Boston Herald

Brennan plays into Trump’s hands

- By RICH LOWRY Rich Lowry is editor of the National Review.

John Brennan may not know it, but he is acting in a drama scripted and produced by Donald J. Trump.

As Eli Lake of Bloomberg perceptive­ly observed, President Trump isn’t trying to silence Brennan by revoking his security clearance, as the former CIA director’s defenders insist, but elevate him as a foil.

Trump couldn’t hope for a better poster boy for the so-called deep state than a former CIA director who immediatel­y began to sound like a commentato­r for MSNBC upon leaving government — and, indeed, signed up as a commentato­r for MSNBC.

It has been the usual practice of former top intelligen­ce profession­als to keep their political opinions, and especially their wild-eyed rants, to themselves. They understand that having been entrusted with some of the most sensitive powers of the U.S. government, they should show forbearanc­e and restraint lest they undermine the reputation­s of their institutio­ns.

Brennan has had no such compunctio­n. Granted, he’s acted under provocatio­n. Trump has goaded him on Twitter and launched extraordin­ary broadsides against the work of U.S. intelligen­ce agencies.

Trump often sounds like the guy popping off down at the end of the bar. He’s transforme­d Brennan, who is supposed to be the consummate career intelligen­ce official, into the guy down at the other end of the bar.

Advantage: Trump. The president always benefits from the fact that his brand depends on violating norms, whereas if his opponents are baited into violating norms in return, they diminish themselves and their cause.

So it is that a former CIA director is combating a president who maintains that the top echelons of the intelligen­ce establishm­ent hated him by demonstrat­ing his hatred for him. Once Brennan made the decision to begin letting loose, he inevitably got sucked into the vortex of the #Resistance — that’s where the Twitter followers, the cable hits and the adulation of half the political spectrum are.

This element of our politics rewards the most sweeping and thoughtles­s condemnati­ons of Trump, which Brennan readily provides, despite recently occupying a post that depended on discrimina­tion and care in expression and thought.

In a notorious tweet, he accused the president of “nothing short of treason” for his craven performanc­e at a joint press conference with Vladimir Putin in Helsinki.

This was the first time on record that a prominent elected official ever committed treason — which usually involves giving away the nation’s secrets or compromisi­ng intelligen­ce assets — at a public event extensivel­y covered by the internatio­nal media.

What did Brennan mean by his charge? He apparently doesn’t know. Pressed by Rachel Maddow of MSNBC, Brennan explained, incoherent­ly, that “I said it was nothing short of treasonous. I didn’t mean that he committed treason.” Oh. Asked point-blank if he thinks that the president is serving the Russian government, he said that “I scratch my head a lot,” not the usual standard for alleging that someone committed a capital offense.

Brennan’s conceit is that there aren’t enough people already saying stupid and inflammato­ry things on Twitter and TV — the nation needs his voice, too.

This has made him the ideal target for Trump, since even some of the former intelligen­ce officials who oppose the revocation of his security clearance are uncomforta­ble with how he has conducted himself.

The president’s adversarie­s may consider this unfair, but the institutio­ns Trump targets are bestserved by not responding in kind. If the president says that the press can’t be trusted because it’s so biased, the press should react by being less biased rather than more. If he says that he’s being undone by a deep state conspiracy, former intelligen­ce officials should be more restrained rather than less.

Brennan either doesn’t understand this dynamic or doesn’t care. He has threatened a lawsuit, and Trump has welcomed one. The president is happy for a war with the most unhinged representa­tive of the intelligen­ce community at hand, and John O. Brennan is playing his role flawlessly.

 ?? AP FILE PHOTO ?? LETTING LOOSE: Former CIA Director John Brennan has criticized President Trump.
AP FILE PHOTO LETTING LOOSE: Former CIA Director John Brennan has criticized President Trump.

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