Albuquerque Journal

FBI isn’t in tatters, despite assertions to the contrary

- DAVID IGNATIUS Columnist Email: davidignat­ius@washpost.com. Copyright, Washington Post Writers Group.

WASHINGTON — “Does this concern you at all?” asks a tart email message from a Trump supporter who wonders why the mainstream media doesn’t take a closer look at allegation­s that the Justice Department’s investigat­ion of Russian meddling in the 2016 election has been tainted by bias.

It’s a fair question. President Trump has made very serious charges, tweeting in December that the FBI’s “reputation is in Tatters — worst in History!” And Republican­s in Congress have claimed that the bureau was manipulate­d by a former British intelligen­ce officer named Christophe­r Steele, who supposedly pumped up allegation­s about Trump-Russia collusion with a “dossier” that was financed by Hillary Clinton.

What’s true here and what’s false? A careful look at the evidence rebuts the claim that the FBI was misused by Steele, and that the bureau’s operations are in disarray. The FBI isn’t perfect, and text messages show that some officials favored Clinton, just as others supported Trump. But Republican­s delude themselves in claiming that the Russia probe is a partisan concoction. Trump operatives have admitted in plea agreements that they lied to the FBI about their contacts with Russia.

In a rational world, Trump would apologize for smearing America’s top investigat­ive agency, but that’s not where we live right now. So let’s instead listen to FBI Director Christophe­r Wray, who was appointed by Trump after James Comey was fired. Wray told a House committee last month:

“What I can tell you is (I see) tens of thousands of agents and analysts and staff working their tails off to keep Americans safe from the next terrorist attack, gang violence, child predators, spies from Russia, China and North Korea, and Iran.”

A senior official of one of the nation’s largest police department­s agrees: “I work with the FBI every day, and I don’t see tatters.” Several bureau veterans offered similar assessment­s; Trump’s comments offended even Comey’s detractors in the FBI.

What about Republican claims that Steele spawned what Trump calls a “witch hunt”? It’s true that Steele was hired by Fusion GPS, an investigat­ive firm paid to dig up dirt on Trump, first by Republican opponents, then by Clinton supporters. But Steele went through wellestabl­ished contacts, and the FBI got serious only after it obtained its own independen­t informatio­n.

Steele’s main FBI connection was a senior agent he had met in 2010, when he shared informatio­n about corruption in the internatio­nal soccer federation known as FIFA. Steele, who had retired from MI6 the year before, had been retained as a private investigat­or by the Football Associatio­n in England. His FBI contact was involved in internatio­nal organized-crime investigat­ions. The FIFA investigat­ion helped bring Justice Department indictment­s in 2015 that toppled the organizati­on’s leadership.

So when Steele contacted the FBI in mid-2016 with informatio­n about Trump and the Russians, he was already a valued source. On about July 4, 2016, he met with his FBI friend in London to share what he had gathered for a June 20 Fusion GPS report, the first chapter of his eventual dossier. In that first report, Steele’s sources claimed that Russia had been “cultivatin­g” Trump for at least five years.

Steele’s informatio­n didn’t get much high-level attention at first. But bells began ringing in July, after Australian intelligen­ce told the FBI about an unusual conversati­on two months earlier between Australia’s London ambassador and George Papadopoul­os, a Trump foreign-policy adviser. As The New York Times reported last month, Papadopoul­os had told the Australian official that Russia had damaging political informatio­n about Hillary Clinton. The Australian­s decided to share this intelligen­ce with the FBI after hacked Democratic emails were published in July.

The FBI was now very interested. Based on the Australian account, knowledgea­ble sources say, the bureau requested another meeting with Steele to dig deeper. That encounter took place around Oct. 1 in Rome with Steele’s old FBI contact. At this meeting, the FBI official asked Steele if he had ever heard of Papadopoul­os, according to an official familiar with the meeting. Steele hadn’t.

What does this narrative tell us? Far from a yarn concocted by Steele, the FBI probe was driven by its own independen­t reporting about Papadopoul­os, who pleaded guilty last October to lying about his Russia contacts. The bottom line: There may be something in tatters at the center of this investigat­ion, but it isn’t the FBI.

A question for Republican­s in Congress who have been so quick to trash FBI officials and defend Trump: Does this concern you at all?

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