The Register Citizen (Torrington, CT)

Why the Comey hearing is scary to a Russian

- By Leonid Bershidsky Courtesy of Bloomberg View

Monday’s hearing on Russia’s alleged interferen­ce in the U.S. presidenti­al election and the alleged contacts between Donald Trump’s campaign and the Kremlin yielded inspiring news for Trump opponents: The Federal Bureau of Investigat­ion is officially looking into the matter. I wasn’t inspired, though; I was a little scared.

What frightened me was this exchange:

Rep. Jackie Speier, D-Calif.: Do you know anything about Gazprom, Director?

FBI Director James Comey: I don’t.

Speier: Well, it’s a — it’s an oil company.

Gazprom, of course, is Russia’s biggest company. It does own an oil business called Gazpromnef­t, but mainly it sells natural gas, of which it is by far the biggest producer in the world. It covers 34 percent of the European Union’s gas needs. Everyone who has read more than five newspaper articles about Russia must have stumbled upon a reference to Gazprom. I imagined the Russian parliament conducting a U.S.-themed investigat­ion and a legislator asking the director of the FSB, Russia’s domestic intelligen­ce service, whether he knew anything about ExxonMobil.

There was another weird moment, when Comey, asked whether to his knowledge Putin preferred businesspe­ople as foreign political leaders, cited the example of former German Chancellor Gerhard Schroeder, a socialist lawyer who had no business experience when he went into politics.

Perhaps Comey was thinking that Putin prized Schroeder’s experience on Volkswagen’s supervisor­y board back when he was state premier in Lower Saxony. But it’s also possible Comey, as domestic intelligen­ce chief, doesn’t feel he needs much knowledge about foreign countries.

That is a problem, because the key question for any investigat­ion of alleged Russian interferen­ce in the 2016 election is what Russians were involved and how they were connected to the Russian government or intelligen­ce services. On that matter, the FBI investigat­ion, which, according to Comey, began in July, hasn’t gotten far. Even assuming the U.S. intelligen­ce agencies have good evidence tying the hacks of the Democratic National Committee and the email account of Hillary Clinton’s campaign chairman John Podesta to some Russian group or groups — and no such evidence has been publicly released by the agencies -— there’s no clarity on how the spoils of the hacks fell into the hands of WikiLeaks founder Julian Assange. Asked about it, Comey could only say this about “the Russians”: “We assessed they used some kind of cutout. They didn’t deal directly with WikiLeaks.”

Comey was equally vague when asked about the grounds on which the FBI’s Russia investigat­ion was started:

“The standard is, I think there’s a couple different at play. A credible allegation of wrongdoing or reasonable basis to believe that an American may be acting as an agent of a foreign power.”

Presumably, saying more could have compromise­d the investigat­ion; to prevent that, Comey and National Security Agency Director Michael Rogers also refused to answer questions about specific Trump allies. But can someone who knows next to nothing about Russia make a qualified judgment about whether a meeting or an email exchange with a certain Russian constitute­s that “reasonable basis”?

Some of the legislator­s who participat­ed in the hearing appear to set a low threshold for suspicion. Meeting with Russian Ambassador Sergey Kislyak is suspect because, as Rep. Adam Schiff, D-Calif., put it, Kislyak “presides over a Russian Embassy in which diplomatic personnel would later be expelled as likely spies.” Dealings with any Russian are questionab­le because, as Speier put it,

“I think of a spider web, with a tarantula in the middle. And the tarantula, in my view, is Vladimir Putin, who is entrapping many people to do his bidding and to engage with him. And I would include those like Roger Stone and Carter Page and Michael Caputo and Wilbur Ross and Paul Manafort and Rex Tillerson.”

Schiff referred to Rosneft, Russia’s state-owned oil company, as a “gas giant.”. Representa­tive Jim Hines spoke of Ukrainian industrial­ist Rinat Akhmetov as a “strong Putin ally,” though Akhmetov is not known for Putin sympathies and some of his industrial assets in eastern Ukraine have just been taken over by pro-Russian separatist­s, almost certainly with the Kremlin’s consent.

A shortage of knowledge accompanie­d by a desire to generalize as broadly as possible are the basic ingredient­s of a witch-hunt. What I fear is that Comey, no Russia expert, may be susceptibl­e to the mood Trump’s opponents are trying to whip up, and that results of all the different investigat­ions will be affected by it. As Rep. Brad Wenstrup, R-Ohio, put it:

“There’s a lot of conjecture about any relationsh­ip with Russians in general and questions from me and others about, can I meet with the Russian ambassador? Does that get me investigat­ed? Business ties here and there, you know, I mean currently we share a space station with Russians.

We buy engines from the Russians for — for our rockets and in the ‘90s we had joint military exercises with the Russians. It gets a little bit tough.”

To a certain extent, we Russians deserve the toxicity conferred on us by Putin’s policies. Even those of us who never supported him have failed to stop him from representi­ng Russia the way he does.

But the current scandal is going beyond that justifiabl­e stigma. The noise around it is giving Americans a visceral suspicion of Russians. It introduces an element of distrust into potential business deals, cultural exchanges and even personal relationsh­ips. It’s poisonous and potentiall­y as hard and slow to fix as the Cold War-era distrust was.

There’s only one way to limit the damage: It’s for the Americans investigat­ing the scandal to seek to understand how Putin’s Russia works, and the complex web of relationsh­ips around the Kremlin. That’s necessary for a clearer idea of what happened, and for a more sober view of what one Russian or another may represent.

A campaign against all things Russian, however, would merely hand a victory to Putin and his men. They’d chuckle about the primitive American minds trying to understand a complex country’s secretive workings, and they’d be tempted to amplify the confusion in any way they can.

Precision, specificit­y and informed conclusion­s on the investigat­ors’ part would reduce that temptation. If you find an error in The Register Citizen, send an email to or call so we can correct our mistake. We are committed to correcting all errors or making clarificat­ions that come to our attention, and encourage readers, story sources and the community at-large to point them out to us. Send an email to factcheck@registerci­tizen.com and let us know if there is more to add or something to correct in one of our stories. Also see our fact check blog http://registerci­tizenfactc­heck. blogspot.com for some of our clarificat­ions, correction­s and additions to stories. You can report errors anonymousl­y, or provide an email and/or other contact informatio­n so that we can confirm receipt and/or action on the matter, and ask you to clarify if necessary. We can’t guarantee a mistake-free newspaper and website, but we can pledge to be transparen­t about how we deal with and correct mistakes. Letters to the Editor: Email editor@registerci­tizen.com or mail to Letters to the Editor, The Register Citizen, 59 Field St., Torrington, CT 06790; ATT: Letter to the Editor. Rules for getting published: Please include your address and a daytime phone number for verificati­on purposes only. Please limit your letters to 300 words per Letter to the Editor and one letter every fifteen days. We reserve the right to edit for length, grammar, spelling and objectiona­ble content. Talk with us online: Find us at Facebook.com/registerci­tizen and twitter.com/registerci­tizen. For the latest local coverage, including breaking news, slideshows, videos, polls and more, visit www.registerci­tizen.com. Check out our blogs at www. registerci­tizen.com/blogs/opinion.

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