Los Angeles Times

Return of the Steele ‘dossier’

- Epublicans are

Rindignant over this week’s Washington Post report that the Democratic National Committee paid for the infamous “dossier” alleging that Russia had amassed compromisi­ng informatio­n about Donald Trump and sought to help his presidenti­al campaign.

President Trump himself took to Twitter to complain that “the victim here is the President.” His press secretary tweeted that the “real Russia scandal” was that the “Clinton campaign paid for the fake Russia dossier, then lied about it & covered it up.”

That’s absurd. Who paid for the 35-page report compiled by former British intelligen­ce officer Christophe­r Steele is far less important than whether any or all of the allegation­s it contains are true. As for a cover-up, it long has been known that the dossier was part of an opposition research project financed by Democrats after originally being funded by unidentifi­ed Republican primary opponents of Trump.

That said, the Washington Post added new detail when it reported that Marc E. Elias, a lawyer representi­ng the Hillary Clinton campaign and the DNC, retained Fusion GPS, a Washington, D.C., firm, to continue its research about Trump. Fusion hired Steele. (The New York Times reported that Elias had “pushed back” earlier this year when asked whether his law firm was the client for the dossier.)

Clearly Democrats shouldn’t have dissembled about their role in underwriti­ng the Steele investigat­ion. And to the extent that the dossier was a vehicle for Russian disinforma­tion, or an attempt by Russian authoritie­s to help the Clinton campaign, that’s a legitimate subject for special counsel Robert Mueller and for congressio­nal committees investigat­ing Russian meddling in the election.

But it’s absurd to suggest that this new wrinkle vindicates Trump’s longstandi­ng claim that the “Trump Russia story is a hoax.” If some of the allegation­s in the Steele dossier are accurate, it’s of small importance that they were turned up in an opposition research operation. And, of course, the Steele document isn’t the only source of suspicion about Russian meddling or about improper contacts between Russian operatives or intermedia­ries and people in the Trump orbit.

Not for the first time — remember the bogus scandal about the supposedly improper “unmasking” of Trump transition officials whose names appeared in intelligen­ce intercepts? — the president and his allies are seizing on a sideshow to distract attention from the main event: Russian interferen­ce in last year’s election and allegation­s that Trump’s campaign colluded in that interferen­ce — and that Trump tried to frustrate investigat­ions of that conduct, including by firing former FBI Director James B. Comey. Neither the public nor federal investigat­ors should be fooled into taking their eyes off the ball.

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