Scott Horton Show - Just the Interviews - 9/27/21 Aaron Maté on the Charged Clinton Lawyer and the Legacy of Russiagate
Episode Date: October 2, 2021Scott interviews Aaron Maté about his recent article on Michael Sussmann, the Clinton attorney who was recently charged for lying to the FBI. Maté helps weave this developing story into the broader ...narrative of Russiagate. Scott and Maté reflect on how wild this story was from the beginning. They also discuss the effects this Clinton/FBI hoax had on the 2020 election and how it will affect our Country going forward. Discussed on the show: “With Clinton lawyer charged, the Russiagate scam is now under indictment” (Grayzone) Aaron’s Substack Chuck Schumer accidentally blowing the whistle on Russiagate before Trump was even inaugurated Mueller Report Scott’s interview with Jeffery Carr - July 2016 Fear by Bob Woodward Aaron Maté is an NYC-based journalist and producer. He hosts the news show Pushback for The Grayzone, and writes regularly for The Nation. Subscribe to his Substack and follow him on Twitter @AaronJMate. This episode of the Scott Horton Show is sponsored by: The War State and Why The Vietnam War?, by Mike Swanson; Tom Woods’ Liberty Classroom; ExpandDesigns.com/Scott; EasyShip; Dröm; Free Range Feeder; Thc Hemp Spot; Green Mill Supercritical; Bug-A-Salt; Lorenzotti Coffee and Listen and Think Audio. Shop Libertarian Institute merch or donate to the show through Patreon, PayPal or Bitcoin: 1DZBZNJrxUhQhEzgDh7k8JXHXRjYu5tZiG. Learn more about your ad choices. Visit megaphone.fm/adchoices
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All right, y'all, welcome to the Scott Horton Show.
I'm the director of the Libertarian Institute, editorial director of anti-war.com, author of the book, Fool's Aaron,
time to end the war in Afghanistan, and the brand new, enough already, time to end the war on terrorism.
And I've recorded more the 5,500 interviews since 2000.
almost all on foreign policy and all available for you at scothorton dot four you can sign up to the podcast feed there and the full interview archive is also available at youtube.com slash scott horton's show all right you guys on the line i've got erin mate and uh he's of course at the gray zone and he's got his very own substack as well which is mate mate dot substack dot com and uh he's of course at the gray zone and he's got his very own substack as well which is mate mate mate dot substack dot com and
at both places, you can see his new piece. With Clinton lawyer charged, the Russiagate scam is now
indicted. Welcome back to the show. How you doing? I'm good, Scott. How are you? I'm doing great.
Really happy to have you here. I'll tell you what, I agree with you that this Russiagate thing is important.
It seems like maybe kind of it's not, because Trump isn't the president anymore, and they dropped it,
you know, quite a while ago. All the accusations, I guess 2009 was mostly the last hurrah for the thing.
and it seems like it's kind of going into the memory hole
some stuff that happened but what's the big deal Aaron
what do you think
well it's true that it's kind of gone away
but I think the reason why is because
it served its political function
which was basically to
constrain Trump
from
deviating too much from the
bipartisan national security
consensus that he
challenge when he ran, at least rhetorically on the campaign trail in 2016, when he criticized
U.S. policy in Iraq and Syria. And it also served its political function in basically
letting the Clinton-Biden wing of the party avoid any kind of reflection and responsibility
for their loss in 2016 by blaming it all on some giant Russia conspiracy. And now that
Trump has gone, it just doesn't have the same political utility anymore. But
unfortunately for the people who perpetrated
Russiagate, there's now this investigation
ordered under Trump
into the origins of the Russia investigation
that's being carried out by John Durham.
And we need some, you know, for people who care about
accountability, you know, weaponizing
the intelligence community to undermine an elected president
and perpetrating this like, you know,
multi-year siop against the U.S. population
to convince them that Russian bots were invading the
country and the reason why we have Donald Trump is not because of a dysfunctional society,
but because of Vladimir Putin's machinations, you know, it's important that we get some
accountability. And as part of that, Michael Sussman, this Clinton attorney, just got indicted
for something pretty serious stuff. You know, like the case shows that there was, it's new evidence
that there was a deliberate scam, plot perpetrated by the Clinton campaign to basically
manufacture the appearance of Trump-Russia ties.
Yeah. All right. I'm going to ask you about that in just one second, but I got to add in here, too, though, that I wholeheartedly agree with you that even the investigation itself, I mean, these aren't your exact words, but the investigation itself was part of the plot against him, when, as we know now from all the late releases of documents, that the FBI was already satisfied how untrue all this was before they went on with the special
counsel investigation. And then they carried on the special counsel investigation for two full
years before letting the American people know that, oh, yeah, no, we don't, we're not pursuing
an angle that the president of the United States is a Russian agent. We don't see any evidence
of that. And remember when Jason Leopold put out a story about Michael Cohen, Trump's lawyer,
Trump told him to lie to Congress, and that's impeachable, and that's going to be a big one.
and then Mueller put out a statement saying that's not true.
But then, and that was one of the, I guess, the first real time he had commented
Mr. Tightlips on the investigation for two years straight.
But then if he can debunk that, then he could have let the American people know
that he was not investigating, that the trail had not led to the idea or the fact
or the suspicion that the President of the United States was a pro-Russian traitor.
who was sitting in the chair behind the resolute desk in command of our nuclear submarines.
That it's not right.
He could have said that all along.
Well, we're going after some low-hanging fruit online to the FBI about inconsequential matters.
But rest assured, American people, your president is not guilty of treason.
He didn't say that.
He waited two years to say that.
And that, to me, goes to show the nature of the entire thing here, that it was
all meant the investigation itself was part of the plot against him. They weren't looking
for facts. They were hemming him in by having the investigation itself. And in fact, that's
what the FBI told CNN. Well, if we can't remove him with the 25th Amendment, at least we can
hem him in. Okay. Yeah, I look, I mean, Chuck Schumer said it best, just shortly before
Trump was inaugurated in January 2017, he went on the Rachel Maddow show. And they were
talking about how Trump was basically raising questions about the Russian hacking allegations.
And Schumer said that, you know, you shouldn't mess with the intelligence community because
they have six ways from Sunday to get back at you, you know. So that was, and that's, that's what
was happening. It's not because it's not, it's not like the intelligence community was offended
by Trump's, you know, sexism or his racism. They just saw him as an suitable steward of the
U.S. war machine. And he wasn't a member of the club. And he actually was saying,
some uncomfortable things about members of the club, like the Clintons and the Bush family.
I mean, he humiliated two political dynasties while also criticizing things like the interventions
in Libya and Syria. And both to constrain that and constrain his behavior in office and
also to stigmatize his criticisms of the national security state, it was very convenient to
basically attribute his entire presidency to Russia to make it seem as if you're saying the things
he's saying that now all that's Russia propaganda. It was an effort to, it was basically a
disinformation effort aimed at the American public to, you know, stoke fear of Russia and undermine
the inconvenient parts of Trump's presidency for the bipartisan war machine. And that perfectly
dovetailed with Democrats who were just humiliated that they lost to this reality TV show host,
this buffoon, you know, this guy who was not a member of the club. So for just a huge,
array of powerful interest there was just there was a convergence of of uh of of motives here and so
they kept it going exactly as you say just not because they were genuinely investigating anything
because they there was no russia conspiracy that i mean try to find even any russians in russia
gate in terms of actual contacts between trump campaign people and russians there's constantin
Kalimnik, who was working for a long time with Paul Manafort as his business associate
in Ukraine. And their policy actually was pro-Western. They were trying to move
Ukraine away from Russia's orbit. And also Kalimnik himself has deep state department ties.
He was in regular contact with a bunch of U.S. officials, including all the supposed
polling data that was like, you know, there was a certain point in which that was like the
smoking gun proof supposedly of collusion. Kalimick was sending all that polling data to
US colleagues as well just to like talk about the campaign and he was trying to argue that
Trump wasn't heard that angle that he was sending the same stuff to all others and this is the same
guy correct who had been who had worked at the International Republican Institute led by John McCain
correct he spent 10 years at the IRA heading their Moscow office and so according to the Russia gate
narrative now all of a sudden we have to believe that a guy who was working for a congressionally funded
organization, you know, headed by, you know, John McCain,
or chair by John McCain, and then was also in regular contact with the State Department,
was a trusted actually informant for the State Department,
who would actually meet with him about Ukrainian politics.
Oh, man, I wish I had my soundbites queued up where I could play John McCain,
and say, we can vet these guys. We know how to vet these guys.
Or he's talking about Syria, of course, but, you know, if John McCain can vet somebody,
then this Kalyminic guy's not a Russian spy.
well in this case you know we're supposed to believe that this guy was all like a secretly a russian spy
which is so even even though there's zero evidence for it and all the evidence that they put forward
for it as a joke and actually some of the evidence they put forward as false as i reported earlier this
year uh you know they they said you know muller is like big big proof that calumic might be associated
with russian intelligence of course muller didn't even directly allege it he just insinuated he said
that this guy has Russian intelligence ties, which, like, whatever that means, I mean,
ties is the most, like, ambiguous thing you can say.
But his big piece of evidence was that Kalenik traveled to the U.S. on a diplomatic, or on a Russian
diplomatic visa in 1998.
That's, like, one of the big pieces of evidence that Mueller has.
I showed that to be false.
I got Kalinick's actual visa from that exact date, and it was a regular U.S. visa.
And, you know, when I had followed up with the state department to try to get the record of the visa
to see who was, you know, like, what happened here, they told me that that record had been
destroyed. They don't have it anymore. So, so, um, the State Department record of Columbus visa
doesn't exist anymore. And the visa I have, which was Kalimix, says it's a regular passport.
So that's, that's what Mueller had. And, you know, on this polling data thing, there's a footnote
in the Mueller report, which is where so many of the interesting tidbits are. A footnote acknowledges
that Kalimik sent this polling data that caused so much dumb rush.
Gate controversy to all these State Department American contacts.
But of course, that's inconvenient information to the narrative, so it just gets ignored.
But like the point is, Russia Gate barely had any Russians because the whole thing was a scam.
And so they kept it going for way longer, for, you know, just for way longer than it should have.
And first of all, it never should have happened in the first place.
The opening of the investigation was ridiculous.
But they knew early on they had nothing.
And at a certain point, Mueller switched it to obstruction of justice.
because they knew they had nothing on collusion or conspiracy.
So then it became, did Trump obstruct justice?
And, of course, what happened in the end?
They also knew they had no obstruction case.
But, of course, they couldn't say that because that would then make their whole exercise
look even more ridiculous.
So they just declined to issue a call on it.
And they claimed some weird interpretation of the law and the rules that it wouldn't be
fair to Trump to accuse him of obstruction of justice.
because a sitting president can't be indicted.
It was just such a farce.
But it served its purpose.
Trump was hamstrung.
You know, he, to the extent he was serious about pursuing better ties with Russia,
he certainly didn't.
His administration radically increased tensions with Russia, with other policies, as we've
talked about before.
And he was ultimately defeated.
So, you know, it served his purpose.
But again, now we still have to deal with all the stuff that happened and all the dirty
tricks that were pulled to make this thing look, look, look,
genuine. And this Durham indictment is the first sign really of some accountability in that
direction. Yeah. Hey, y'all, check out our great stuff at Libertarian Institute.org
slash books. First of all, we've published no quarter the ravings of William Norman
Grigg, our institute's late and great co-founder. He was the very best one of us, our whole
movement, I mean. And no quarter will leave his mark on you, no question. Which,
brings us to the works of our other co-founder, the legendary libertarian thinker and writer Sheldon
Richmond. We've published two collections of his great essays, Coming to Palestine, and
what social animals owe to each other. Both are instant classics. I'm proud to say that
coming to Palestine is surely the definitive libertarian take on Israel's occupation of the
Palestinians. And social animals certainly ranks with the very best writings on libertarian
ethics, economics, and everything else. You'll absolutely love it. Then there's me. I've written
two books, Fool's Errand, Time to End the War in Afghanistan, and enough already. Time to
end the war on terrorism. And I've also published a collection of the transcripts of all of my
interviews of the heroic Dr. Ron Paul, 29 of them, plus a speech by me about how much I love
the guy. It's called The Great Ron Paul. You can find all of these at Libertarian Institute.
All right. Now, you know, I really wish you would write a book about this.
Is there so much to, you know, in the very origins of this thing, it seems, if I understand it right, based on, you know, especially Taibi's work about the Cambridge Four and all of that stuff, it really does seem to me that this all kind of started with an FBI disenfranchised.
information program in the very first but like the very first people to even utter the word
rush or have anything to do with any of that was uh essentially people who were trying to set up
the trump people i mean trump had said well we want to get along with russia and things like that so
the topic had been raised obviously um but you know it's it's really difficult if you don't
just you know keep a russia gate calendar on your desk uh when you have 10 000 stories coming out
from all different directions like this to keep the timeline really tight on where exactly
all of this story came from in the first place. And it seems like at least a very significant
part of it really came directly out of the Clinton campaign and the lawyers that they hired,
but which parts? And I think this is one of the major things that we're learning about now,
right, is on this Alpha Bank supposed scandal. This is one that they just kind of made up,
it seems like, right?
Yeah, look, first of all the major components of Russia Gate,
you have a Democratic Party tie.
You have a Democratic Party basically, like,
you have someone from the Democratic Party generating the allegations.
So collusion, that comes from Crowds, sorry,
that comes from Fusion GPS in April 2016.
The Clinton campaign hired Fusion GPS to do the Steel,
dossiers, and, you know, which can, which, like a fabricated collection of so-called intelligence
reports alleging this ridiculous Trump-Russia longstanding black male conspiracy relationship.
And, uh, Democratic Party operatives also generated this whole fear monitoring about Russian
social media bots.
Facebook initially reviewed, you know, Russian, uh, memes and accounts on its pages.
And it concluded that it was just basically commercial activity, just normal troll farm activity, like targeting certain demographics to build an audience.
And then the Russian hacking allegation, the allegation that Russia hacked the DNC server and gave emails to WikiLeaks, that came from CrowdStrike, another Democratic Party contractor, also hired in April 2016 the same month that they hired Fusion GPS.
And so this Durham indictment gives us a window into the collusion part because not long after Fusion GPS was hired to do the Steele dossier.
Michael Sussman, who is an attorney at Perkins Cooey, which is the firm that hired Fusion GPS on the Clinton campaign's behalf, Michael Sussman began working with this unnamed tech executive to basically pursue this theory that Trump and Russia
were secretly communicating via a bank server
between a server associated with the Trump organization
and a server used by Alpha Bank,
which is a major bank in Russia.
And what comes out from this Durham indictment
is that the tech executive worked with a team of researchers
to put together data that could make this theory look credible.
But the team doing this themselves expressed doubt.
They said that we said that there's really nothing here and that if people subject this to scrutiny,
they're going to know that this is just, there's nothing to see here.
And even as tech executive acknowledged the whole thing was a red herring, but they still
pursued it.
And Michael Sussman still then went to the FBI in September 2016 and presented it to them
as if this was all credible and said that this team of concerned cybersecurity researchers
had come to him after uncovering this troubling web traffic between Trump and Alpha Bank.
And so he was giving it to the FBI in the hopes that they would investigate it, while also
we're talking to the media in the hopes that the media would report it.
So it's clear that this was part of an effort to both plant this one more Trump-Russia
story in the FBI and also planted in the media before the election.
And that's what happened because shortly before the election.
A Slate, a reporter at Slate called Franklin Foyer, who's now at the Atlantic, put out this big story about this Trump-Russia bank server.
And the New York Times also reported on it, too.
And then as soon as they did, the Clinton campaign came out with a statement saying, look, it looks as if cybersecurity researchers have uncovered a Trump-Russia bank server and the Trump administration has to answer.
You know, this is put out by Hillary Clinton on Twitter and Jake Sullivan, who's now the National Security Advisor, put out a statement too.
but what they were concealing is that they had planted this story.
So this was a scam.
And where it now becomes criminal is that Sussman's been indicted by John Durham for concealing from the FBI that he was really acting on behalf of the Clinton campaign and like billing them for his time, while instead claiming he was just there, you know, just sharing information he had come across and was not doing this for any partisan purpose.
And it also becomes potentially criminal because Alphabet.
Bank alleges, this hasn't been subject to a criminal indictment yet, but Alpha Bank alleges
that some of this purported web traffic between a Trump server and Alpha Bank was spoofed.
It was concocted.
And regardless, I mean, whether it was concocted or not, the theory is so dumb because really
the web traffic, whether it was genuine or not, it wasn't even between a Trump server.
It was between a server that a Trump campaign uses for marketing for like to spend spam
emails about a to tell. So whatever it is, the link was extremely tenuous. Now, it might even
have been fabricated, but regardless, there was nothing there. And for the first time, we're getting
in a indictment, we're getting an act to do with the Trump Russia investigation. We're getting an
actual conspiracy. Not the conspiracy involving Trump and Russia, because none existed, but a conspiracy
to gin up the appearance of a Trump-Russia conspiracy by Clinton campaign affiliated.
actors and what was the date on when they first started shopping this story around uh they were
discussing it amongst themselves in july and august of 2016 and that's when you know steel
was working on his dossier that's when that's when fusion GPS still started reaching out to the
FBI trying to get them to investigate trump russia ties and get them to look into what they were
supposedly uncovering. And that was when the crowd strike accusations came out too.
All this happened at the same time. So basically, in April 2016, is when Perkins Coe hires
the steel, is when Perkins Coe hires fusion GPS to do the steel dossier. That same month later on
is when the DNC supposedly discovers that it's been hacked. And at the very end of April,
the firm CrowdStrike is hired by Perkins Coe, not the DNCRE directly, but also by Perkins Coe, to investigate the supposed hack.
And in June 2016 is when CrowdStrike comes out with the allegation that Russia hacked the DNC.
And so it's just all very coincidental that the same month that Perkins Coley hires Fusion GPS to investigate,
Trump's supposed Russia ties is when Perkins Coity also hires CrowdStrike, who soon after
comes out with the allegation that Russia was behind the hacking of the DNC.
And as we've talked about before, it wasn't until May 2020 after Russia Gate was pretty
much over, after all the investigations were over, that we learned that CrowdStrike privately
did not have any evidence that these alleged Russian hackers actually took anything off.
the server because in December 2017 CrowdStrike Sean Henry went before the House Intelligence Committee and he admitted under oath that CrowdStrike did not have any concrete evidence that any data was stolen off the server any data was actually exfiltrated all they had was circle all they had was in his words circumstantial evidence but that testimony was buried throughout the entirety of Russia gate and we only got it in May 2020 so nearly three years
after Sean Henry admitted it under oath.
Well, now, I'm confused because I know it was April Glaspi Day.
That's how I remember.
It was July 25th, 2016, was when I interviewed the computer security expert Jeffrey Carr,
who debunked all of this stuff then.
But I'm trying to remember why it took me until July 25th.
If the accusations originally came out in June, I don't remember.
It's probably because right around then is when WikiLeaks released the DNC emails.
And so immediately.
Oh, I get that must have been it.
Yeah, and then that was when Carr started talking about it.
But so people can go and find that interview in the archive, and it's, you know, the guy's
a, a level computer security expert, and he says, let me tell you something, no one on earth
can examine a server and tell you exactly who broke into it.
That's not how it works, okay?
Exactly.
And then he said, but there's one organization who can tell you exactly.
exactly what happened here and only one and that's the national security agency because they monitor the entire internet and if it was a russian at the gru going through 15 different uh you know vpns and whatever it was they can rewind the whole internet and go back and look at a part they weren't watching before if they want to they have total control over it they built the thing you know or participated in the building of it from the ground up and have all their back doors into everything and they can tell you
for sure who'd done it. And then, as I know, because this has been a whole other level of your
argument, another major piece of your argument is when you look at the reality winner document
and you look at even the John Brennan intelligence assessment that they put out three days
before Trump's inauguration there, they admit that the National Security Agency only gives this
narrative medium competence. In other words, whatever you guys say, but we're not vouching for it.
uh and so i mean there you have it right there uh yes and so by the way so and guess who hired
crowd strike to investigate the dnc server hillary's lawyer right didn't you just say that that it was
but but guess who specifically it was it was susman yeah it was michael susman so the same guy who
had just been indicted for lying to the to the FBI about who he was working for when he came to
them with this scam narrative about Trump alpha-bank tithe is the same guy who hired crowdstrike
to investigate the DNC server and which shortly afterwards came out with the allegation
that Russia did it and look the allegation that Russia did it had a very useful purpose it
because when the emails came out they were embarrassing to Hillary and the Clinton campaign
the DNC they showed that you know the DNC was basically biased against Bernie Sanders
is that Hillary Clinton was saying one thing in public,
but then another thing to Wall Street behind closed doors.
And so when all this came out by accusing Russia of doing this,
it flipped the narrative from being about the contents of the emails
to about being this like foreign-led, you know, espionage campaign
trying to undermine Hillary and stop her advance to the White House.
So it's just, and this was while secretly the Clinton campaign
was paying for research to gin up fake ties between Trump and Russia.
So there are just so many coincidences here.
So look, it's possible that Russia did it and that it's just a coincidence at the same time
that the crowd strike caught Russia doing it.
The Clinton campaign was the same people.
We're also hiring Christopher Steele to write fake reports tying Trump to Russia.
It's possible.
But, you know, given how much.
fraud there's been to perpetuate the Russia gate scam, given how many so-called bombshells have
consistently fallen apart because they're based on lies. I just, you know, and given how many
times evidence has come out that undermines the official story, I mean, every single time I've
gone through it. Like the Mueller report, when it came out, you read it closely, they show that
they're not actually all that confident in the Russian hacking claims. They start using qualified
language. They say that, you know, Russia appears to have stolen the emails. They don't say
Russia stole the emails. Their timeline doesn't make sense. So, you know, Julian Assange came out
and said that he had Hillary Clinton related emails in early June 2016. And then according
to the Mueller report, it's only after then that Julian Assange first makes contacts with
Guzsippur 2.0, who Mueller suggests gave Assange the email.
So, according to Mother's timeline, Assange would have had to have announced that he has the emails before he made contact with the entity that gave the emails to him.
And, of course, we know that Mother doesn't even know for sure that Gooseper 2.0 gave Assange the emails because he acknowledges that it's possible that Assange got the emails directly through an intermediary in person.
So Mueller has no idea how Assange actually got the emails.
And he actually, and he doesn't know, and as Sean Henry admitted, they actually have no idea if even these alleged hackers, whoever they were, even took anything off the server.
So there's just so many holes in the story.
And now you have the fact that you have a Clinton lawyer who hired CrowdStrike, which generated a hacking allegation, now being indicted for lying to the FBI while he was pushing a scam, jitting up fake Trump-Russia ties.
It's just one more piece of evidence that this whole thing was a scam.
And, you know, hopefully we'll get a report from Durham showing, giving us more detail because there's so much we still don't know.
For example, I've been trying to get the CrowdStrike reports for many years now from the U.S. government because the public has never been able to see the reports that CrowdStrike did.
They did at least three.
Like, what is the basis for their attribution to Russia here?
What is the basis for their claim that Russia hacked the emails?
supposedly they're in these reports
the public has never been able to see them
why can't we see them and I've been trying to get them and didn't
comey say that well you know
the FBI didn't really examine the stuff we just took
crowd strikes word for it and went from there
he basically did say that he said you know
normally we don't like to do this but
my people told me that they're a very
respective cybersecurity company and that
you know they they gave us
a copy of the server so we didn't
need to really go in but yeah
he admitted that normally it's not how we
do things. Yeah. But yeah, so they did basically, well, you know what, we don't know the
folks then of what they relied on, how they relied on crowd strike, because we have not been
able to see any of the underlying evidence. We know that crowd strike was used, but we just don't
know what they found and what the FBI relied and what they didn't, because the evidence has
been kept from us. So why? The question is, why can't we see it for ourselves? So one thing I hope
we get out to the public are these crowd strike reports let's see them let's see what this private
company found yeah hey jason leopold there's some redemption for you buddy mr foya ninja get that stuff
released man um now so i was uh talking on the phone with a friend of mine the other day and we
were joking about how trump is such a dummy that he never once mr twitter never one time said
Hey, look, everybody, even the liberal nation magazine, aka you, says that I'm not guilty, that this Russia stuff is BS. Go read it. He never once said that because he didn't know that because, you know, the nation is a periodical. That was what Anthony said. Well, the nation's a periodical. He doesn't know about stuff like that. That whole time. And, you know, Ray McGovern had said back during the time that all he should do, he's
president of the United States. He should just declassify everything. No, I don't know. This never got any
coverage. And damn Bob Woodward for waiting to put it in his book. He should have put this in the
post immediately. But it's in the first Woodward book on Trump. I think Rage is the title of it.
No, no, no. I forgot. Rage is the second one. Anyway, but he says in there, Trump's lawyer, Dowd,
said to Trump, as soon as he's inaugurated, I guess, he said, or as soon as the special counsel takes over.
that's what it's so in March or so 17 he says listen Trump is there anything to this
Russia stuff at all that I need to know about here and Trump is like hell no this the whole thing is
stupid and his lawyer says okay I'm going to give everything we have all of the campaign documents
every scrap of paper I'm going to turn it all over to the special counsel and Trump goes fine
do it which that right there is like oh man you know if that had been part of the narrative all
along, then that would have been different.
And instead, they just buried that part of it.
No one ever really discussed that part of it, where Trump said give them everything because
they hope that would get them off their back, you know?
But then when that didn't work, he's still the president.
He could have fired every single person.
He could have fired the top 15 people at the Justice Department.
And then at the same time, as Ray McGovern urged him to do, declassify everything,
hand it right over to the Times, the Post, the journal, and Politico, and NPR, and tell them, do your worst.
Give it all to them.
But shut down the investigation.
You only get to be president for four years.
Probably you're a guy like Trump.
You're not going to let them do a special counsel investigation against you for years like this.
But he did because that's what a dummy he is.
when all he had to do was fire caller,
but then order everything released
so that the people can judge for themselves
because he knew all along,
just as you and I knew all along,
that it wasn't true.
So what the hell did he have to lose to do it that way?
But he's just too dumb to have thought it through.
He was too busy yelling at somebody
to think about it, you know?
Well, you know, I don't actually agree with you.
I don't think you're too dumb.
I think a few things here.
First of all, if he had fired Mueller, someone else would have taken over.
I mean, as soon as the special counsel is appointed, that's an investigation.
That's a special counsel investigation, whether Mueller is leading it or not.
So in the same way that firing Comey was, you know, wouldn't, didn't really actually probably
prolonged the Russia investigation, which I think Trump even knew it would.
But I think, look, there's a few things.
One, I mean, you're right.
His lawyers advised him just to cooperate fully because they knew there was nothing there.
And they tried that.
what they didn't maybe anticipate is that the mother team and you know people people like
Andrew Weissman they weren't there to do an actual investigation they were there to basically
try to lend some credibility to this fake Russiagate narrative because in the case of Andrew
Weissman especially and he's a partisan hack I mean now he's a now he's an analyst at MSNBC and
he's repeatedly fueled the collusion innuendo by being dishonest and he brought all these really
stupid prosecutions that were totally baseless, as all of them were, just, you know, getting people
on trivial perjury charges or whatever, going after Manafort for his Ukraine finances, which
had nothing to do with Trump or Russia, but they tried to make it look as if it was.
And so, you know, this investigation would have gone on regardless. And I think the strategy
of full cooperation was actually smart because it made, you know, it gave, you know, it gave
the Mueller team sort of
like no, like they couldn't complain
that Trump wasn't being cooperative because
you know, as you say, they were
like they gave him everything.
They even let Mueller, Trump's
lawyer speak to Mueller and that's actually
who became Mueller's key witness
in an attempt to fuel obstruction stuff,
but of course they didn't even work in the end
because they knew they had nothing there because
as they also had to acknowledge, Trump wasn't guilty
of the underlying crime that was being investigated
which was a Trump, which was
a conspiracy with Russia. But also,
Also, in terms of him being stupid, I just think he was scared.
I think he got intimidated.
And I think the constant impeachments where he needed to keep the support of some Republicans
to keep him in office, I think he just got, far from being stupid, I think he got to sufficiently
intimidated into going along.
And he knew that if he declassified, he would provoke the ire of the national security
state.
And they could hurt him.
You know, as we talked about before, Chuck Schumer said, you know, the, you know, the, you
intelligence community is six ways from Sunday to get back at you. I think that was very much on his
mind. I think he wanted to, you know, at least last one term. Yeah. And maybe he even was concerned
for his safety. It's not unreasonable given, you know, the power of the national security state.
And there's been reporting that's come out since. After, after Trump left, I interviewed Cash
Patel, who was a senior official in the Trump administration, had a bunch of different roles. And, you know,
Before joining the administration, he was a staffer on the House Intelligence Committee.
And it was basically his work that helped unearth, along with his colleagues, that helped unearth the surveillance abuses in the Carter Page investigation, where the FBI was lying, was basically relying on the steel dossier to the spy on Carter Page and concealing the fact that it was paid for by the Clinton campaign from the FISA court.
So it was Cash Patel who found that out.
And then Patel went on to serve in the Trump administration, and he was instrumental in getting out a bunch of material, of declassifying a lot of information.
But there was some stuff that he wanted declassified that other people like Gina Haspel, Mark Esper, other officials fought.
And basically, after a long standoff, Trump sided with the people who didn't want to declassify, even though obviously it would help Trump, his public narrative.
but ultimately he backed down.
And this was at the very end of his administration.
So this was even after, you know, the two, actually, well, actually, no, sorry, after the first impeachment failed.
But this was while the second impeachment was going on.
So I just think he was trying to preserve himself and not piss off too many powerful people.
I think that's, that was the main motive.
And even at the end, when he ordered stuff declassified, it's, you know, there was, it just, it didn't, it didn't, all of it didn't get publicly released.
somehow John Solomon, who's a conservative journalist, got some of it, but a lot of it didn't
get out. And so I don't attribute that to stupidity. I just attribute that to him being scared.
Yeah. Well, you know, on this and a lot of other things, he never could close the deal.
You know, never could just, you know, it seems to me, like my example of him never once tweeting
out your articles in the nation goes to show that he didn't even have a guy on his staff
who was in charge of telling him
like what's the latest on the
Russiagate hoax. You know what I mean?
Like he wasn't even up to date on what the hell
was going on with the thing, you know?
Well, I agree with that. I agree that his
administration, look, there were, it was
look, he was hated by the Republican establishment.
So the people willing to work for him,
it was a pretty small pool
and they weren't very experienced. I mean, you talk
to people who run his 2016 campaign
and basically that was just Trump
freestyling. It was mostly just Trump.
Everything was just off, you know,
And so it wasn't a very smooth operation.
And in terms of tweeting out my articles, the problem from their point of view is I also, I also every time, I think every time would make a partisan argument too that I thought all this Russiagate stuff was actually a big gift to Trump because it was turning his resistance into a bunch of conspiracy crazed, deranged, you know, fanatics.
True.
But look, I mean, hey, if I'd been on his staff, I'd have been saying, boss, you got to tweet this.
that even the nation admits it's all a hoax
and type it in all capital letters
and then tweet that out six times.
Do you crazy?
I don't care what else,
Matte, what other point he makes in there
about universal health care,
whatever it is, you know?
Because that's the whole point, right?
Here's a guy who's not a Trump guy
who is also not going to sit here
and carry water for the FBI
and the CIA and the Clinton campaign
when they're lying about the elected president.
And this is the thing
that people should have got right away
is that no matter what you think of Trump, he won an election.
The FBI and the CIA, they're not even described in the Constitution anywhere.
They are to be subordinate to him, full stop, period.
You don't, this is like a co-intel pro op that you would launch against,
that they would launch against the Black Panthers in Oakland,
and they did the President of the United States.
That's absolutely intolerable.
No matter who the president is, and if they'd done this,
same thing to Hillary Clinton, I'd have took her side, which is really saying something,
because I'm a really anti-Hillary guy.
I totally agree.
And it's a point that, unfortunately, a lot of people couldn't process because they were so
consumed by fear of Trump and the shock of him winning.
And so the Russia Gators took advantage of that, took advantage of people's fear of Trump,
and they used it to normalize a really cynical playbook where your webbing.
weaponizing the national security state to undermine the elected president, whatever you think of him, you know.
And, you know, it sets a very dangerous precedent. And look, look, look, it, look what happened to progressives.
And this is exactly what people like me and Max Blumenthal were warning about during the 2020 primary when Bernie Sanders was, you know, doing well early on.
He was, you know, it was very early on. And so on the eve of the Nevada caucuses, what happened? We got this leak saying that Vladimir
Putin wants to install Bernie Sanders and that predictably, you know, helped, you know, stir
this frenzy about, you know, Putin and Bernie and, uh, it probably hurt Bernie. And so that was
because and the reason it was successful is because progressives and liberals had helped normalize
this Russia gate playbook where we're just going to, we're just going to reflectively believe
whatever the national security state tells us, especially if it's about Russia. And we're
naturally going to see Russia as this buggy man, this monster under the bed.
that can, like, you know, install a president in the White House,
and we have to fear whatever we're told is Russia's agenda.
It's like, it's really, it's classic McCarthyism, but it's worked.
It's been successful.
Look here, you and I both know that what you need is some Libertarian Institute things,
like shirts and sweatshirts and mugs and stickers to put on the back of your truck,
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So here's what you do.
Go to Libertasbella.com
and look at all the great Libertarian Institute stuff they've got going there.
Find the ad in the right-hand margin at Libertarian Institute.org.
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You guys check it out.
This is so cool.
The great Mike Swanson's new book is finally out.
He's been working on this thing for years.
And I admit, I haven't read it yet.
I'm going to get to it as soon as I can.
But I know you guys are going to want to beat me to it.
It's called Why the Vietnam War?
Nuclear bombs and nation building in Southeast Asia, 1945 through 61.
And as he explains on the back here, all of our popular culture and our retellings and our history and our movies are all about the height of the American war there in, say, 1964 through 1974.
But how do we get there?
Why is this all Harry Truman's fault?
find out in why the Vietnam War by the great Mike Swanson available now.
Well, and of course, he wasn't man enough to debunk it all along, which he should have.
He should have said, everybody, you know me.
I'm so left.
I'm independent of the Democrats in the Senate.
And I'm no Trump guy, but I'm telling you, I'm not impressed by the CIA and the FBI's case here so far.
He should have been saying that and citing you all along anyway.
and not because the truth is the truth and that's important and then that would have helped him
because then when they came out and said that against him he could have said oh yeah right we all saw
this coming from a million miles away just like you did and because i remember in real time that
you guys were predicting this and when it happened you said see we told you this was what was going
to happen especially that was bloominthal's narrative right at the time but that could have been
Sanders narrative but he didn't do it you know he said he went a lot it's so sad because what
these emails show. These emails showed
that
Bernie's rival, the Clinton campaign,
were biased against him.
And not only
did these emails show that, then shortly
after that, Clinton lost.
So you have both a record of
electoral failure where they lost to this
reality TV show host.
And you had these revelations
that they were trying to undermine Bernie.
So you had a perfect opportunity for Bernie
to take the reins of the party
and say, you know, these people,
they lost to Trump and they tried to sabotage, you know, our movement through rigging and bias.
Instead, what did he do?
He propped up the narrative that was used by the Clinton wing to distract everybody from what these emails actually showed and from the lesson of their loss, which is that their legacy was a failure.
He propped up the Russia Gate narrative instead.
So basically, he helped prop up the thing Clinton campaign was doing.
to avoid talking about the embarrassing emails
and talking about their embarrassing loss to Trump.
It's so, it's pathetic, really.
And at the time, I thought maybe, you know, Bernie was making it,
he was like a, it was a strategic calculation
because if he goes, if he goes anti-Russiagate,
then they're going to just accuse him of being a Putin puppet too
and he doesn't want that to undermine his chances.
But really, if he had done what, you know,
as you said, as you said he could have done,
he would have really taken a huge safety blanket away from the Clinton campaign.
He could have, and he could have really charted a different course where instead of trying to undermine Trump with this dumb Russia conspiracy thing, you actually try to undermine Trump by putting forth a different political agenda.
And you're not normalizing this playbook of using the national security state, which naturally made a lot of Trump supporters defensive and support Trump, you know,
know, and being, like, naturally protective of him, and, like, which thus kind of close people off
from hearing any kind of dissenting point of view. So it was a perfect storm that totally
benefited only one party, which is the Clinton campaign. And it's just so sad that Bernie went
along with that. Yeah. You know, part of what you're talking about, too, and, you know,
in the background of this whole discussion, now that we're a few years out, looking back on this,
as you know this now relatively short period of time
that we're no longer in the middle of you know this whole russia gate scandal
it goes it's just unavoidable how completely
silly and ridiculous this thing is and i remember i got this wrong
but i was telling my audience in the summer of 16 that this russia thing can't last
because i mean look at who you're talking about you're talking about donald trump he's a mega
star they call him right like bigger than
than a superstar. He's as famous as all the famous people ever combined at the same time. He's
a real estate tycoon from Manhattan, and he happens to be probably the most transparent
individual person as far as just looking at him and knowing what he's thinking and what he's
about in every kind of way that you could imagine. I mean, this is a guy. I first saw him on Robin Leach
Lifestyles of Rich and Famous in like 1983 or something. He's been in 10,000 cameos. He's been in 10,000
cameos, right? Like, he's the most, uh, anyway, the idea that somehow he's a commie agent from
the Kremlin or whatever, like, and I know that they're not the commies anymore, but ultimately it's
the same algebra-type scenario as what they're trying to push here, and it's still the Kremlin and all
of that. And it just seemed to me at the time in the summer that this is so ridiculous, and it didn't
stop him from winning, right? He won the election anyway, and then, but boy, was I proven wrong that
it was going to somehow peter out. And I guess they had to double and triple down just because of what
trouble they'd be in since he won anyway. And they had done all of this to try to set him up in the
summer. So now they had to, that was one of the main reasons. I guess they had to continue this
whole thing. But just, anyway, back to the question, just how crazy it is now. And look at this
story where, like, you know, if it was Schwarzenegger, if he'd been born in America,
Schwarzenegger ran. And they go, oh, yeah, no, he's a secret agent of the Russians or the Chinese
or whoever. You would say, no, he's not. He's the guy from the movies. We all know him.
You know what I mean? You don't need to know every business deal to know that Schwarzenegger is not
compromised by some foreign power. Same thing with Trump. The whole thing is just crazy.
And to think that they got away with perpetuating this thing for three years straight. And even to
this day, I see you fighting with ridiculous Marcy Wheeler on Twitter still insisting on this
garbage. It's just incredible.
well it's funny i mean you look at media throughout the russia gate thing and people like marcy were on
msnbc regularly even on progress about what's like democracy now my old home whereas my point
of view which was just simply all i was doing was looking at the available evidence like we'd get
these indictments so often and we get court filing so there was a lot of available evidence and
all of it consistently showed that there was nothing to support any of this
conspiracy stuff. But the dominant media narrative was that there really was something there.
Mueller was closing in. So media across the board just featured all these conspiracy theorists
like Marcy Wheeler, people who were ignoring and distorting what was actually in the available
facts to spin it into this grand conspiracy tale. And voices like mine, which were, you know,
just pointing out that there was nothing there. It was like, it's like, you know, I got to be in the
Nation magazine to debunk this stuff, but that's kind of the closest this really got to the
mainstream. And it's just so, it's so ridiculous to look back on because as you say, it was so
stupid, this idea that the president is a Russian puppet blackmail victim, how that was like
the dominant belief of like grown up adults who are all educated and work at these well-established
media outlets. But that's what it was. That's what was in style. And it should,
it speaks to how you can't just understand
politics
you know based on you know
like the merits of arguments but there's a lot of
social psychology involved and just this was
the club to be in and this was the way to be
so that's how so many people acted and look even now
this Michael Sussman story
so after wall to wall coverage of every single
Russian gate development for you know more than two years
every court filing every court hearing
you know every possible bombshell
would dominate the news cycle.
Now this Michael Sussman indictment
where the first time we have an actual evidence
of a conspiracy, it just goes
in the other direction, showing that the conspiracy
was the one that concocted
the fake Trump-Russia conspiracy theory.
Look how it's getting covered now.
The MSNBC
has barely touched it.
If you look at like Rachel Maddow
who was due rushing it every single night,
she covered the story
by covering it the night
before the indictment came out.
So she was doing it based off of a New York Times story, which was based on leaks from the Sussman camp.
So Rachel Maddow spun it the way the assessment camp wanted the story to look, thereby avoiding all the damning information that came out in the indictment the next day.
And you look at places like democracy now and whatever.
You can go to every liberal progressive outlet.
They're ignoring it.
Even though we have evidence for the first, you know, like in a court indictment of a conspiracy involving the,
the Clinton campaign to manufacture what was once the biggest story in the country for more than
two years. It's just our media has become incredibly partisan and dishonest across a wider
spectrum in ways that I haven't seen before. Yeah. And look, I mean, the blowback from this
is already legendary. And this has been going on for 30 years, but this is, you know, Russia Gate is
not an insignificant part of the overall massive failure of America's centrist liberal establishment
here, along with their wars and along with the rest of this. They wonder why, you know,
the, for example, the arguments about the germ have become all so partisan. Well, geez,
you're the same guys who lie about everything. So, I guess we're supposed to take your word for
this on on this you know uh most important issue you know and people just don't and and it didn't like
um they're wrong to not right when when so much of the official pronouncements even about the germ
not to get into specifics but just you know uh so much of that is wrong even by their own
standards when they later correct it and that kind of thing that there's not a lot to believe in there
and especially in the aftermath of things like this things like pretending saddam hussein was
making a nuke to attack your hometown with, you know, in order to get into, you know,
these, you know, further decades of war and things like this. And, and just the level of
dishonesty, they just think that, you know, it's all about messaging. You got a message to the
people right. You know, like you're saying, social psychology. But there's blowback when people
feel like they're being manipulated, you know, but they don't take that into account. You know,
where's that go in your little algorithm about how to correctly message what we're supposed to
think and feel like and now it's like really undermining their authority over everyone which is
you know the good part i'm sorry i'm just renting let me ask you a good question what do you
think might be the future of durham's investigation here more indictments are they going to
make this guy squeal on somebody else and really build a thing here this is just one last
little kind of deal?
He's not going to squeal. There's no way.
Because he's, you know, he's able to do a job, which is, you know, pursue the Clinton campaign
agenda. And to get, you know, I don't think there's a just like a single count indictment
on a false statement charge is not enough to get someone like him to squeal. So I don't
expect that. I think you'll probably see, well, you know what, look, it's, it's not good to
predict. But if I had to, I would guess that you'll probably see maybe some more charges on this
Alpha Bank thing, possibly more charges on giving false information to the FBI. Maybe if they can
prove that someone actually faked traffic between this Trump marketing server and Alpha Bank,
maybe you'll get them for that kind of computer fraud thing. But I think it's a hard thing to
bring criminal charges over because, I mean, either you get them on purge,
But otherwise, to me, it's all just intelligence and misconduct.
And that can be accountability for that has to come in a public report.
And that's what I'm really hoping comes out of this Durham thing, which we get an actual,
an actual honest public report with no redactions because so many of the reports so far have
been redacted.
I think the redacted parts will tell us from like the Mueller report and also from the
Senate intelligence report just will probably show more evidence that this thing was a scam.
I think that's why they're redacted personally.
But regardless, I hope that Durham gives us a report and that we're allowed to see it
and that we're allowed to especially see information on what led U.S. intelligence officials
to conclude that Russia hacked the Democratic Party emails, gave them to WikiLeaks as part
of this sweeping interference campaign to install Trump.
What is the actual intelligence for that?
Because I think there's every indication that there's nothing.
nothing there and that some of that was just basically embellished or fabricated. And I want
to see it. And the public has a right to see it given how much this narrative dominated our
politics for so long. So I hope that's the product of the Durham investigation is a really
comprehensive final report. And on the plus side, this indictment, look, it's one count on false
statements. It could have just been one page, but it's 27 pages. And the narrative of the 27 pages
is that the Trump-Russia collusion thing was the product of a scam.
So hopefully that's a good sign that we'll get more reports
and information like that from Durham in the coming future.
And by the way, everybody, the entire 27-page charging document
is linked in Aaron's piece there at the gray zone
and at Mateh, that's spelled like mate,
mate.mate.substack.com
with Clinton lawyer charged, the Russiagate scam is now indicted.
thank you very much sir for your time thank you scott
really appreciate the scott horton show anti-war radio can be heard on kpfk 90.7 fm in
l a psradyo dot com antiwar dot com scott horton dot org and libertarian institute dot org