Christopher Steele
© Associated PressChristopher Steele, former British intelligence officer, seen in London in March, when he spoke to the media for the first time
If we found out that Donald Trump's campaign and the Republican National Committee had paid a firm working for the Russians to create a file of fabricated attacks on Hillary Clinton during the election, would the media treat it as an impeachable offense? Would such efforts be considered an attack on the foundations of our democracy? Would liberal columnists make sensationalistic claims that the Russians had "carried out a successful plan to pick the government of the United States"? Would they argue that the election had been rigged? Would they demand that Republicans pick their country over their party?

Of course they would.

What if a major media organization had taken that ginned-up dossier, one that included a number of unsubstantiated stories about Hillary's supposed sexual fetishes and shady business dealings with foreign powers, and put it online so millions of readers could judge the content for themselves? What if the firm that helped disseminate that file was also feeding a number of reporters alleged scoops that helped shape post-election coverage? Would we now be engaged in a national conversation about the responsibility journalists have to avoid broadcasting questionable information about candidates? Would the outlets that ran with those stories apologize for regurgitating items that might have been concocted by the Russians themselves? Because all of that sure sounds like fake news to me.

According to The Washington Post's reporting, much of this likely happened, but in reverse. The Post claims that Marc E. Elias, a lawyer representing the Clinton campaign and the Democratic National Committee, had hired Fusion GPS, a DC firm that was working on behalf of Russians to undermine American sanctions, to do opposition work for them. And it is likely that Russian sources were in part responsible for some of their bogus assertions.


Comment: Russian "sources" are a long way from the Russian government. By all accounts long-retired Steele chatted up some old contacts who passed on seriously sketchy stories (paid for, of course) from their contacts. Sound more like "giving the customer what they want". Joe Quinn comments:
The origin of these laughable claims is Christopher Steele, a former MI6 operative who, along with fellow ex-spook, Christopher Burrows, runs 'Orbis Business Intelligence Ltd' a private intel outfit which, like so many similar private intel/security contractors, allow for Western "intelligence" agencies to peddle lies with impunity. Steele was stationed in Moscow during his official tenure at MI6, and after "leaving" provided information to the FBI that was instrumental in bringing down Sepp Blatter during the FIFA scandal last year that, coincidentally, focused heavily on alleged Russian government bribery of FIFA officials.
[...]
All 35 pages of this screed read like a bad spy novel, and comprise tall tales from 'knowledgeable sources', unnamed 'officials' and 'trusted compatriots' about Trump's alleged contacts and dealings in Russia. These same sources also attest to the 'truth' that Putin was desperately trying to get Trump elected and hacking everything in sight to make it happen. To give you an idea of the crassness of the drivel it contains, in one paragraph on page 27 we're told that, according to some 'sources', Trump participated in 'sex parties' in St. Petersburg, but that all the direct witnesses had been "silenced" so evidence was "hard to obtain". Sure.



And if The Post is correct, those involved in hiring the firm lied about it for a year. Yes, we knew that Democrats had contracted the opposition research, but we didn't know that it had been the national party and presidential candidate who did so. (One unknown Republican was also involved with Fusion GPS before the firm hired Christopher Steele, a former British spy, to author the dossier.)

How often did the FBI use the dossier as a pretext for FISA warrants? Seems like a reasonable question. According to CNN, at least, the dossier was used in part to justify at least one FISA warrant on Trump advisor Carter Page. CNN has also reported that the FBI paid Steele for some of his efforts. The Washington Post reported that Steele had reached an agreement with the FBI only a few weeks before the election to continue his work, before pulling the plug. Did they pay him for other work?

The dossier reached the highest levels of the intelligence community. Then-FBI director James Comey briefed President Obama and President-elect Trump about the dossier after the election. Information leaked from the dossier was what really revved up the Russia collusion scare in January.

No doubt there is much more to this story. For now, though, Fusion GPS officials have taken the Fifth (despite what you may have heard from some reporters) and have asked a federal judge block a request for the House Intelligence Committee to grant them access to bank records. Maybe another Robert Mueller is needed to get to the truth, since independent counsels doesn't seem to function under these strictures - or any, for that matter.

This is all old news, they tell us. While Clinton's plans for the presidency did indeed fail, I've been informed on numerous occasions that a foreign attack on our democratic process is tantamount to a declaration of war. I mean, we know that Clinton has been tied to Russian uranium interests going back to 2009, but this all happened just last year. Surely those who are ready to condemn Attorney General Jeff Sessions for attending the same party as a Russian diplomat are somewhat concerned about the DNC hiring a firm that was actively attempting to weaken the Magnitsky Act during a national election?

Now, some of us believe much of the Russia scare is a politically motivated effort to undermine the legitimacy of an election. Voting totals were never "hacked." Not one vote was manipulated. Americans still possess free will. On the other hand, there's no doubt Russia would love to instigate unrest in the United States. Democrats have been telling us this for a year. So those who automatically dismiss this inconvenient Fusion GPS story as irrelevant only reveal that they were never very serious about the Russian interference to begin with.

David Harsanyi is a Senior Editor at The Federalist. He is author of the forthcoming First Freedom: A Ride through America's Enduring History with the Gun, From the Revolution to Today