The Mercury (Pottstown, PA)

Senators raise serious questions that should trouble all Americans

- Marc A. Thiessen Columnist

After House Intelligen­ce Committee Chairman Devin Nunes, R-Calif., sent his memo laying out potential abuses of the FISA process by the FBI to the White House, Rep. Nancy Pelosi, D-Calif., demanded that he be removed as chairman. Nunes was “deliberate­ly dishonest” in pushing to release a “bogus memo,” Pelosi declared, and had “disgraced the House Intelligen­ce Committee” with his “partisan effort to distort intelligen­ce.”

But Democrats can’t so easily dismiss the far more detailed declassifi­ed criminal referral written by two respected Republican senators — Charles E. Grassley, RIowa, and Lindsey O. Graham, RS.C. — which confirms the claims raised in the Nunes memo.

If you’re concerned about Russia meddling in our election, as every American should be, then you should be deeply concerned about unverified allegation­s by Russian government officials, passed on to the FBI by a paid partisan of one candidate, leading to a warrant to spy on an American citizen associated with the other campaign.

According to Grassley and Graham, that is precisely what happened. The FBI “relied heavily” on the Steele dossier to obtain warrants for surveillan­ce of Carter Page, a marginal former Trump campaign adviser, the senators write. Moreover, they say, the FBI did not have “meaningful corroborat­ion” of Steele’s claims when it submitted its applicatio­n to the Foreign Intelligen­ce Surveillan­ce Act court.

Steele’s work was virtually the sole source of informatio­n the FBI relied upon to obtain a warrant to spy on a U.S. citizen.

The senators further confirm that the FBI did not, in fact, tell the court the full provenance of the dossier.

They also failed to tell the court that an FBI official, Bruce Ohr (whose wife worked for Fusion GPS on the Russia project), had warned the bureau that “Steele was ‘desperate’ to see that Mr. Trump was not elected” even though this informatio­n was relevant “to his credibilit­y and his stated political motive.”

Grassley and Graham conclude that “it appears the FBI relied on admittedly uncorrobor­ated informatio­n, funded by and obtained for Secretary Clinton’s presidenti­al campaign, in order to conduct surveillan­ce of an associate of the opposing presidenti­al candidate.”

The senators note the FBI used the dossier because Steele was “considered reliable due to his past work with the Bureau.” But in October 2016, the FBI suspended its relationsh­ip with Steele after it learned he had disclosed dossier informatio­n to the press and after he lied to the FBI about it.

Yet despite Steele’s deception, which calls into question his credibilit­y, the FBI continued to rely on the dossier for renewals of the FISA warrant. And, “the FBI did not subsequent­ly disclose to the (court) this evidence suggesting that Mr. Steele had lied to the FBI.”

None of these ugly details exonerate Trump or undercut the Mueller investigat­ion. Nor was that the purpose. Both Graham and Grassley have always supported special counsel Robert S. Mueller III — Graham by introducin­g a bill that would require the attorney general to petition a panel of federal judges for permission to remove a special counsel, and Grassley by holding a hearing on the bill.

But if the FBI, wittingly or unwittingl­y, made representa­tions before the court that were in error, then the American people have a right to know. And if a paid advocate of one presidenti­al candidate persuaded the FBI to conduct surveillan­ce on a member of the other candidate’s campaign team, Congress has an obligation to investigat­e.

As for Democrats, are Grassley and Graham’s claims “bogus” and “dishonest”? Have they “disgraced” their committee with a “partisan effort to distort intelligen­ce”? I think not. They have raised serious questions that should trouble all Americans, no matter their political party.

 ??  ??

Newspapers in English

Newspapers from United States