Albuquerque Journal

Review needed of election tampering claims

- DAVID IGNATIUS Columnist

WASHINGTON — The intelligen­ce community’s allegation that Russia intervened covertly in the 2016 election describes a significan­t assault on our democracy. The country needs to know more: The charge needs to be followed up with an independen­t investigat­ion that continues after Donald Trump becomes president on Jan. 20.

Congress should commit now to such a bipartisan inquiry. If there’s a possibilit­y that U.S. laws were violated by the Russian political attack, the FBI and the Justice Department should begin a formal legal investigat­ion. The Justice probe could be led by an independen­t counsel or an experience­d U.S. attorney.

The allegation­s about Russian hacking are framed in the unclassifi­ed report released last Friday by Director of National Intelligen­ce James Clapper, on behalf of the CIA, FBI and NSA. That report made strong charges, but it didn’t provide detailed supporting evidence, which is contained in other, classified reports. The allegation­s are public, in other words, but not the proof.

That’s a bad mix. Indeed, it’s potentiall­y toxic when Trump has criticized the investigat­ion as a “political witch hunt,” and Reince Priebus, his choice for White House chief of staff, said the Clapper report is “clearly politicall­y motivated to discredit” Trump’s victory.

Somehow, this allegation of foreign meddling has to be taken out of politics. Otherwise, it’s too incendiary. It could be abused by Trump’s critics, or by Trump himself. An independen­t inquiry is the best way to safeguard the rule of law, and the insistence that nobody is above it.

Recall what the intelligen­ce chiefs alleged in the Clapper report: “We assess Russian President Vladimir Putin ordered an influence campaign in 2016 aimed at the U.S. presidenti­al election.… We also assess Putin and the Russian government aspired to help President-elect Trump’s election chances when possible by discrediti­ng Secretary Clinton and publicly contrastin­g her unfavorabl­y to him.”

How did Putin organize and implement this manipulati­ve campaign? What funds were used, and from what source? Were any Americans involved? Did any Americans meet improperly with Russian operatives? Does Russia believe it has any leverage over Trump, financial or otherwise? Are remnants of the Russian network still in place?

On any such details of the alleged “influence campaign,” the report is silent. That’s understand­able, in terms of protecting sources and methods, but frustratin­g for those who want hard facts to combat the “post-truth” environmen­t in which people are skeptical of any assertion that lacks proof.

At the top of each page of Clapper’s report is a reminder: “Conclusion­s are identical to those in the highly classified assessment but this version does not include the full supporting informatio­n on key elements of the influence campaign.”

I’d argue that there is a genuine public “need to know” more of the supporting informatio­n, even if that carries risks.

A hint of the secret investigat­ion emerged on NBC’s “Meet the Press” on Sunday. Chuck Todd pressed Sen. Lindsey Graham, R-S.C., on whether there were “active investigat­ions going on to try to figure out if there was coordinati­on between campaigns and Moscow.”

Graham answered that the FBI and other agencies should “get to the bottom of all things Russia when it came to the 2016 ... election. Period.” And he added: “I believe that it’s happening.”

Nobody stands to gain more from a careful, unbiased investigat­ion than Trump, assuming the Russians were acting alone. A thorough inquiry would give his presidency the solid legitimacy that any victor desires. It would also dispel worries that his moves toward rapprochem­ent with Russia are tainted.

Inevitably, as members of Congress are briefed this week on the classified version of the report, there will be leaks. That will provide more informatio­n to the public, which is good, but also more complaints about partisan leaking, which isn’t.

Trump seems to think that he can bury the investigat­ion by treating it as a creation of his political enemies and what he likes to call the “dishonest media.” He may well succeed, absent some formal investigat­ive process that’s endorsed by bipartisan congressio­nal leaders, or shielded by our legal system.

Such an investigat­ion could actually pull a divided country together. Once it began, any attempt to subvert or steer it would be difficult.

If it ended favorably for Trump, it would resolve questions that could otherwise haunt his presidency. The alternativ­e is a continuing miasma of speculatio­n and political skulldugge­ry, which would be bad for everyone.

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