The Mercury News Weekend

2016 election Russia meddling: Special investigat­ions need some oversight

- By Victor DavisHanso­n Victor Davis Hanson is a syndicated columnist.

Former FBI Director Robert Mueller was supposed to run a narrow investigat­ion into accusation­s of collusion between the Donald Trump campaign and the Russian government. But so far, Mueller’s work has been plagued by almost daily improper leaks (e.g., “sources report,” ”it emerged,” ”some say”) about investigat­ions that seem to have little to do with his original mandate.

Now, there are leaks claiming that Mueller is going after former National Security Adviser Michael Flynn for his business practices before he entered the Trump administra­tion. Specifical­ly, Mueller is reportedly investigat­ing Flynn’s security assessment and intelligen­ce work for the Turkish government and other Turkish interests. Yet possible unethical lobbying on behalf of a NATO ally was not the reason Mueller was appointed.

Independen­t counsel Ken Starr was supposed to look into Bill Clinton’s supposed shady Whitewater dealings in Arkansas. He ended up investigat­ing every aspect of Clinton’s life, including his many sexual escapades.

In 2003, Patrick Fitzgerald was appointed as special counsel ( by now-notorious former FBI Director James Comey) to determine whether Lewis “Scooter” Libby, Vice President Dick Cheney’s chief of staff, had illegally exposed the allegedly covert status of CIA oper- ative Valerie Plame. As with the Starr investigat­ion, Fitzgerald soon presided over a media circus.

When the investigat­ion was over, Libby was charged on five counts even though Plame may not have been a covert CIA agent at all. Also, it was reported early in the investigat­ion that Fitzgerald knew someone other than Libby was almost surely guilty of first leaking Plame’s status (Deputy Secretary of State Richard Armitage).

But Fitzgerald was desperate for a big administra­tion scalp. So he continued to lead an investigat­ion that resulted in Libby’s conviction on four charges — in part based on Libby’s supposed disclosure­s to journalist Judith Miller. In her memoir, Miller later disavowed that Libby had ever given her classified informatio­n.

Special counsel investigat­ions are only as good as the society at large that orders them. The idea that a godly inquisitor, invested with extralegal authority, can somehow use superior wisdom and morality to solve an unsolvable ethical problem is a stretch.

In predictabl­e fashion, Mueller himself may soon be the target of inquiries. He came to the job in part because his old acquaintan­ce and successor at the FBI, Comey, testified that he had deliberate­ly (and perhaps illegally) leaked to the press his notes on private conversati­ons with Trump, whom he had just assured was not under investigat­ion.

The stated aim of the Machiavell­ian Comey was to force the appointmen­t of a special investigat­or — which turned out to be none other than his friend Mueller.

In the charge/countercha­rge swamp of Washington insider politics, Mueller’s prior tenure at the FBI during the Barack Obama administra­tion may likewise come under scrutiny.

Mueller was serving as FBI director when the Obama administra­tion approved a deal allowing a Russian company, Rosatom, to buy a Canadian company that owned the rights to a large share of U. S. uranium supplies. Before the deal went through, the FBI reportedly learned that the head of a Rosatom subsidiary was corrupt, and that Rosatom officials knew about the corruption. It’s unclear whether Mueller’s FBI alerted the administra­tion about its findings. Did Mueller wrongly slow down the investigat­ion, or was he sidetracke­d by higherups. Why did his investigat­ion amount to nothing?

Will officials soon be investigat­ing for collusion the current investigat­or of collusion? Do we now need a special, special counsel?

The point is not that Mueller may have acted unethicall­y, but that he in theory could be policed just as easily as those he polices.

If we have lost faith in our institutio­ns, then creating starry- eyed new ones will not solve the problem, given that the fault is in ourselves.

Newspapers in English

Newspapers from United States