The Senate just dropped a massive Russia bombshell (and most people missed it)

Authored by edition.cnn.com and submitted by mangoarts
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(CNN) On Tuesday, the Senate Intelligence Committee dropped a bombshell about Russia's interference in the 2016 election -- and its ongoing efforts to disrupt the 2020 contest as well.

And most people just sort of shrugged.

Maybe that reaction was because the country is still in the midst of a fight against the coronavirus. Or that the focus of the political world is on the virtual Democratic National Convention. Or that people are just plain sick of all the back-and-forth on the Russia story.

Whatever the reason, the public's reaction (or lack thereof) was entirely out of step with the details that were contained in the fifth (and final) release of the Intelligence Committee's report. What was in those documents was deeply damning for President Donald Trump -- and his attempts to dismiss the entire investigation into Russia's meddling in the 2016 campaign as a hoax.

* Trump's campaign chairman Paul Manafort's "high-level access and willingness to share information with individuals closely affiliated with the Russian intelligence services" was regarded as a "grave counterintelligence threat," and his "presence on the Campaign and proximity to Trump created opportunities for Russian intelligence services to exert influence over, and acquire confidential information on, the Trump Campaign."

* Manafort was working directly with Konstantin Kilimnik, a Russian intelligence officer, and tried to share internal campaign information with him. The committee says it obtained "some information suggesting Kilimnik may have been connected" to Russia's 2016 hacking operation of Hillary Clinton's emails and the Democratic National Committee.

* Roger Stone was tasked by the campaign with finding all he could about what information WikiLeaks had about Clinton and Democrats more broadly, and "Trump and the Campaign believed that Stone had inside information and expressed satisfaction that Stone's information suggested more releases would be forthcoming."

* Two other Russians who took part in the June 2016 meeting at Trump Tower with the top brass of the President's campaign had "significant connections to Russian government, including the Russian intelligence services."

* Russian government actors continued until at least January 2020 to spread disinformation about Russia's role in the 2016 election -- and Manafort (and Kilimnik) actively participated in this influence campaign by blaming the meddling on Ukraine.

* Russia took advantage of the Trump transition team's inexperience and opposition to Obama administration policies "to pursue unofficial channels." And it's likely that Russian intelligence services exploited the Trump's transition team's lack of experience for Russia's advantage.

These were just some of the findings of a bipartisan investigation in the Senate Intelligence Committee. And while acting committee chairman Marco Rubio (R-Florida) sought to emphasize on Tuesday that "the Committee found no evidence that then-candidate Donald Trump or his campaign colluded with the Russian government," The Washington Post's Aaron Blake notes that the report itself doesn't ever actually say that.

Arguing over whether the report proves collusion (or doesn't) may actually be something of a red herring, however.

Especially when you consider that what the report makes very clear is that Trump's campaign chairman was a) working with a Russian intelligence officer b) seeking to share proprietary campaign data with him and c) attempted to sway public opinion about which country actually had meddled in the US election. And that Stone, whose prison sentence was commuted by Trump last month, was designated by the campaign to find out what he could about the information that had been hacked by the Russians and when WikiLeaks planned to release it. And that the two Russians from infamous Trump Tower meeting had more ties Russian intelligence than we previously knew. And that Russia continued through this year to muddy the waters about its interference in the 2016 election.

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That is most certainly not a "hoax," to borrow the preferred nomenclature of the President. And regardless of whether his campaign actually formally colluded with the Russians, the behavior documented in the Senate Intelligence Committee's report should be deeply, deeply troubling to any Americans -- particularly as we near another national election with a president who continues to downplay the threat of foreign election interference.

That is not the sort of thing that should be overlooked or underplayed, even in a moment when we continue to struggle to get our arms around a pandemic and the Democratic Party formally nominates its national ticket. The integrity of the coming election is at stake and every sign points to the likelihood that Russia is, again, seeking to put its thumb on the scale.

jpwarman on August 19th, 2020 at 20:57 UTC »

Trying to convince people he's corrupt is no longer a viable option. People are either on one side or the other. I don't think anyone is still on the fence about him and just waiting to see....

Example:

The bulk of my family are on the hoax/brainwashed-side of things. I actually did a test, and lied to them saying "Trump just admitted on TV that he colluded and did several illegal acts so Clinton would lose, and that he's only in it for the money ."

My family's response wasn't "you're lying" or "show me". Oh no.

Their responses were:

"who cares!" "he needed to do what he needed to do!" "I do not care. He still has my vote!" and my favorite response "Obama did worse and admitted to it on live TV. I can't show you the clip because he and his cronies had it scrubbed with the use of 5G"

Not once did they ask for evidence or follow-up questions. They didn't even look it up.

Luckily I'm several hundred miles away from them!

k_dubious on August 19th, 2020 at 20:11 UTC »

We’re in a really weird place right now. Anyone who still supports Trump at this point is either living in a fact-free media bubble, in which case they won’t ever see this report, or they actually want Trump as an authoritarian leader in the US and simply don’t care about anything he’s done to undermine our democracy.

For anyone who actually cares about the substance of this report, it’s likely just more confirmation of what they already suspected to be true and yet another reason to vote Trump out in November.

hildebrand_rarity on August 19th, 2020 at 19:35 UTC »

I actually think the thing most people are missing is that the Senators on this committee knew all of this and yet voted to acquit Trump on impeachment and parroted his bullshit claims that there was no collusion.