By Finian Cunningham
August 18, 2017
Source: https://www.strategic-culture.org/news/2017/08/18/as-russia-gate-story-stalls-cue-trump-neo-nazi-scandal.html
August 18, 2017
Source: https://www.strategic-culture.org/news/2017/08/18/as-russia-gate-story-stalls-cue-trump-neo-nazi-scandal.html
The political opponents of President Trump
have found a new lever for sabotaging his presidency – his alleged embrace of
white supremacists and Neo-Nazis. He is now being labelled a «sympathizer» of
fascists and bringing America’s international image into disrepute. Cue the
impeachment proceedings.
Notably, the same power-nexus that opposed
Trump from the very outset of his presidency is vociferously condemning his
alleged racist leanings. Pro-Democrat media like the Washington Post, New York Times and CNN can’t give enough
coverage to Trump «the racist», while the intelligence community and Pentagon
have also weighed in to rebuke the president. Former CIA chief John Brennan
said Trump’s comments on racial violence were a «national security risk».
This is not meant to minimize the ugliness
of the various Neo-Nazi fringe groups that have lately rallied across Southern
US states. Trump’s wrongheaded remarks which appeared to lay equal blame on
anti-fascist protesters for deadly violence last weekend in Charlottesville,
Virginia, were deplorable.
However, the concerted, massive media
campaign to nail Trump as some kind of new Fuhrer seems way over the top. The
media frenzy smacks of Deep State opponents scouring for a handy new pretext
for ousting him from office.
The enthusiasm for whipping up the new
anti-Trump campaign seems due in large part because the erstwhile Russia-gate
story has patently failed to gain any traction. For nearly seven months since
Trump’s inauguration, the relentless claims pushed by Democrats, the media and
anonymous intelligence sources that his election last November was enabled by
Russian interference have shown little impact in terms of discrediting Trump
and ultimately forcing him out of the White House. The Russia-gate theme has failed
in its soft coup objective.
Back in January, on the eve of Trump’s
inauguration, the US intelligence agencies claimed that Russia had interfered
in the presidential election with the aim of promoting Trump’s victory over
Democrat rival Hillary Clinton. But seven months on, no evidence has ever been
produced to support that sensational claim.
Despite this absence of «killer evidence»
to damage Trump as a Russian stooge, the Congress continues to hold
investigations into the vapid allegations. And, separately, a «special
prosecutor» – former FBI chief Robert Mueller – continues to expand his
investigation, forming a grand jury and this week opening enquiries into White
House staff.
Thus the whole Russia-gate affair is in
danger of becoming a giant farce from the lack of evidence. With so little to
show for their herculean efforts to trap Trump as a «Russian patsy», his
political opponents, including prominent media organizations, are at risk of
being seen as ridiculous hoaxers.
A telltale sign of how bankrupt the
Russia-gate story is was the publication of a lengthy article in
Wired earlier this month. The California-based online magazine proclaims to be
a cutting-edge technology publication. Wired is published by Condé Nast, a
global American company, whose other prestige titles include Vogue, Vanity Fair
and New Yorker.
With a claimed monthly readership of 30 million, and an editorial staff of over
80, Wired is supposed to be a global leader in new technology and
communications.
According to its advertising blurb, «Wired
is where tomorrow is realized», adding: «It is the essential source of
information and ideas that make sense of a world in constant transformation».
Therefore, as a US technology forum, this
publication is supposed to be the elite in insider information and «nerdy
journalism». With these high claims in mind, we then turn excitedly to its
article published on August 8 with the headline: «A guide to Russia’s high tech
tool box for subverting US democracy».
On reading it, the entire article is a
marathon in hackneyed cliches of Russophobia. It is an appalling demonstration
of how threadbare are the claims of Russian hacking into the US election last
year. Citing US intelligence sources, the Wired article is a regurgitation of
unsubstantiated assertions that Russian state agencies hacked into the
Democratic National Committee last July and subsequently used whistleblower
site Wikileaks to disseminate damaging information against Trump’s rival
Hillary Clinton.
«According to US investigators», says
Wired, «the hack of the DNC’s servers was apparently the work of two separate
Russian teams, one from the GRU [military intelligence] and one from the FSB
[state security service], neither of which appears to have known the other was
also rooting around in the Democratic Party’s files. From there, the plundered
files were laundered through online leak sites like WikiLeaks and DCLeaks…
Their impact on the 2016 election was sizable, yielding months of damaging
headlines».
Nowhere in the Wired article is any
plausible technical detail presented to back up the hacking claims. It relies
on US intelligence «assessments» and embellishment with quotes from think tanks
and anonymous diplomats whose anti-Russia bias is transparent.
Wired’s so-called Russian «tool box for
subverting US democracy» covers much more than the alleged hacking into the
DNC. It accuses Russia of using news media, diplomats, criminal underworld
networks, blackmail and assassinations as an arsenal of hybrid warfare to
undermine Western democracy.
Wired declares: «And they are
self-reinforcing, because in Russia the intelligence apparatus, business
community, organized crime groups, and media distribution networks blend
together, blurring and erasing the line between public and private-sector
initiatives and creating one amorphous state-controlled enterprise to advance
the personal goals of Vladimir Putin and his allies».
This is an astoundingly sweeping depiction
of Russia in the most slanderous, pejorative terms. Basically, Wired is
claiming that the entire Russian state is a criminal enterprise. The
Russophobia expressed in the article is breathtaking – and this is in a
magazine that is supposed to be a leader in technology-intelligence.
Wired tells its readers of Russia having a
«Grand Strategy» – to undermine Western democracies, and multilateral alliances
from NATO to the European Union.
With foreboding, it warns: «[T]he Putin
regime’s systematic effort to undermine and destabilize democracies has become
the subject of urgent focus in the West… the biggest challenge to the Western
order since the fall of the Berlin Wall».
The salient point here is that despite its
grandiose professional claims, Wired provides nothing of substance to support
the narrative that Russia hacked into the US election. If a supposed
cutting-edge technology magazine can’t deliver on technical details, then that
really does demonstrate just how bankrupt the whole Russia-gate story is.
Moreover, another nail in the coffin for
the Russia-gate narrative was recently provided by a respected group of former
US intelligence officers called Veteran Intelligence Professionals for Sanity
(VIPS). Last month, the group wrote to
President Trump with their expert analysis that the DNC incident was not a hack
conducted via the internet, but rather that the information came from a DNC
insider. In other words, the information was a leak, not a hack, in which the
data was transferred by person out of the DNC offices on a memory disk. In that
case, Russian agents or any other internet agents could not have possibly been
involved. The key finding in the VIPS analysis is that the information obtained
from the DNC computers was so vast in file size, it could not have been
downloaded over the internet in the time period indicated by meta-data.
It is relevant that Wikileaks editor Julian
Assange has consistently denied US intelligence and media claims that his
source was Russian hackers. Also, former British ambassador Craig Murray has
confirmed that he knows the identity of the source for Wikileaks and that, as
the dissenting veteran US intelligence people have assessed, the information
was leaked, not hacked.
In sum, the Russia-gate story that the US
Deep State and media have peddled non-stop for seven months is on its knees
gasping for lack of credibility.
Even a supposed top technology publication,
Wired, is embarrassingly vacant of any details on how alleged Russian hackers
are supposed to have interfered in the US election to get Trump into the White
House. As if to compensate for its dearth of detail, the Wired publication pads
out its «big story» with hackneyed Russophobia worthy of a corny James Bond
knock-off.
Not only that, but now technical details
and expert analysis are emerging from credible former US intelligence personnel
who are verifying that the Russia-gate story is indeed a hoax.
The Deep State and other political/media
opponents of Trump are inevitably scrabbling for alternative means of
sabotaging his presidency. They are finding that the Russia-gate ploy to get
Trump out of the White House is in danger of collapsing from lack of evidence
and from the emergence of a plausible explanation for the DNC breach that
damaged Clinton’s election campaign. The bottomline is: it wasn’t the Russians,
so all the hype about Trump being a Russian stooge is a case of fake news, just
as Trump has long maintained.
The imminent death of the Russia-gate
«scandal» is giving way to the next orchestrated campaign to oust Trump in the
form of allegations that the president is a «Neo-Nazi sympathizer». Trump’s
nationalistic America First views may be suspect, even reprehensible in their
wider association. That’s not the point. The point is the concerted,
orchestrated way that the Deep State will rail-road the new campaign to oust
Trump in place of the failing Russia-gate ploy. The contempt for democratic
process raises the question of who the more dangerous American fascists are?