The Guardian (USA)

'Unmasking' inquiry ordered by Barr finds no wrongdoing by Obama officials – report

- Tom McCarthy

A federal prosecutor handpicked by the attorney general, William Barr, to investigat­e whether Obama administra­tion officials had mishandled classified intelligen­ce relating to the Russia investigat­ion has wrapped up his work without finding wrongdoing or considerin­g charges, according to the Washington Post.

The conclusion of an investigat­ion by US attorney John Bash into the socalled “unmasking” of names in intelligen­ce reports by Obama officials was seen as a defeat for Donald Trump and Barr, who appeared to be fishing for damaging informatio­n that could be used against former vice=president Joe Biden.

“Unsurprisi­ng. What a politicall­ydriven waste of [ justice department] resources,” tweeted Sam Vinograd, an adviser to the national security council under Barack Obama.

A second federal investigat­ion launched by Barr into Obama-era investigat­ions of Russian election tampering, in this case led by US attorney John Durham of Connecticu­t, likewise has failed to bear political fruit before the presidenti­al election.

Durham continues to investigat­e the origins of investigat­ions into Russian election meddling and Trump campaign contacts with Russian operatives. Trump asserts the Trump-Russia investigat­ion was a political hit job.

But the Russia investigat­ion, led by special counsel Robert Mueller resulted in the indictment of 34 individual­s and criminal charges against half a dozen Trump associates, including multiple guilty pleas.

Barr told a group of Republican lawmakers earlier this year that Durham would not file a report – much less any charges – before the presidenti­al election, dashing what appeared to be increasing­ly desperate hopes inside the Trump administra­tion for a Biden-related scandal.

Officials in the executive branch routinely move to “unmask” names in classified intelligen­ce documents in order to better understand the documents, the Post reported.

The “unmasking” conducted during the Obama administra­tion revealed that former national security adviser Michael Flynn, a key figure in the 2016 Trump campaign, was in the crosshairs of the Russia investigat­ion, which had picked up contacts between Flynn and Russian operatives that Flynn later lied about.

That revelation proved to be politicall­y damaging to Trump. The emergence of Flynn’s deep ties to Russian operatives, which he later admitted falsely denying, led to his resignatio­n as national security adviser and was an early blow for the Trump administra­tion.

Trump at the time asked the then FBI director, James Comey, to “go easy” on Flynn, in a scene that would become a central piece of evidence against Trump in Mueller’s investigat­ion of possible obstructio­n of justice by the president.

That investigat­ion would in turn fuel demands for Trump’s impeachmen­t, after it was revealed that the US president had pressured the Ukrainian president to generate negative headlines about Biden and his son, Hunter Biden.

Trump was impeached in December 2019, and acquitted by the Senate in early 2020, but the key players in the scheme that led to his impeachmen­t remained active in trying to fabricate a scandal attached to Biden’s son in advance of the election.

 ?? Photograph: Brynn Anderson/AP ?? William Barr ordered John Bash to investigat­e whether Obama administra­tion officials had mishandled classified intelligen­ce relating to the Russia investigat­ion.
Photograph: Brynn Anderson/AP William Barr ordered John Bash to investigat­e whether Obama administra­tion officials had mishandled classified intelligen­ce relating to the Russia investigat­ion.

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