Letters from an American - July 18, 2024
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July 18, 2024.
Paul Manafort, walking onto the floor of the Republican National Convention yesterday,
illustrated that the Republican Party under Trump has become thoroughly corrupted
into an authoritarian party aligned with foreign dictators.
Manafort first advised and then managed
Trump's 2016 campaign. A longtime Republican political operative, he came to the job after
the Ukrainian people threw his client, Viktor Yanukovych, out of Ukraine's presidency in 2014.
Yanukovych was backed by Russian President Vladimir Putin, who was
determined to prevent Ukraine from turning toward Europe and to install a puppet government that
would extend his power over the neighboring country. Beginning in 2004, Manafort had worked
to install and then keep Yanukovych and his party in power. His efforts won him a fortune thanks to his new friends,
especially Russian billionaire Oleg Deripaska. Then, in 2014, after months of popular protests,
Ukrainians ousted Yanukovych from power in what is known as the Revolution of Dignity.
Yanukovych fled to Russia, and Putin invaded Ukraine's Crimea and annexed it,
prompting the United States and the European Union to impose economic sanctions on Russia itself
and also on specific Russian businesses and oligarchs, prohibiting them from doing business
in United States territories. These sanctions crippled Russia and froze the assets of key Russian oligarchs.
Now without his main source of income, Manafort owed about $17 million to Deripaska.
By 2016, his longtime friend and business partner, Roger Stone,
was advising Trump's floundering presidential campaign, and Manafort stepped in to remake it.
He did not take a salary, but reached out to Deripaska through one of his Ukrainian business
partners, Russian operative Konstantin Kalimnik, immediately after landing the job, asking Kalimnik
how we could use the appointment to get whole, and he made sure that the Russian oligarch to
whom he owed
the most money knew about his close connection with the Trump campaign. Special Counsel Robert
Mueller's 2019 report on Russian interference in the 2016 presidential election explained at least
one answer. Manafort and Kalimnik discussed a plan to resolve the ongoing political problems in Ukraine
by creating an autonomous republic in its more industrialized eastern region of Donbass
and having Yanukovych elected to head that republic.
The report continued, that plan, Manafort later acknowledged,
constituted a backdoor means for Russia to control eastern Ukraine.
This policy was the exact opposite of official U.S. policy for a free and united Ukraine.
Russia worked to help Trump win the White House, and immediately after his election,
according to the Republican-dominated Senate Intelligence
Committee, Kalimnik wrote that all that is required to start the process is a very minor
wink or slight push from Donald Trump, saying he wants peace in Ukraine and Donbass back in Ukraine
and a decision to be a special representative and manage this process.
and a decision to be a special representative and manage this process.
The email went on to say that once then-Ukrainian President Petro Poroshenko understood this message from the United States, the process will go very fast and DT could have peace in Ukraine basically within a few months after inauguration.
The investigation into the Trump campaign's ties to Russia slowed
the consummation of this plan, and strong bipartisan support for Ukraine threw a monkey
wrench into the works, prompting Trump's cronies to try to smear Ukraine as the country that
interfered in the 2016 U.S. election, a story that began to come out during Trump's first impeachment hearing.
Biden's election meant an abrupt end to Russia's quiet absorption of Ukraine's eastern region, and in February 2022, Putin simply invaded the country and then claimed that the people there
had voted to join Russia. Trump seemed to bring this back up at a CNN event in June in which,
referring to Putin's invasion of eastern
Ukraine in February 2022, he said, Putin saw that. He said, you know what? I think we're going to go
in and maybe take my, this was his dream. I talked to him about it, his dream. Trump has said he has
a plan for peace in Ukraine that will stop the war in a day.
Republican Vice Presidential pick J.D. Vance is wildly inexperienced for such a position,
but he has been staunchly in favor of ending U.S. assistance to Ukraine and was the pick of that
party faction. Russian Foreign Minister Sergei Lavrov cheered Vance's nomination, saying,
Russian Foreign Minister Sergei Lavrov cheered Vance's nomination, saying,
He's in favor of peace. He's in favor of ending the assistances being provided.
And we can only welcome that because that's what we need to stop pumping Ukraine full of weapons. And then the war will end.
Russia needs this sort of help.
For just this week, Ukraine forced it to remove its last remaining patrol ship from occupied Crimea.
When the 2022 invasion began, it held most of its 74 Black Sea Fleet warships at ports there.
Manafort was convicted of a slew of criminal charges for his work with Ukraine and obstruction
of the investigation into the connections between the Trump campaign and Russian operatives,
and was serving a seven-year sentence when Trump pardoned him in December 2020.
Now he is back at the center of Trump's MAGA party.
Before 2016, the Republican Party stood staunchly against Russia, and getting Republican voters to forget that history required adopting the argument of Hungarian Prime Minister
Viktor Orban, who is aligned with Putin and Trump, that democracy has ruined the United States.
In this argument, the central principle of democracy, that all people must be equal before
the law and have a right to a say in their government, destroys a country by making women, people of color,
immigrants, members of religious minorities,
and LGBTQ plus individuals equal to heteronormative white men
and permitting them to influence government.
In place of democracy,
they want to impose their version of Christianity on the nation,
banning abortion, rejecting immigrants, and curtailing the rights of gender, religious, and ethnic minorities.
Josh Kavinsky and John Light of Talking Points Memo picked up that in his speech at the Republican convention last night,
Vance pushed back against President Joe Biden's traditional idea that America is an idea,
tying it instead to a place and a people. As Kavinsky and Light note, this is a somewhat quiet,
somewhat obvious dog whistle, gesturing toward the idea there are, as some on the far right contend,
heritage Americans, native-born Americans who have a deeper understanding
than newcomers of what this country means. That view of nationhood is commonplace elsewhere,
Kavinsky and Light note, but its absence in the U.S. has long made our country exceptional.
This nationalist concept is at the heart of MAGA attacks on immigrants, which were in full display at the convention yesterday.
From the podium yesterday, Thomas Holman, director of U.S. Immigration and Customs Enforcement, or ICE, for Trump's first two years in office, told undocumented immigrants,
you better start packing to go home.
you better start packing to go home. Trump has promised to round up 11 million migrants,
although he claims there are 18 million, currently living in the U.S., put them in camps,
and deport them. There were actually pre-printed signs at the convention for attendees to wave,
which they did with apparent enthusiasm. The signs said, mass deportation now.
The convention has also emphasized its opposition to women's rights. Trump, who has proudly claimed responsibility for the Supreme Court's overturning of the 1973 Roe v. Wade decision, recognizing
abortion as a constitutional right, walked out last night to the song,
It's a Man's World.
By focusing on the 14th Amendment to the Constitution, which gives Congress the power to enforce
it as the protector of life, the Republican platform covertly endorses a national abortion
ban.
Their rejection of democracy requires a strong man at the head
of the government. And in Milwaukee, that man is Trump, who will be the first convicted criminal
nominated for president by a major party. He was convicted for trying to tip the 2016 election
by hiding payments to an adult film actress after they had sex in order to keep the
story from voters. Conference attendees are honoring Trump with large bandages on their
right ear as a tribute to an injury he sustained in a shooting attempt on Saturday. Although,
and this is very weird, there has been no information about that injury aside from his own comments
and those of his inner circle, a lack the press seems willing to ignore despite their deep interest
in every piece of medical information from President Biden. As he did at his criminal
trial in Manhattan, Trump keeps nodding off to sleep at the convention. The theme of the party has been unity, but that unity depends on everyone lauding Trump.
Gone are the establishment Republicans that ran the party before 2016.
Even longer gone are the traditional Republicans who were chased out of the party in the 1990s
as Republicans in name only because they believed government had a role to play in the
economy and did not see tax cuts as a solution to everything. In the Philadelphia Inquirer,
Will Bunch wrote, here in Milwaukee, the political pundits finally saw the thing they've been
pleading for, unity, and what that really looks like. It looks a lot like Jonestown, where a cult leader took
the lives of his followers in 1978. In 1959, veteran Robert Biggs wrote to Republican President
Dwight D. Eisenhower, who had led the Allied forces in Europe during World War II, asking the
president to make direct statements that would give people
the confidence to back him completely. Americans needed more of the attitude of a commanding
officer who knows the goal and the mission and states without evasion the way it is to be done.
Eisenhower answered that in a democracy, debate is the breath of life. This is to me what
Lincoln meant by government of the people, by the people, and for the people. Dictatorial systems
make one contribution to their people, which leads them to tend to support such systems.
Freedom from the necessity of informing themselves
and making up their own minds
concerning tremendous complex and difficult questions,
Eisenhower wrote.
But while this responsibility is a taxing one
to a free people, it is their great strength as well.
From millions of individual free minds come new ideas, new adjustments to emerging problems,
and tremendous vigor, vitality, and progress. While complete success will always elude us,
still it is a quest which is vital to self-government and to our way of life as free men.
to our way of life as free men.
Letters from an American was produced at Soundscape Productions,
Dedham, Massachusetts.
Recorded with music composed by Michael Moss.