The Bulwark Podcast - S2 Ep1023: Ben Wittes: Sorry, We Still Have Due Process
Episode Date: April 17, 2025The White House is doubling down on justifying its extra-judicial actions around Abrego Garcia by trying to incriminate him in the court of public opinion. But the government still can't take people o...ff an American street and send them to a concentration camp without due process. Plus, Judge Boasberg is not letting Stephen Miller off the hook for defying his order to turn the Salvadoran-bound planes around. And while the administration tries to stir up outrage about one immigrant's marital problems, they admiringly describe the evil, blood-thirsty Vladimir Putin as a good guy. Ben Wittes joins Tim Miller. show notes CNBC on Chris Krebs leaving his company after being targeted by Trump Boasberg's probable cause finding to hold the goverment in criminal contempt Tim's 2019 Bulwark piece that he referenced Support Lawfare
Transcript
Discussion (0)
Hello and welcome to the Bullhorn Podcast. I'm your host, Tim Miller. Delighted to be
back with my pal, editor in chief of law fair, senior fellow in governance studies at the
Brookings Institution. He also writes Doe's Shirt Daily on Substack. It's been with us.
Ouch.
Now, is that not right? No, that hurts.
First of all, Dog Shirt Daily predates Doge.
That's like something I would expect Dan Bongino to say to me.
Who I saw on the Amtrak the other day, he was sleeping.
Mouth open or closed?
It was closed.
It wasn't a bad sleep, you know, but it was he is the deputy FBI director
sleeping during business hours. And if Dan Bongino on his podcast called it Doe's Shirt
Daily, I would think okay, but for Tim Miller to do that, that's like...
Well, he used to be a competitor with me in the Apple pod ratings, you know, now that
he's been promoted, I guess, to Deputy FBI Director.
You have something to aspire to.
Yeah, it was nice for me. I moved up one slot and, you know, in the Westmore administration,
who knows that I could be deputy of.
Do you feel qualified based on hosting the Bulwark podcast to be Deputy FBI Director?
Boy, you know, and it does prepare you for a lot.
You got to have a wide remit.
You know, you got to think about that.
You got to be up relatively early in the morning.
Right.
So I also take naps midday.
I guess I'd say this.
I think I could do a better job than Dan Bonjino.
I don't know if I should be at the top of
the recruitment list for the future,
but I don't want to close any doors to the top of the recruitment list for the future, but I
don't want to close any doors to myself then.
You never know these days.
I, you know, for those who don't know, I also host a podcast, the Lawfare Podcast, and my
Gorilla One dog shirt TV.
And I feel very qualified to be deputy FBI director against the Bungino standard.
I have some experience that he doesn't have.
For example, I've run lawfare, which is at least an organization devoted to national
security issues, whereas he really had never run anything. So I feel like, you know, this gives hope to all of us who
were wildly under qualified to be FBI Deputy Director.
I'm going to float you for the short list on, you know, in our dystopian AI Politico
newsletter in 2036, if we ever get our democracy back. Ben, you, for Lawfare, which you mentioned,
a venerable publication that I'm reading more often than
I'd like lately, you wrote, I guess, two days ago now about Judge Boesberg and the other
Alien Enemies Act case that has kind of gotten pushed out of the news because of Abrego Garcia.
And so I want to start there.
And I guess we'll just leave it at the biggest picture. Can you give us the kind of state of play on what we know about the case with regards to the Venezuelans who were
also sent to Sukkot?
Yeah. So what we know is that Judge Boesberg, you know, tried to prevent this from happening by issuing an order that basic, while planes
were in the air saying they need to turn around, the government did not follow that order.
The planes landed in El Salvador and the contents of the planes, which is to say 260 plus human beings, were transferred to the
custody of the Salvadoran government and have been, one of whom was Mr. Abrego Garcia, by
the way. But the others who have not had kind of individual attention on them, and some
individuals have, but most of them on these three planes,
two planes of which were covered by this order, have kind of become this mass of people who are
alleged to be Trinidad and Aragua members. Judge Boesberg has been in the position ever since of trying to figure out what happened,
who violated the order, did somebody violate the order. The Supreme Court now 10 days ago vacated
the order on the theory that these cases should have been brought as habeas petitions in the locations
in which the people were being held. But yesterday, Judge Boesberg issued a 46-page opinion that
basically held three things. The first is while my order was later vacated, it was valid at the time and the
government was obliged to follow it. Number two, that the government didn't follow it
and there is probable cause to believe that somebody in the government intentionally and
willfully violated that court order. And number three, that the government therefore has a choice, which is it can either act to
remediate in the language of contempt law, purge the contempt, which probably means bringing
these people back, or in the alternative, it can identify the person who
made this decision so that I, Judge Boesberg, can hold him or her. And by the way, we all
kind of know that the person in question is Stephen Miller, but we don't know that in
a way that a court can find, right? And so finger the person.
So to speak, so that they can be individually
held in contempt. And as of I can't remember if it was late last night or this morning,
time all blends together. The government has announced that it is appealing this ruling.
Got it. Okay. So this ruling then will go back to SCOTUS and then simultaneously there is like
a group effort where like I guess the ACLU and others are suing on behalf of these Venezuelans
like in the Texas Circuit and New York, I guess.
What's happening with that?
So there are various efforts to sue on behalf of people who are still here. But this is really the
mainline effort to see if you can force the government to bring them back. And well, it
doesn't go directly to the Supreme Court. It goes to the DC Circuit first. And there's
a question about whether they will hear it because normally an action like this is not final enough to appeal. There's been a lot of give in what counts as an appealable
order recently. I wouldn't be surprised if the Supreme Court thought about it in a kind
of shadow docket sort of way. Right now, Judge Boesberg is moving along and has given the government,
I think until, I can't remember what his deadline was for them to respond to the order, maybe
the 25th or the 28th or something.
Pete You know, the thing about this case, which is why it's important and why I wanted
to lead with it is that you can already see in the public discourse of the Abrego Garcia
case, making all of this about one individual person on the one hand has some benefits.
It can be a lightning rod for people to engage on this.
There's focus on one person in the media.
I guess using George Floyd and Black Lives Matter as an example for something like that. On the other hand, the debate over what the government did can get bogged down in the
details of that case.
I'll get a little bit more into the paragraph you're going to see in a second.
Taking it out to the 30,000 foot level, arguing on the grounds that actually no, the government
just doesn't have the right to
take people off the street without due process,
send them to a foreign concentration camp, leave people there indefinitely, and then just say trust us. The people that are there are all
evil gang members. That's just not how the American system works.
I think that that
argument you're already seeing in the polls, is compelling if you can get it in front of people. Right. If instead what gets
in front of people is the details of like each individual and whether or not they find them
personally sympathetic, you know, there are going to be some potential pitfalls with that. Yeah. So let's talk about these two cases and why they're individually important. First of all,
but for Kilmar Abrego-Garcia, the number of people who would give a shit about these three
airplanes that went to El Salvador would be dramatically lower. You would still care.
I would still care. You know, JV you would still care sure I would still care You know JVL would still care and suffering through my rants on Instagram would care
But you know, but maybe because they want you to calm down and shut up
We get it Tim I have listened to all of them and said you go
But I acknowledge that I'm the minority on that. You know, the number
would be the bulwark crowd, right? Would be the people who are reluctantly reading lawfare
again crowd. Those are the people who will care without a name.
The liberties lefties.
The name of Abrego Garcia and the specific facts of his situation matter a great deal in terms of
putting this in front of people.
And when you have an individual, Stalin, I don't know if he really said the death of
one man is a tragedy, the death of a million men is a statistic, but it's famously attributed
to him. And once you take it from the 280 people
and you bring it down to the level of one person,
you humanize it.
And that's the role that the Abrego Garcia case
has taken here.
Also the fact that the government, in court at least,
acknowledges that it was an accident
and that it was a screw up, which
the other cases it's very, very proud of, right?
So if you read Judge Boasberg's opinion yesterday, and I urge people to do it because it is a
model of the craft of holding the administration accountable for these barbarities, this is
how it's done.
And one thing it isn't is personal.
He refers to himself constantly as the court,
as though he's some disembodied entity.
There is no Kilmar Abrego Garcia, right?
None of the detainees have names, right?
It's super, super impersonal, but it is a methodical catalog of the events that convince
him that the government didn't just not follow his order, but willfully defied his order
and conspired to defy his order. That is great for the law nerds like me. You want a record
like that. It's really good for the DC Circuit and the Supreme Court because if Sam Alito
has a nit to pick, he's going to pick that nit. You want to close every door and dot every I and cross every T and make sure your
record is pristine.
And that's what Judge Boesberg did.
But if the goal is to appeal to the public, this is dry as dust.
And for that purpose, you need a name.
You need somebody who's married to a US citizen and has a five-year-old
autistic child and, you know, has been working, never been charged with a crime in either
this country or in El Salvador, right? You want to humanize it. And that's why the Abrego
Garcia case is so important.
I mean, I agree that in this case that the Gregor Garcia cases is also just so cut and
dry, right?
That's like the government admitted they made a mistake.
And you know, so he can be the lightning rod.
You know, now we see what the downfalls of that are.
There's now this domestic, you know, violence filing, you know, from five years ago, you
know, his wife made some court accusations about abuse,
the MAGA folks are talking about that.
Yeah. Although I would like to say that that's a little bit of an over-broad argument because
if you could summarily deport all people who had a domestic violence, half of the MAGA folks
themselves would be on the next plane.
I mean, the President of the United States is an adjudicated sexual assault, you know, committer.
Right.
So we could present him to CICOT, which, you know, people
might have mixed views on.
The yesterday, like the full filing, you know, related to,
you know, when a burglar was initially detained, you know,
he is in the group outside now having a brain fart, whether it was like a Home Depot
or a Walmart or something, that he's in a group outside a big box store.
A couple of the other people there, it seems like, were MS-13.
He had some wads of bills on him.
Again, all this stuff, none of this stuff justifies sending a person to a hole in a
foreign country without due process obviously like that said
You know getting bogged down to the details of the case. I had a mega friend text me the other day
They were like I was with you more when you were talking about the gay makeup artist because I was thinking man
We might have screwed that one up like this guy seems like a gangbanger to me, right the media side of this
How do you get attention on stuff and then this political matter?
I think that there's importance to kind of just talk about the broad side of this, how do you get attention on stuff? And then as political matter, I think that there's importance to kind of just talk about the broad principle of this.
Yeah. So that's why both cases are important. One case brings it home, and the other case
is about the policy. It's about the decision to defy a court order and do all this stuff
anyway. I will say about Abrego Garcia, it is, I think,
important not to assert that he's innocent of anything. I don't know who he is. That's
why we have process. And if the government wants to bring him back and initiate another
deportation proceeding against him on the basis that they have evidence that he's MS-13?
Fine, I'm not going to assert that they could have no possible basis for believing that.
I will say that that is not what happened here. What happened here is that they rounded him up
because he was standing in a parking lot with some other people and they Deported him summarily with no process notwithstanding a withholding of deportation order
That said he could not be deported to El Salvador. And so until you fix that problem
Don't bring me
casual allegations that he can't possibly respond to. It's not like you have credibility,
not you Tim Miller, but you the government. It's not like you have credibility to be making
casual allegations about this guy.
Right. That's true. Yeah. And to your point, like, you know, in the first term, like Trump's,
what was Rob Porter's job? Trump's staff secretary was accused of multiple domestic violence situations.
So again, this is like these sort of casual accusations are not how in America we determine
whether someone gets sent to a prison camp.
Speaking of the contrary views on this, I wanted to get your take.
As a lawfare expert, I was producing the free press, Barry Weiss's outfit last
night because I couldn't go to sleep. I don't know why I thought that was going to help
me with that, but that's, I guess, another question.
And there's an article by Jed Rubenfeld headlined, no, the president has not defied a Supreme
Court ruling. What do you think about that?
So I have not read the article. What do you think about that? So I have not read the article.
What do you think about the headline?
The argument depends on splitting hairs. So let's split the hairs and determine how we
feel about it. The Supreme Court said two things. One is that you cannot deport people
under the Alien Enemies Act without reasonable notice
to them and an opportunity for them to challenge their designations in habeas proceedings.
They haven't done it since the Supreme Court said it, but they did do something times
268 that the Supreme Court has subsequently said
was illegal. Number two, the Supreme Court also unanimously said about Mr. Abrego Garcia
in particular, that it is lawful and appropriate for the district court in that case, this is Judge Sinez, to order that the administration facilitate
his return, but not appropriate to interpret the word effectuate his return too aggressively.
And so far, the administration has done exactly nothing to facilitate his return. So, you know, is that violating a court order or is
that merely litigating about what the contours of the Supreme Court's ruling means? I don't
think it constitutes-
This is where lawyers kind of annoy me. Can't we just call John Roberts and be like, bro,
what do you mean?
Well, that's exactly what's happening, right? Because Paula Sinis entered an order saying, here's how I interpret the word
facilitate and the Trump administration is appealing that order.
And that's exactly the phone call that you're describing, translated
into the language of appellate law.
Can you like-
How long is that going to take?
That feels like kind of a, you know, I could just reply to the Supreme Court with like
facilitate means facilitate.
Well, yeah, so that's actually pretty literally what her order says, actually.
And look, appellate law always takes longer than you want it to, particularly when you're
sitting in a gulag in El Salvador, or when you're concerned about
somebody who is. But one thing the Supreme Court has not been in these cases is slow.
So I look, I think it is reasonable to say they have not complied with what the Supreme
Court said. Would I say they've defied it? Yeah, I would, honestly. But I can see how you might split that particular hair and say,
if I were Jed Rubenfeld, I might say, okay, they haven't defied it. What they've done
is interpreted it aggressively.
Yeah. If I were Jed Rubenfeld, if I was, you know, writing for the free press, and I care
about individual rights and the rights of free speech, and that's the animating
element of my website. I might think the thing that outrages me in this case is not that the
government unilaterally swooped up someone fleeing communism off of the street because
of their tattoos and sent them to a fucking hole outside of El Salvador, what I would be upset
about is that there are some liberals out there that are overstating the case a little bit on the
constitutional crisis. And that, to me, is the real threat that faces the country. I could see
that if I was on their side. Let me say this as somebody who does not use the word defy in my own writings and does not ever use the term constitutional
crisis. And so, I literally cannot be accused of this.
Great.
I agree with Tim that to be hung up on the excess of the way liberals talk about this,
it's not the way I talk about it, though I am a liberal.
It is not precise to be hung up on the precision at this point, rather than to be hung up on what is
a genuine, whether you call it a constitutional crisis or whether you call it what I would call it, which is a grave confrontation
between the executive branch and the courts.
The problem here is that the executive branch did a set of things, some of them involving
the life and liberty of many individuals that are in very dubious relation to the law and claim that nobody can force
them to undo them. And if you're not confronting that reality, you have a moral instinct for
the capillaries. Let's just put it that way.
Yeah. How about if we're going to just pick just pick words about an assault on the natural rights of the individuals who fled Venezuela?
You know, maybe a Lockean appeal to our friends over there at the free press. I don't know something to think about
Yeah, I look I you know, my enthusiasm for the free press is altogether under control
Look the premise our enthusiasm for the free press not capitalized. Very high, very high.
Right. But look, let me put it this way.
The bulwark and the free press, you know, were founded within a reasonable space of time of one another on opposite premises.
The bulwark's premise was there is a crisis in American democracy, and the Trumpist movement
is that crisis.
And so reasonable center left and reasonable center right people, it started in the center
right of course, need to come together and confront that crisis.
Is that a fair summary?
Great premise. Yeah, that sounds great. Yeah, I'm excited about that.
The premise of the free press as I understand it is that there is a crisis in
liberals responding to previous crisis and we need to all come together
center-right and center-left and pick nits from the liberal critique of that
crisis.
And I have to say that I don't find that a compelling premise.
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stuff. We've gone longer than I tended on the El Salvadorans, but you can tell I get my hackles
up. But just really quick, two other items from yesterday, I just feel like we should mention.
Chris Van Hollen went to El Salvador, said he met with the vice president. It's interesting they
have a vice president in El Salvador. he's the world's coolest vice dictator.
Right, he's the second coolest.
The second coolest. Van Hollen Center for Maryland said that the vice president said,
so we're, you know, we're relying a little bit on hearsay here, that they don't have evidence
that Gabriel Garcia is MS-13. And he also said that the vice president said that America is paying them to keep
These folks these seem like pretty relevant matters for the American court. So you're taking that really quick
Also the highest legal officer in our government Pam Bondi the attorney general
countered that she was on Fox as she usually is saying that he is quote, one of the top MS-13 members.
So it's the first accusation we've heard about that. So anyway, I don't know whether you would
think any of this has any legal ramifications or this is all in the political sphere.
Well, so there are two legal ramifications. The first is regarding a representation by a
senior officer of that government to a US senator about the
state of the evidence. Now, that is not going to be admissible as such, but it's atmospherically
very interesting. And it will be interesting at some point whether El Salvador makes any
representation to the court as to what information it has about
this individual.
The more important element is the element about the money, because one question is whether
Abrego Garcia and the others are still, in the language of the courts in constructive US custody. That is, if we
put you in a US prison, there are steps that the United States can be ordered to take to
release you. But if we put you in a tin box in El Salvador, in a black site or whatever, and it is entirely under their control, there
is an actual respectable argument that it may not be remedyable by a US court.
But if we pay somebody to run that black hole that you're being held in, then there is a
subsidiary question as to whether that entity is just an agent of us. That becomes much more
potentially addressable. I think the allegation about payment is going to be something that both
Judge Boesberg is going to care about a great deal with respect to the question of whether
of whether there are remediable steps that he can take
with respect to the 260 people. But it's very important with respect to,
in Abrego Garcia's case, particularly.
All right, let's move on to what's happening in Ukraine.
I played this audio the other day,
but I think it's worth playing again of Steve Witkoff,
our chief envoy, I guess, to this negotiation, if you want to call it that, between our friends
in Russia and our counterparties in Ukraine.
Before we get to that, just one other item to set the table.
Our friend Michael Weiss reported that his sources say that there were Pentagon figures
close to Trump that recently questioned one of our allies about why they were still supplying
weapons to Ukraine.
That challenge was ignored by the ally.
And he says also the diplomats in Washington reports that some Trump aides say privately
that they are fed up with Europe's effort to strengthen Ukraine.
So that's what our European allies are hearing in private.
Here's what Steve Wichoff is saying in public.
And there's a little audio hiccup on this, but it's Tucker's fault, not ours.
Don't blame Jason.
Always blame Tucker.
What did you think of him?
I liked him.
Yeah.
I thought he was straight up with me.
Of course, by the way, I've said that. And you can imagine, by the way, I say that I get pill. Yep. I thought he was straight up with me. Of course, by the way, I've said that and you know
You can imagine by the way, I say that I get pilloried. Oh my gosh, you mean you you're actually called
communication
Which many people would would say
You know, I shouldn't have had because Putin is a bad guy
I don't regard Putin as a bad guy. That is a complicated situation that war and all the ingredients that led up to it.
It's, you know, it's never just one person.
Right.
So we're going to, I think we're going to figure it out.
Complicated situation.
A lot of ins outs and what have yous.
Ben, maybe you can bring a little clarity to it, to Steve Witkoff.
You know, I've never met Steve Witkoff.
You weren't a deal man.
You weren't a deal man?
You weren't a New York real estate deal man?
I was not a New York real estate man.
And look, I mean, Steve Witkoff managed to get a ceasefire in Gaza, albeit it didn't
last that long.
So I don't want to be entirely dismissive of him.
That said...
I'll play that role on the pod.
Okay. So you know, it's important
that everybody has their own job. I'm trying to be, you know, bend over backwards to be
fair here. Okay. This is a morally outrageous statement. And let's focus on three components
of it. The first is, I liked him. I like about Vladimir Putin. Now, there are many things you could say about Vladimir Putin, who I'm sure is capable of
being personally affable.
That's part of being a politician and …
A male manipulator.
…a manipulator. To say about somebody who is responsible for the deaths of, at this point,
millions of people that you liked him, again, just elevates the salience of personal affect
over aggregate effect on the world. is a deeply deeply evil.
You know this is somebody who has had a terrible terrible impact on his own country on a lot of the surrounding countries on the united states and the question was what did you think of him.
It was not.
not, you know, how was his manner? Was he polite, right? Was he good company? And it really deeply misses the moral point.
Can I just pause you right there for you to the other two? Because I've been dying to
get this off my chest lately because there have been a lot of examples of this very flaw
recently. There's a pretty, you know, widely familiar pop culture totem,
particularly for us elder millennials. There's a show called The Sopranos on HBO. It's not
really that complicated of a moral question, but yet people really seem to struggle with
it, which is Tony Soprano is an actor, is just a character, but Tony Soprano was a charming
character. You might want to go to the Bada Bing and have a whiskey with him and hang out.
He'd tell some funny jokes.
He would make you laugh.
At times, he seemed like a good dad.
At times, a bad dad.
He likes ducks.
He loves animals.
Yeah, he seems to be a lover of animals.
He also is a fucking bad person who caused the deaths of a lot of people and got himself
rich on the back of a lot of people and got himself rich on
the back of other people who worked hard.
This is not complicated.
This is happening a lot when people talk about Trump administration people.
JD Vance uses this tactic a lot.
Tucker uses it a lot.
And it's like, yeah, people that are bad and make bad moral choices can also be a good
hang.
I don't really understand why
this is complicated, but people's experience with Tony Soprano
demonstrated that the human mind sometimes really struggles with this
concept. Yes, and there's a historical antecedent to this, which is the
reaction of people to Adolf Hitler. a bunch of Western journalists would go there and
interview him. He actually gave a lot of interviews and people were dazzled by him. He was charming.
People found his eyes mesmerizing. You have all these interviews with him where people go there and they're really
impressed with him personally.
So what?
So that's thing number one.
Thing number two is the claim he was straight with me.
You know, this also has a historical antecedent with Putin, which is George W. Bush saying, I looked into his eyes and I saw a piece of his soul.
And by the way, that was unforgivable when George W. Bush did it. It's much more unforgivable now.
Because then you could say, well, he was elected, he's not the nicest guy, but you know, he's being helpful whatever We got two decades of info now. We have two more decades of info and none of it
Supports the idea that he's being straight with you. He is a
methodical liar
Who whatever he's being it's not being straight with you and then the third part is this is complicated.
Look, you know, there are things in the world
that are complicated.
Crossing the border of a sovereign state,
invading it and stealing 20,000 children,
annihilating major cities, all on no provocation.
annihilating major cities, all on no provocation. This is not complicated, right?
And the insistence on making it complicated, making it sound like Putin has real grievances,
making it sound like there was a real movement in Ukraine to join Russia or for...
This is all not true.
My closest Ukrainian friends are native Russian speaking.
To say that somebody is native Russian speaking and to say that they are pro-Russian, this
is just a nonsensical piece of disinformation.
And so, like, everything that could be wrong about that statement is wrong.
And I want to add that the only thing more outrageous than that statement is what Trump
said in the Oval Office.
Great.
That's where I was going next.
Yeah.
Go for it.
Where he went further.
You have to do an impression of him, though, because I don't play his audio whenever possible.
I can't do an impression of him, but I will say what he said, which is he was asked about
the attack on Sumi.
On Palm Sunday, you know, killed 34 civilians at last check.
On my part, I haven't looked at the latest numbers, but you know, this is
attack on the center of a city. People were going to church and he started by saying it
was a mistake, which he can't possibly know. And a matter about which Russia does not deserve
the benefit of the doubt given its systematic attacks on civilians.
Are you sure, Ben?
Are you sure we want to be fair?
Are you sure it's not possible that Putin called them late night over a little vodka
and was just like, done, done?
What we meant to do there was bomb some European tanks.
You know how we both don't like Europe.
We meant to bomb some European tanks, but we how we both don't like Europe. We meant to bomb some European tanks,
but we missed by a mile and we accidentally bombed
300 civilians, like it might be.
So first of all, I'm not saying it wasn't a mistake.
I'm just saying, like see previous thing about
he's being straight with you.
Good point, okay.
Russia makes mistakes all the time. It's perfectly
plausible to me that they were trying to hit a military target.
And it's also equally possible that they're trying to terrorize
Ukrainian civilians. I don't give them the benefit of the
doubt. It's not like when the US military hits a civilian target
and says, we fucked up.
You have a certain amount of credibility.
But then he goes on.
He didn't just say, it was a mistake.
He goes on and says, this war was caused by Zelensky.
This war was caused by Joe Biden.
It never would have happened if I had been in office.
And so he's asked about the deaths of Ukrainian civilians in a military attack in an aggressive
war launched by Vladimir Putin.
And his response is, you know, it was a mistake, and the whole thing is the fault of the victim
government and Joe Biden.
Well, guess what?
The whole thing is not the fault of Volodymyr Zelensky,
and it's not the fault of Joe Biden.
If you take these two statements together,
you have Witkoff saying he likes Putin,
he's got a relationship,
he looked in his soul and
he thinks he's being straight with me, and by the way, the situation is complicated,
and then Trump fleshes out that complexity into, by the way, what we mean when we say
it's complicated is it's Biden and Zelensky's fault.
I got news for you. Sometimes a
cigar is just a cigar. And sometimes when it looks like the aggressor country in a war
of conquest is just killing the civilians of the victim country, you don't need to look for complexity. It's
actually just that simple.
I feel like I always ask you this when you're on, but you do work with Ukrainian advocacy groups.
I'm just kind of wondering as you talk to people, you know, kind of this mindset at this point and,
you know, what people think about the state of affairs over there.
Yeah. Look, it's a very diverse crew. It's not diverse on the question of, is it a just
fight? There is a lot of sense of betrayal. There is a lot of commitment. People are not going to give up because Donald
Trump says he's on Russia's side now. On the part of government officials, the strategy
is agree to everything we can possibly agree to and let Putin run out his leash. And there was some indication a couple weeks ago when Trump said he
was getting really pissed with Putin that maybe they were getting there. This is a setback in that
regard. That they're blaming Zelensky for suing me. Yeah, it's like, I guess if you're in their
shoes, you have to imagine that there's a leash.
Right.
Right?
Like you have to believe that there's a leash because that is like the hope and you just
work with the theory that there's a leash that at some point it might be possible that
the Yankees will, you know, come to their senses.
You know, that's their only play.
So they're playing it.
They're not stupid.
Right. So that's at the government level.
At the individual level, there's a lot of heartbreak and it's mixed up with people not
knowing what their personal fates are going to be because a lot of them are here on either you for you visas or on temporary protective status, which both of which could
disappear quickly.
And so
we get temporary protective status other places.
I mean, that's probably so most of them have ability to spend significant amounts of time
in Europe.
Europe has Ukraine visas, but visas. But people have built lives
here. So there's a lot of anxiety about that. And there's also a confusion, I think, because
it is quite unreasonable to expect Ukrainians who often don't have perfect English and haven't followed Trump's psychological dramas since
2016, to be deep in what you and I understand intuitively, which is why he hates Ukraine.
What the relationship is between Ukraine today and the Russia investigation in 2016, 2017, right?
There's a reason why he hates Ukraine.
It's not based in the facts of anything that Volodymyr Zelensky has done.
It's based on a bunch of crazy conspiracy theories that have their roots in 2017. And you and I can swap stories about that stuff
and about the CrowdStrike server and Rudy Giuliani's, right? We know that stuff. It's all bullshit,
by the way, but it has affected the way he thinks in a profound way. And it is quite unreasonable to expect a Ukrainian 23-year-old
who just doesn't want Russia to invade her country to understand that at an intuitive
level.
He literally thinks that him and Putin were on the same side of the so-called Russia hoax
and that the Ukrainians were plotting with the Deep State and New York Times and Ben
Witt, James Comey, I think he really believes.
Right. And that this all has something to do with Hunter Biden's laptop.
Yeah, right.
And if you're a Ukrainian 27-year-old, you were like a teenager when some of this shit happened,
and you weren't following it because American domestic politics, so what? And so all of a sudden, this is the reason why Steve
Witkoff is saying nice things about Putin when he bombs your country.
Yeah. Right? And it is totally unreasonable to expect them to understand this. And I
have sat around a table with young Ukrainians trying to explain this and where this comes from and had them look
at me like I'm speaking Greek.
And, you know, and they're not wrong.
I tried to explain this in an article a long time ago.
I'll put it in the show notes.
It was one of my funnier articles.
People can go read it if they are like the Ukrainians who think that we're speaking Greek
right now.
But it's really important to understand and I remember this article, this is your Rolling
Stone article about...
No, it's from the Bullork. I've added a version of it for Rolling Stone too. I don't know,
now time is a flat circle, but it was...
So, look, when you read this article, you have to understand that this story about the
so-called server is actually an important component of US domestic
politics then, but this is now affecting Ukraine's ability to get weapons.
Yeah, it is crazy. On the youth thing, just really quick aside, I was speaking to
my alma mater earlier this week and in the middle of the talk I was like, what
year were you guys born in again? And a kid goes, 2009. And I was like, oh my God. And I was like, so forget
being in your teens when all this was happening. For like high school students, they were seven.
Like they were the age of my child. So anyway, you know, the linear nature of time is confounding.
Last topic, I need to mention my friend Chris Krebs really quick.
I think obviously listeners to this know he was at DHS in charge of protecting the election
in 2020 when he just honestly testified that there was no fraud, there were no efforts
to break into the machines, there were no Chinese bamboo ballots.
Donald Trump got very mad at him about this and as a result put out an executive order
last week saying that Chris Krebs should be investigated, they should lose the security
clearance that the company works for should lose their security clearance and suffer other
consequences.
So, yesterday Krebs announced that he was resigning from that company Sentinel One.
It's a cybersecurity company.
He said the choice was his and that he wants to focus on this fight to protect our democracy
and our institutions.
I just, I gotta say, number one, good on Chris Krebs.
We don't deserve him.
It is wonderful that we have somebody out
there that is willing to just be honest and straightforward and unapologetic and take
on this fight.
Number two, like this is really unbelievably fucking pernicious and bad. And if any other
president in our lifetime had done this, this would be the front page New York Times story every day.
The President of the United States specifically targeted with an official executive order
an American citizen who did nothing except for their job because the President doesn't
like that person.
The President of the United States is targeting and menacing an American citizen as a result causing him to have to quit his job. A man that's a parent with many, many
kids. This is crazy. It is un-American. It is not with precedent. And because there's
so much other crazy shit up there, it's kind of getting slept under the rug. The story
that he quit, I saw a lot of places didn't even cover.
Good on Krebs.
We'll do what we can to help support him.
But I don't know if you have any other thoughts on either Chris or on the legal side of this.
Well, I have thoughts on both.
First of all, on Chris Krebs, one thing Lafair spends a lot of time on is cybersecurity. On the substance of his work, Chris Krebs was one of really two people who created CISA
as a major cybersecurity powerhouse, the other one being Jen Easterly during the last administration. But this is an organization that became a serious government
player in election protection, in a bunch of other stuff, and Chris Krebs is one of
several reasons for that. He did remarkable work. And so, this isn't a situation in which some minor player is being oppressed for saying something
about.
This is somebody who made a real contribution and who is being oppressed, and the word is
not too strong, because of that contribution and because he had the temerity to say that the elections that he helped secure
were in fact secure.
I don't want to lose in this that there are a lot of people in the first Trump administration
who said, okay, it's important that people like me be in because otherwise crazy people
are going to be in, because otherwise crazy people are gonna be in.
And as a general matter,
I was not all that sympathetic to those claims.
And I think a lot of people kidded themselves
about how essential they were.
Chris is not one of those people.
Chris made a real contribution
in the first Trump administration.
And one of the reasons that we had a quite pristine election
in 2020 was Chris Krebs.
The second is about the oppression.
You know, the Constitution has a very specific provision
barring what are called bills of attainder.
You can't legislatively declare Ben Whittes or Tim Miller a criminal.
You don't get to pass a bill that says you're a traitor. You actually have to indict them under
law that exists and prove it. The British parliament used to declare, write a bill of
attainder and then execute people on the basis of it.
This is a bill of attainder.
It's actually an executive order of attainder.
It's slightly different, but it's the same thing.
It's I, the president, point at you and say, you're a traitor, and it is morally outrageous.
It's legally outrageous, and it works anyway. The reason it works anyway is because if you're a cybersecurity consultant, who wants to do
business with somebody who's that controversial?
Chris will prevail in whatever the fight involves.
If he sues and challenges it, he'll win, just as the law
firms have won, right? Who've challenged it. But note that a lot of the law firms fold
instead of litigating, even though they know they can win. And why is that? Because it's
bad for business to be on the wrong side of the president.
So we have this challenge, then we really have to think about it, which is how do we incentivize
people to do the right thing when they're legally right, when they're morally right,
even though it's bad for business.
Hats off to Chris Krebs, he's doing the right thing and we should all figure out ways to soften the landing pad
for people who do the right thing in government and people who are four plus years later being
oppressed for it while private citizens.
Amen. I should close, but I just want to put one final point on that just by giving an
example because anyone that is ever a whistleblower is going to suffer some consequences, right? its citizens. Amen. I should close, but I just want to put one final point on that just by giving an
example, because anyone that is ever a whistleblower is going to suffer some consequences, right?
Like I think back to the first person that comes to mind is Scott McClellan during the
Bush administration, right? Who was a spokesperson who then resigned and kind of spoke out about
the Iraq War. And that didn't help him, right? Like if he just resigned, he could have gone out and gotten a much fancier job.
You know, the controversy surrounding it certainly didn't help his future job prospects.
But you know, that's a personal choice and he should be commended for that.
Imagine then if instead of that pointing out how it did, George W. Bush signed an executive order
that said Scott McClellan needs to be investigated, that we need to look into this person.
Again, the New York Times would have covered that every day.
Like that would have been the craziest thing that happened.
Anyway, I just think that this is a very important story.
I don't want to lose sight of it.
Ben Whittes, I appreciate you very much for sticking around with me.
Any final thoughts or plugs you have for us before I let you go?
Can I mention Lawfare's fundraiser?
Please.
We have a fundraiser going on for Lawfare that has gone completely viral for reasons
that I'm not sure I understand, except the excellence of my colleagues and the work that
they're doing.
A lot of people have been tweeting about it and supporting us. If you are inclined to do the same, please go to givebutter, g-i-v-e-b-u-t-t-r.com slash know, support the work that we're trying to do.
It's great work.
Uh, I appreciate it.
It makes me smarter.
Uh, not every day.
I can't take it every day, but on the days that I read it, it makes me stop.
Thank you as always to Ben with us.
Everybody else.
Thanks for hanging out.
People keep telling me, uh, that this podcast is helping them stay sane and is there therapy?
I've had several people tell me that this week.
That is boggling my mind
because I think it's making me crazier.
So like there's some kind of cosmic thing happened
where like the sanity is-
You're absorbing the insanity of the audience
and you're internalizing it all.
It's like the picture of Dorian Gray.
Yeah, there's a metaphysical side to that. So anyway, I appreciate it. Everybody that's
listening every day. And so we'll see you back here tomorrow for another edition. Peace. The The Borg Podcast is produced by Katy Cooper with audio engineering and editing by Jason
Brepp. You gotta move, gotta move on in your eyes
So sad, god damn, god damn shame
You gotta move, gotta move on in your eyes
Yeah, I know you just can't help yourself Yeah you you you you you