret cabal of pederastic cannibal Satanists, dominated by Democrats, against whom Trump is fighting. Followers also believe John F Kennedy Jr is not dead and will soon return to lead them. Many recently congregate­d in Dallas, waiting for that to happen. The FBI considers QAnon a potential source of extremist violence.

Trump has refused to disavow QAnon believers. Tucker Carlson, of Fox News, called them “gentle patriots”.

Late on Saturday, Wood released a recording of what appeared to be a call between him and Flynn on Telegram, a social media and messaging app favored by far-right extremists. During the conversati­on, a voice which appears to be Wood is heard to complain that QAnon followers are coming after him online.

In answer, the Daily Beast reported, a voice which appears to be Flynn says: “I think it’s a disinforma­tion campaign. I think it’s a disinforma­tion campaign that the CIA created. That’s what I believe. Now, I don’t know that for a fact, but that’s what I think it is. I think it’s a disinforma­tion campaign.’”

“I find it total nonsense,” the voice adds. “And I think it’s a disinforma­tion campaign created by the left.”

The Guardian could not verify the authentici­ty of the recording. Contact informatio­n for Flynn was not immediatel­y available. Wood could not be reached for comment.

Flynn was fired from a top intelligen­ce role by Barack Obama before becoming a close aide to Trump. He was installed as national security adviser but resigned after less than a month, for lying to the FBI about interactio­ns with Russians.

Under the special counsel Robert Mueller’s investigat­ion of Russian election interferen­ce, Flynn pleaded guilty to one criminal charge. He tried to withdraw that plea, then received a pardon from Trump.

Flynn has attracted condemnati­on for his links to QAnon and the far right, for calling for the establishm­ent of “one religion” in the US, and for seeming to advocate armed insurrecti­on.

The recording released by Wood comes amid acrimony among leading pro-Trump figures who have worked to overturn the 2020 election. According to the Daily Beast, the feud appears to have sprung from Wood’s brief representa­tion of Kyle Rittenhous­e, the 18-year-old recently acquitted after killing two people and wounding one at a protest in Wisconsin last year.

According to the Beast, Rittenhous­e alleged that Wood intentiona­lly let him languish in jail so he could earn money off the case. Wood reportedly became angry that Flynn and Sidney Powell, another pro-Trump attorney, didn’t speak up for him.

Powell could not be reached for comment on Sunday.

The recording apparently featuring Flynn disowning QAnon raised echoes of remarks about a related conspiracy theory by Steve Bannon, Trump’s former campaign chair and White House strategist.

Bannon was pardoned on fraud charges by Trump but now faces a charge of contempt of Congress over the 6 January Capitol attack, to which he has pleaded not guilty.

He has repeatedly promoted the “deep state” conspiracy theory, which holds that a permanent government of bureaucrat­s and intelligen­ce agents exists to thwart Trump’s agenda.

However, Bannon has also said the “deep state conspiracy theory is for nut cases”.

 ?? Photograph: Carolyn Kaster/AP ?? National security adviser Michael Flynn speaks during the daily news briefing at the White House in 2017.
Photograph: Carolyn Kaster/AP National security adviser Michael Flynn speaks during the daily news briefing at the White House in 2017.

Newspapers in English

Newspapers from Australia