Orlando Sentinel

How Trump can end this Russia nonsense

- Rachel Marsden

From where I normally sit in France (I’m currently visiting Canada), the ongoing Trump-Russia fever dream that has played out in the U.S. barely even qualifies as background noise. I guess the world has more important things to worry about than whether Russian President Vladimir Putin personally zombified the nearly 63 million Americans who voted for Donald Trump over Hillary Clinton in November’s presidenti­al election. Not so here in North America, where up close it comes across as a form of psychosis.

All of this started last summer, when a collection of Democratic National Committee emails were published by WikiLeaks. Many of those emails exposed underhande­d political maneuverin­g within the DNC to benefit Clinton in her primary campaign against Sen. Bernie Sanders of Vermont.

Clinton beat Sanders for the Democratic nomination, then Trump beat Clinton in November, and both establishm­ent and opposition critics accused Russia of hacking the election to benefit Trump. Former Homeland Security Secretary Jeh Johnson, who served under former President Barack Obama, told the House Intelligen­ce Committee last month: “I know of no evidence that through cyber intrusion, votes were altered or suppressed in some way.”

The issue really should have ended there. But, of course, it didn’t.

So now we’ve fallen down the conspiracy rabbit hole, with recent media coverage desperatel­y trying to keep the Russia-Trump smear alive in the public conscience.

Trump has long been an internatio­nal real estate magnate, and now we’re told that there are rich Russians in New York and Atlantic City who have lived in Trump’s skyscraper­s, some of whom might be shady. Yeah? At least one senior member of the Saudi royal family lives there as well — and Saudi Arabia has been accused of supporting Islamic State. So why isn’t there any investigat­ion into Trump-Saudi collusion?

Perhaps it has something to do with the fact that the Saudis and the CIA have collaborat­ed on some “projects.”

Why is it perfectly acceptable to collude with the Saudis and other countries while Russia and the U.S. are expected to behave like Angelina Jolie and Brad Pitt during the 2005 press tour for “Mr. & Mrs. Smith,” standing apart from each other during photo ops to avoid any hint of closeness?

Jared Kushner, Trump’s son-in-law and adviser, appeared before congressio­nal investigat­ors on Monday to explain why he failed to list Russians he’d met with (and other foreign contacts, for that matter) on his SF-86 security clearance applicatio­n. The form is 127 pages long and necessitat­es the detailing of all foreign contacts of both applicant and spouse going back seven years. An internatio­nal businesspe­rson could spend weeks filling out the foreign-contacts section of the applicatio­n.

Silly Jared. Don’t you know how Washington works? Of course no one wants to fill out these forms. That’s why establishm­ent politician­s typically hire expensive consultant­s to meet with foreigners — then they can safely say haven’t met with any.

Donald Trump Jr. is also appearing before a congressio­nal committee this week to explain a meeting with a Russian lobbyist last year. Trump Jr. had been invited via a third party to meet with a Russian attorney, Natalia Veselnitsk­aya, during the campaign because she supposedly had dirt on Clinton.

If Trump wants to kill this Russia nonsense, he should threaten to sign an executive order making it a criminal offense for any elected official to engage with any domestic representa­tive of foreign interests. Want to bet on how fast the establishm­ent types would drop the Russia obsession? And if the criticism persists, Trump should sign the order. Then we’ll quickly find out who’s really colluding with foreign interests.

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