Sentinel & Enterprise

Was the FBI manipulate­d by the Democratic Party over Trump?

- By Eli Lake

John Durham, the U.S. attorney appointed in 2019 by then Attorney General William Barr to investigat­e the origins of the FBI’s investigat­ion into Russian interferen­ce in the 2016 presidenti­al campaign, has finally begun to show his hand. It doesn’t look good for either the FBI or the Democratic Party.

On Thursday he indicted a former Brookings Institutio­n researcher named Igor Danchenko on five counts of lying to the FBI. Danchenko was the primary source for former British intelligen­ce officer Christophe­r Steele’s infamous “dossier,” which alleged an elaborate conspiracy between Donald Trump’s presidenti­al campaign and the Kremlin. That document set the media and Democratic Party narrative for the first two and a half years of Trump’s presidency, and was crucial evidence the FBI submitted to the federal surveillan­ce court in late 2016 to obtain a warrant to monitor a Trump campaign aide.

It’s been clear for nearly two years that Steele’s dossier was garbage. This is mainly thanks to the work of Justice Department Inspector General Michael Horowitz, who released a report in 2019 skewering the FBI for its use of the dossier in its warrant applicatio­ns, concluding that the bureau could not confirm any of its original reporting.

Durham’s investigat­ion has taken a different approach. His last two indictment­s suggest that the FBI was not a villain but a victim, conned by Democratic operatives to pursue bogus investigat­ions into the Trump campaign.

In September, Durham indicted Michael Sussman, a lawyer who represente­d the Clinton campaign in 2016. That indictment alleges that Sussman failed to disclose to the FBI that he was representi­ng the Clinton campaign when he presented evidence alleging that servers for the Trump campaign had unusual communicat­ions with servers from the Russian Alfa Bank.

Durham’s lengthy indictment quotes researcher­s warning that the Alfa Bank story would not withstand public scrutiny. It also says that if Sussman had acknowledg­ed he was working for Clinton’s campaign, the bureau would have treated his claims with more skepticism. The FBI eventually concluded there was nothing to the Alfa Bank story.

Like Sussman, Danchenko is also charged with hiding his relationsh­ip. to a prominent Democrat in interviews with the FBI about the dossier. In this case, the prominent Democrat is described as “public relations executive 1.” He was a state chairman for Bill Clinton’s 1992 and 1996 presidenti­al campaigns, and in 2016 “actively campaigned and participat­ed in calls and events as a volunteer on behalf of Hillary Clinton.”

This unnamed executive is Charles Dolan Jr., a senior strategist at KGlobal, his lawyer has now confirmed. Dolan did not return an email requesting comment.

According to the indictment, Dolan was likely the source for several items in the dossier. This undermines one of the central claims in the initial coverage of the dossier — that it was well-sourced Kremlin intelligen­ce from a respected profession­al. It turns out that much of it was rumor conveyed in part by a Democratic partisan.

Durham’s indictment says Danchenko’s lies “deprived FBI agents and analysts of probative informatio­n” “that would have, among other things, assisted them in evaluating the credibilit­y, reliabilit­y, and veracity” of the dossier. Again, Durham portrays the FBI as the victims of the Clinton campaign’s efforts.

It’s a fair point as far as it goes. But FBI agents were able to discern that Steele’s informatio­n was worthless without the benefit of knowing Danchenko’s relationsh­ip to Dolan. They reached this conclusion over the course of four interviews with Danchenko in 2017.

In this respect, the real victim of these Democratic Party deceptions was not the FBI, but the American public.

That’s why Durham’s investigat­ion, now in its third year, remains not only relevant but vital.

Eli Lake is a Bloomberg

Opinion columnist covering national security and foreign policy. He was the senior national security correspond­ent for the Daily Beast and covered national security and intelligen­ce for the Washington Times, the New York Sun and UPI. Distribute­d by Tribune Content Agency.

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