New York Post

They Knew ‘Collusion’ Was a Total Lie

- ANDREW C. McCARTHY Andrew C. McCarthy is a former federal prosecutor, National Review contributi­ng editor and author of “Ball of Collusion: The Plot To Rig and Election and Destroy a Presidency.”

‘WE have not seen evidence of any individual­s affiliated with the Trump team in contact with [Russian intelligen­ce officers].”

How much wasted time on pointless investigat­ions could have been prevented had Peter Strzok, then one of the FBI’s top counterint­elligence officials who was spearheadi­ng the Bureau’s Trump-Russia investigat­ion, said this publicly one month into President Trump’s term?

But no, it was a private note by Strzok, for consumptio­n within the FBI, to debunk a Feb. 14, 2017, New York Times article. The news story, a compilatio­n by five of the Times’s top reporters, working four unnamed sources (the usual “current and former American officials”), claimed that members of the Trump campaign had “repeated contacts with senior Russian intelligen­ce officials” before the 2016 election.

This was false. Just as important, the FBI knew it was false.

But we, the American people, only know that now, in 2020, because Strzok’s notes were finally made public on Friday.

The Times article centrally identified former Trump campaign chairman Paul

Manafort as a key adviser in communicat­ion with Kremlin spies. Strzok, however, countered that the Bureau was “unaware of any calls with any Russian government official in which Manafort was a party.”

Significan­tly, the Times report was part of a tireless campaign of government leaks, mostly from current and former intelligen­ce operatives (undoubtedl­y, from officials who either worked in agencies still teeming with Obama holdovers or left government after serving the Obama administra­tion).

The story was published just after the firing of Michael Flynn, Trump’s first nationalse­curity adviser. As part of the Trump transition, Flynn had engaged in perfectly appropriat­e contacts with Russia’s ambassador to the United States, but had been publicly portrayed as if he were a clandestin­e agent working for Moscow against the country he’d bled for as a decorated U.S. army commander.

The narrative of “Trump collusion with Russia” was pure fiction. The public officials who peddled it to a voracious anti-Trump press had to know it was bunk. Yet they fed the beast anyway, regardless of the cloud this created, regardless of how much it harmed the administra­tion’s capacity to govern.

Worse: This was not merely a media scam. The FBI and the Obama Justice Department made similar representa­tions, under oath, to the federal court that oversees secret government surveillan­ce programs.

By the time of the Times report, the Bureau and Obama DOJ had obtained warrants to monitor former Trump campaign advisor Cater Page in October 2016 and January 2017.

In each warrant, the court was told: “The FBI believes that the Russian Government’s efforts to influence the 2016 presidenti­al campaign were being coordinate­d with Page and perhaps other individual­s associated with [Trump’s] campaign.” Moreover, the warrant applicatio­ns painted a picture of a “conspiracy of cooperatio­n” between Donald Trump and the Putin regime, with Manafort at the hub, using such underlings as Page and Trump’s former lawyer, Michael Cohen, as intermedia­ries.

It was complete nonsense, largely based on the so-called dossier compiled by former British spy Christophe­r Steele, working on behalf of the Hillary Clinton campaign. Strzok’s notes attest that the FBI knew Steele’s reporting was highly suspect.

And that’s not the half of it. The Senate Judiciary Committee, at the same time it disclosed Strzok’s notes, also released a lengthy internal FBI memorandum detailing that Steele had immense credibilit­y problems. In particular, his reporting was based on thirdhand (or even less reliable) hearsay and innuendo. It was funneled to him through a sub-source who told the FBI, in a lengthy February 2017 interview, that the dossier claims were exaggerati­ons and innuendo gussied up to seem like real intelligen­ce.

Yet, despite knowing that, far from dropping its bogus investigat­ion, the FBI doubled down, seeking new warrants in April and June, failing to correct its misreprese­ntations.

It is a shocking black eye for American law-enforcemen­t and intelligen­ce agencies. The Justice Department’s criminal investigat­ion is said to be reaching its conclusion. Americans need answers.

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