Santa Fe New Mexican

The plot against America unfolds

- Michelle Goldberg, a New York Times Op-Ed columnist, covers politics, gender, religion and ideology.

On Monday, after the United States learned that Donald Trump’s former campaign chairman Paul Manafort and his lobbying partner, Rick Gates, had been indicted and turned themselves in to federal authoritie­s, the president tried to distance himself from the unfolding scandal. “Sorry, but this is years ago, before Paul Manafort was part of the Trump campaign,” the president wrote in one tweet. A few minutes later, he added, in another, “Also, there is NO COLLUSION!”

At almost the exact same time, news broke suggesting that the FBI has evidence of collusion. We learned that one of the Trump campaign’s foreign policy aides, George Papadopoul­os, pleaded guilty to lying to the FBI about his attempts to solicit compromisi­ng informatio­n on Hillary Clinton from the Russian government. Despite Trump’s hysterical denials and attempts at diversion, the question is no longer whether there was cooperatio­n between Trump’s campaign and Russia, but how extensive it was.

In truth, that’s been clear for a while. If it’s sometimes hard to grasp the Trump campaign’s conspiracy against our democracy, it’s due less to lack of proof than to the impudent improbabil­ity of its B-movie plotline. Monday’s indictment­s offer evidence of things that Washington already knows but pretends to forget. Trump, more gangster than entreprene­ur, has long surrounded himself with bottom-feeding scum, and for all his nationalis­t bluster, his campaign was a vehicle for Russian subversion.

We already knew that Manafort offered private briefings about the campaign to Oleg Deripaska, an oligarch close to President Vladimir Putin of Russia. The indictment accuses him of having been an unregister­ed foreign agent for another Putin-aligned oligarch, former Ukrainian President Viktor Yanukovych. Trump wasn’t paying Manafort, who reportedly sold himself to the candidate by offering to work free. But he intended to profit from his connection with the campaign, emailing an associate, “How do we use to get whole?” If there were no other evidence against Trump, we could conclude that he was grotesquel­y irresponsi­ble in opening his campaign up to corrupt foreign infiltrati­on.

But of course there is other evidence against Trump. His campaign was told that Russia wanted to help it, and it welcomed such help. On June 3, remember, music publicist Rob Goldstone emailed Donald Trump Jr. to broker a Trump Tower meeting at which a Russian source would deliver “very high level and sensitive informatio­n” as “part of Russia and its government’s support for Mr. Trump.” Trump Jr. responded with delight: “If it’s what you say I love it especially later in the summer.”

The guilty plea by Papadopoul­os indicates what informatio­n Trump Jr. might have been expecting. An obscure figure in foreign policy circles, Papadopoul­os was one of five people who Trump listed as foreign policy advisers during a Washington Post editorial board meeting last year. A court filing, whose truth Papadopoul­os affirms, says that in April 2016, he met with a professor who he “understood to have substantia­l connection­s to Russian government officials.” The professor told him that Russians had “dirt” on Clinton, including “thousands of emails.” (The Clinton campaign chairman John Podesta had been hacked in March.)

In the following months, Papadopoul­os and his supervisor­s emailed back and forth about plans for a campaign trip to Russia. According to the court filing, one campaign official emailed another, “We need someone to communicat­e that D.T. is not doing these trips.” D.T. clearly stood for Donald Trump. The email continued, “It should be someone low level in the campaign so as not to send any signal.”

Thanks to an August Washington Post story, we know that this email was sent by Manafort. Some have interprete­d the exchange to mean that Manafort wanted a low-level person to decline the invitation, not to go to Russia. But the court filing also cites a “campaign supervisor” encouragin­g Papadopoul­os and “another foreign policy adviser” to make the trip. Papadopoul­os never went to Russia, but foreign policy adviser Carter Page did.

So here’s where we are. Trump put Manafort, an accused money-launderer and unregister­ed foreign agent, in charge of his campaign. Under Manafort’s watch, the campaign made at least two attempts to get compromisi­ng informatio­n about Clinton from Russia. Russia, in turn, provided hacked Democratic emails to WikiLeaks.

Russia also ran a giant disinforma­tion campaign against Clinton on social media and attempted to hack voting systems in at least 21 states. In response to Russia’s election meddling, Barack Obama’s administra­tion imposed sanctions. Upon taking office, Trump reportedly made secret efforts to lift them. He fired FBI Director James Comey to stop his investigat­ion into “this Russia thing,” as he told Lester Holt. The day after the firing, he met with Russia’s foreign minister and its ambassador to the United States, and told them: “I faced great pressure because of Russia. That’s taken off.”

We’ve had a year of recriminat­ions over the Clinton campaign’s failings, but Trump clawed out his minority victory only with the aid of a foreign intelligen­ce service. On Monday, we finally got indictment­s, but it’s been obvious for a year that this presidency is a crime.

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