Orlando Sentinel

FBI must keep digging on Russia allegation­s

- Clarence Page Tribune Content Agency cpage@chicagotri­bune.com

A House Intelligen­ce Committee hearing on Monday heard two bombshells dropped in testimony.

One, FBI Director James Comey asserted what other national intelligen­ce leaders also have expressed: There is no evidence to back up President Donald Trump’s outlandish — and slanderous — allegation that President Barack Obama ordered a “wiretappin­g” of Trump Tower during the 2016 presidenti­al race.

Yet we see lots of defiance and no contrition coming from Team Trump on this matter. We have grown perhaps too accustomed to Trump’s casual attitude toward facts. We should be shocked and dismayed by his eagerness to believe off-the-wall allegation­s that he has heard on Fox News, as was the case here, yet eagerly disbelieve uncomforta­ble news from the nation’s intelligen­ce agencies.

Two, the bureau is investigat­ing possible cooperatio­n between Trump’s presidenti­al campaign and Russian officials to make Democratic nominee Hillary Clinton lose the election — and help Republican nominee Trump win.

As Rep. Adam Schiff, a California Democrat and ranking committee member, observed, Russian meddling in our November election would be a serious crime and “one of the most shocking betrayals of our democracy in history.”

Yet, we have seen and heard so many shocks to our political norms with the rise of Trump that we run the risk of failure to be shocked enough.

Fox News benched judicial analyst Andrew Napolitano amid backlash over his unfounded allegation­s that British intelligen­ce last fall provided then-President Obama wiretapped conversati­ons from Trump Tower, according to the Los Angeles Times. “Fox News knows of no evidence of any kind that the now-president of the United States was surveilled at any time, in any way,” Fox News anchor Shepard Smith told viewers Friday.

Neither, Comey told Congress, did the FBI. But Comey did confirm long-running media reports that the FBI has been investigat­ing possible coordinati­on by the Trump campaign with dedicated and dangerous Russian adversarie­s.

Yet Chairman Devin Nunes of California and the GOP’s other members on the Intelligen­ce Committee sounded much less interested in Russia’s actions than with exposing the leakers and journalist­s who enabled us, the public, to learn about those actions.

Yet Schiff delivered a devastatin­g litany of suspicious “coincidenc­es” that, heard together, present a damning portrait of possible collusion.

Among other issues, Schiff speaks of payments on behalf of Russian leader Vladimir Putin to Michael Flynn, who briefly became Trump’s national security adviser until disclosure of his conversati­ons with the Russian ambassador and his other Russian ties led to his ouster.

There also was a deletion from the Republican Party platform of a section that supports the provision of “lethal defensive weapons” to Ukraine, an action that would be contrary to Russian interests. Paul Manafort, Trump’s campaign manager in midsummer and formerly on the payroll of pro-Russian Ukrainian interests, categorica­lly denies involvemen­t by the Trump campaign in altering the platform. But the Republican Party delegate who offered the language in support of providing defensive weapons to Ukraine said that it was removed at the insistence of the Trump campaign, Schiff pointed out.

Could these and other suspicious events be mere coincidenc­e? Sure, Schiff allowed, but “it is also possible, maybe more than possible, that they are not coincident­al, not disconnect­ed and not unrelated, and that the Russians used the same techniques to corrupt U.S. persons that they have employed in Europe and elsewhere. We simply don’t know, not yet, and we owe it to the country to find out.”

Indeed, we do. The future of our democracy depends on it.

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