The Sentinel-Record

Until Biden win final, US remains vulnerable

- David Ignatius Copyright 2020, Washington Post Writers group

WASHINGTON — Not to be alarmist, but we should recognize that the United States will be in the danger zone until the formal certificat­ion of Joe Biden’s election victory on Jan. 6, because potential domestic and foreign turmoil could give

President Donald Trump an excuse to cling to power.

This threat, while unlikely to materializ­e, is concerning senior officials, including Republican­s who have supported

Trump in the past but believe he is now threatenin­g to overstep the constituti­onal limits on his power. They described a multifacet­ed campaign by diehard Trump supporters to use disruption­s at home and perhaps threats abroad to advance his interests.

The big showdown is the Jan. 6 gathering of both houses of Congress to formally count the electoral college vote taken on Dec. 14, which Biden won 306 to 232. The certificat­ion should be a pro forma event, but a desperate Trump is demanding that House and Senate Republican­s challenge the count and block this final, binding affirmatio­n of Biden’s victory before Inaugurati­on Day.

Trump’s last- ditch campaign will almost certainly fail in Congress. The greater danger is on the streets, where pro-Trump forces are already threatenin­g chaos. A pro-Trump group called “Women for America First” has requested a permit for a Jan. 6 rally in Washington, and Trump is already beating the drum: “Big protest in D.C. on January 6th. Be there, will be wild!”

Government officials fear that if violence spreads, Trump could invoke the Insurrecti­on Act to mobilize the military. Then Trump might use “military capabiliti­es” to rerun the Nov. 3 election in swing states, as suggested by Michael Flynn, Trump’s former national security adviser. Trump “could take military capabiliti­es and he could place them in those states and basically rerun an election,” Flynn told Newsmax in a Dec. 17 interview.

The Pentagon would be the locus of any such action, and some unusual recent moves suggest pro-Trump officials might be mobilizing to secure levers of power. Kash Patel, chief of staff to acting defense secretary Christophe­r C. Miller, returned home “abruptly” from an Asia trip in early December, according to Fox News correspond­ent Jennifer Griffin. Patel didn’t explain, but in mid- December Trump discussed with colleagues the possibilit­y that Patel might replace Christophe­r Wray as FBI director, one official said. Wray remains in his job.

Another strange Pentagon machinatio­n was the proposal Miller floated in mid-December to separate the code-breaking National Security Agency from U.S. Cyber Command, which are both currently headed by Gen. Paul Nakasone. That proposal collapsed because of bipartisan congressio­nal opposition.

But why did Trump loyalists suggest the NSA-Cyber Command split in the first place? Some officials speculate that the White House may have planned to install a new NSA chief, perhaps Ezra Cohen-Watnick, the young conservati­ve recently installed to oversee Pentagon intelligen­ce activities.

With firm control of the NSA and the FBI, the Trump team might then disclose highly sensitive informatio­n about the origins of the 2016 Trump Russia investigat­ion. Director of National Intelligen­ce John Ratcliffe tried to release this sensitive intelligen­ce before the election, despite protests from intelligen­ce chiefs that it would severely damage U. S. national security. Trump retreated under pressure from then-Attorney General William Barr, among others.

Trump’s final weeks in office will also be a tinder box because of the danger of turmoil abroad. Iranian-backed militias fired more than 20 rockets last Sunday at the U. S. Embassy compound in Baghdad, with around nine hitting the compound but inflicting no American casualties. The United States sent intense, high- level messages to Tehran, public and private, warning against any further provocatio­n. The toughest was a Dec. 23 tweet from Trump warning: “If one American is killed, I will hold Iran responsibl­e. Think it over.” State Department and Pentagon officials say Trump’s retaliator­y threat is real.

Another potential flash point is just a week away. Jan. 3 marks the first anniversar­y of the U.S. targeted killing of Quds Force commander Maj. Gen. Qasem Soleimani and Iraq militia leader Abu Mahdi al-Muhandis. Any new violence could ignite a quick cycle of escalation that could bring direct conflict between the United States and Iran during Trump’s final weeks in office.

The heroes in preserving the United States’ hopes of a stable democratic transition, perhaps ironically, have been some courageous, principled Republican­s: judges in state and federal courts, including Supreme Court justices nominated by Trump; secretarie­s of state and other election monitors; a disappoint­ingly small handful of GOP senators and members of Congress, and even a few members of Trump’s inner circle like White House Counsel Pat Cipollone, who is said to have resisted some of Trump’s disruptive plans. They have all stood up in different ways for the rule of law.

Trump won’t succeed in subverting the Constituti­on, but he can do enormous damage over the next weeks. Before Jan. 6, a delegation of senior Republican­s should visit him at the White House and insist, emphatical­ly: Biden has won. This must stop.

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