The Signal

Be careful crying ‘traitor’

Treason accusation tossed around again

- Rick Hampson USA TODAY

Traitor! Few words are defined so narrowly in law and used so commonly in anger, from politics to the playground.

Every nation has an infamous traitor. In Norway, he’s Vidkun Quisling, the Nazi collaborat­or. In Britain, he’s Kim Philby, the Soviet mole. In America, he’s Benedict Arnold, the Continenta­l Army officer who plotted to turn West Point over to the Redcoats in the Revolution­ary War.

After a news conference Monday in Finland, the term is being used in relation to the 45th president of the United States. Donald Trump, master of the political insult, finds himself on the receiving end.

“It’s the word that comes to mind after what he did, with Vladimir Putin standing next to him,” said Eric Arnesen, a George Washington University political historian. “It was so jaw-dropping that people are grasping for words to capture their sense of disbelief.”

Others are more cautious. “When I think ‘traitor,’ I think Benedict Arnold. There was evidence – letters, witnesses,” said Phillip Henderson of the Catholic University of America, an expert in political leadership. “To use the term so loosely discredits people. We should be more careful how we use it.”

After a private meeting with Putin, Trump accepted Putin’s insistence that Russia was blameless of meddling, to Trump’s benefit, in the 2016 election – contrary to findings by Trump’s intelligen­ce agencies.

Although Trump tried Tuesday to

“It’s the word that comes to mind after what he did, with Vladimir Putin standing next to him.”

Eric Arnesen George Washington University

retreat, saying he misspoke, the damage was done.

Former CIA director John Brennan wrote that Trump’s news conference commentary “rises to & exceeds the threshold of ‘high crimes & misdemeano­rs.’ It was nothing short of treasonous.’’

Thomas Friedman, the veteran foreign affairs correspond­ent for The New York Times, saw “overwhelmi­ng evidence that our president, for the first time in our history, is deliberate­ly or through gross negligence or because of his own twisted personalit­y engaged in treasonous behavior.’’

“OPEN TREASON” cried page one of the New York Daily News. Various Twitter hashtags – #Treason, #TreasonSum­mit, #TraitorTru­mp – formed a collective “Amen!”

Treason is the only crime defined in the Constituti­on. That’s because in 18th century England, it was at times liberally interprete­d by the Crown. To avoid such abuses, treason was specifical­ly restricted in Article III as consisting “only in levying War against (the U.S.), or in adhering to (its) Enemies, giving them Aid and Comfort. No Person shall be convicted of Treason unless on the Testimony of two Witnesses …. or on Confession in open Court.’’

While there is no declared war between the U.S. and Russia, the Russians could be defined as “enemies.’’ And cyberwar, apparently Russia’s preferred style of attack, may be one of the future.

The limited, precise definition of treason has never prevented its general applicatio­n. In his biography of Alexander Hamilton, Ron Chernow writes that in the early 1790s, Hamilton and President George Washington “regarded much of the criticism of their administra­tion as disloyal, even treasonous.’’

On the other side of the political fence, Thomas Jefferson said in 1791 that any Virginia official who cooperated with Hamilton’s proposed national bank was guilty of treason.

There have been only a few dozen federal treason trials, and even fewer conviction­s. Former Vice President Aaron Burr, accused in 1807 of conspiracy to steal land, was found not guilty.

Jefferson Davis, president of the Confederac­y, was indicted for treason at the end of the Civil War but never tried, in part because it was unclear he’d be convicted. He spent only two years in custody.

Some presidents have at least flirted with treason. In 1968, Richard Nixon’s presidenti­al campaign reached out to South Vietnam through back channels to urge its negotiator­s not to agree to a peace deal with North Vietnam being pressed by President Lyndon Johnson.

In the 1950s, Republican Sen. Joe McCarthy, the witch-hunting anti-communist, accused the Democrats of “20 years of treason.’’ In 1952, after the new president, McCarthy’s fellow Republican Dwight Eisenhower, proved insufficie­ntly tough on Reds, the senator amended his cry to “21 years of treason.’’

The charge arose again during the Vietnam War. Protesters were accused of underminin­g troops in the field.

One of the accused was Todd Gitlin, who in 1965 helped organize the first big national rally against the war.

Does he have reservatio­ns about its use against Trump? “My eyebrows were raised when I heard it,’’ he said, but said he had no objections: “It belongs in the conversati­on. It speaks to the larger question: What the hell is going on? Do the Russians have something on Trump?’’

 ?? BRENDAN SMIALOWSKI, AFP/GETTY IMAGES ?? President Donald Trump and his Russian counterpar­t, Vladimir Putin, met in Helsinki this week, and some critics suggest that Trump’s support of Putin bordered on treason.
BRENDAN SMIALOWSKI, AFP/GETTY IMAGES President Donald Trump and his Russian counterpar­t, Vladimir Putin, met in Helsinki this week, and some critics suggest that Trump’s support of Putin bordered on treason.
 ?? LIBRARY OF CONGRESS VIA AP ?? Gen. Benedict Arnold, who plotted to turn West Point over to the British in the Revolution­ary War, is the most infamous traitor in U.S. history.
LIBRARY OF CONGRESS VIA AP Gen. Benedict Arnold, who plotted to turn West Point over to the British in the Revolution­ary War, is the most infamous traitor in U.S. history.

Newspapers in English

Newspapers from United States