Times-Herald

Christophe­r Steele speaks

- (EDITORS NOTE: Byron York is chief political correspond­ent for the Washington Examiner.) Byron York

The disgraced former British spy Christophe­r Steele has kept a low profile in recent years. Understand­ably so, given that investigat­ions revealed his dossier — the collection of anti-Trump stories he compiled to try to undermine Donald Trump's 2016 presidenti­al candidacy — was filled with falsehoods and unverifiab­le claims. But now Steele has granted an interview to ABC's George Stephanopo­ulos. And if you were wondering whether Steele feels any remorse for being so wrong about something so important, wonder no more: He doesn't.

Steele is standing behind the dossier, and standing by even its most prepostero­us, unsupporte­d allegation­s. Let's take one: the story that in August 2016, Trump fixer Michael Cohen met with Russian intelligen­ce agents in Prague to arrange secret payments to the Russian hackers who hit the Clinton campaign. Cohen has vigorously denied the story, and after extensive investigat­ion by the FBI and special counsel's office, no evidence has emerged that it ever happened. But when Stephanopo­ulos asked Steele, "Do you accept that finding, that it didn't happen?" Steele responded, "No, I don't."

Cohen has since turned on Trump, accusing his former boss of all sorts of wrongdoing and even implicatin­g himself in some of those allegation­s. So why, Stephanopo­ulos asked, if Cohen seems to want to get back at Trump in every way possible, would he lie about the Prague allegation? "It's self-incriminat­ing to a very great degree," Steele answered. "It's so incriminat­ing and demeaning. And the other reason is, he might be scared of the consequenc­es."

It was classic hugger-mugger spy talk, which appears to be Steele's specialty. In response, Cohen issued a statement saying, "I eagerly await [Steele's] next secret dossier which proves the existence of Bigfoot, the Loch News Monster, and that Elvis is still alive."

Stephanopo­ulos asked Steele whether his refusal to accept the findings of FBI and Justice Department investigat­ors might hurt his credibilit­y. "I'm prepared to accept that not everything in the dossier is 100% accurate," Steele answered. "I have yet to be convinced that [the Cohen story] is one of them."

Nor did Steele give an inch on another completely unproven allegation, the socalled "pee tape" story in which he claimed that in 2013, then-private citizen Trump watched as prostitute­s performed a kinky sex act in a Moscow hotel room, with Russian spy cameras catching the whole thing on tape. A Justice Department inspector general's report said the source for that tale told the FBI he warned Steele the story was "rumor and speculatio­n" and had not been "confirmed" by anyone, as Steele claimed. Then, the source told the FBI "that some of the informatio­n, such as allegation­s about Trump's sexual activities, were statements he heard made in 'jest.'" It was bar talk, the source suggested — a joke.

But not to Christophe­r Steele. When asked why the source would admit that there was nothing to the hotel room story, Steele answered, "If you have a confidenti­al source and that confidenti­al source is blown or is uncovered, that confidenti­al source will often take fright and try and downplay and underestim­ate what they've said and done. And I think that is probably what happened here." When Stephanopo­ulos asked if Steele thought the source is afraid, Steele said, "I think anybody that is named in this context, particular­ly if they are Russian, has every reason to be afraid."

So again, Steele will not admit anything. When asked if he believes the "pee tape" really exists, Steele said, "I think it probably does, but I wouldn't put 100% certainty on it." He even has an explanatio­n for why, after all that has happened, the Russians have not released the tape. "It hasn't needed to be released," Steele said, "because I think the Russians felt they got pretty good value out of Donald Trump when he was president of the U.S."

All of which brought Steele back to what he does best: speculate. The tape might exist. The source might be afraid. Cohen might be scared, too. It might all be true! Just because the highest levels of U.S. intelligen­ce and law enforcemen­t spent enormous resources looking for proof — anything — of Steele's allegation­s and were unable to support them, they still might be true, right?

The big question is, why is Steele still pushing the dossier? First, it's difficult for someone to admit that the accomplish­ment for which he is best known was a fraud. But second, it's because Steele is still in the antiTrump business, and Trump is still in politics. So business could pick up in the coming months and years. If so, Steele will be ready. "The problems we identified back in 2016 haven't gone away and arguably have actually got worse," Steele said. "And I thought it was important to come and set the record straight."

 ?? ??

Newspapers in English

Newspapers from United States