You have commented 339 times on Rantburg.

Your Name
Your e-mail (optional)
Website (optional)
My Original Nic        Pic-a-Nic        Sorry. Comments have been closed on this article.
Bold Italic Underline Strike Bullet Blockquote Small Big Link Squish Foto Photo
Caucasus/Russia/Central Asia
Putin's False Equivalency
2018-07-21
[NationalReview] We are in dangerous times. Amid the hysteria over the Russian summit, the Mueller collusion probe, nonstop unsupported allegations and rumors, the Strzok and Page testimonies, the ongoing congressional investigations into improper CIA and FBI behavior, and a completely unhinged media, there is a growing crisis of rising tensions between two superpowers that together possess a combined arsenal of 3,000 instantly deployable nuclear weapons and another 10,000 in storage. That latter existential fact apparently has been forgotten in all the recriminations. So it is time for all parties to deescalate and step back a bit.

Trump understandably wants to avoid progressive charges that he is obstructing Robert Mueller’s ostensible investigation of Russian collusion, and he also wants some sort of détente with Russia. Mueller has likely indicted Russians, timed on the eve of the summit, in part on the assumption that they would more or less not personally defend themselves and never appear on U.S. soil.

Add that all up, and Trump apparently has discussed with Putin an idea of allowing Mueller’s investigators to visit Russia to interview those they have indicted.

But in the quid pro quo world of big-power rivalry, Putin, of course, wants reciprocity ‐ the right also to interview American citizens or residents (among them a former U.S. ambassador to Russia) whom he believes have transgressed against Russia.

Trump needs to squash Putin’s ridiculous "parity" request immediately. Mueller would learn little or nothing from interviewing his targets on Russian soil ‐ and likely never imagined that he would or could.

On the other hand, given recent Russian attacks on critics abroad, Moscow’s interviewing any Russian antagonist anywhere is not necessarily a safe or sane enterprise. And being indicted under the laws of a constitutional republic is hardly synonymous with earning the suspicion of the Russian autocracy.

Most importantly, the idea that a former U.S. ambassador to Russia, Professor Michael McFaul ‐ long after the expiration of his government tenure ‐ would submit to Russian questioning is absurd. Of course, it would also undermine the entire sanctity of American ambassadorial service.

McFaul, a colleague at the Hoover Institution, who would probably disagree with most of my views, years ago was targeted as an enemy by Vladimir Putin and more recently has been sharply critical of the Trump administration. But, of course, he is a widely admired patriot, a scholar, and voices his candid views, like all of us, under the assumption of free speech and absolute protection under the Constitution. As an ambassador, he was also accorded diplomatic immunity as insurance that his implementation of then U.S. policy would not earn him retaliation from Moscow, both then or now. McFaul is wise enough not to voluntarily submit to be questioned by Russian operatives, and the U.S. government must never suggest that he should.

So, Putin’s offer, to the extent we know the details of it, will soon upon examination be seen as patently unhinged. In refusal, Trump has a good opportunity to remind the world why all American critics of the Putin government ‐ and especially of his own government as well ‐ are uniquely free and protected to voice any notion they wish.
Posted by:746

#6  Putin can't unseat Trump. Deep States is attempting to do just that.

The enemy of my enemy is my friend. (See - FDR and Stalin, and yes this is war by any means necessary)
Posted by: Procopius2k   2018-07-21 11:30  

#5  I've been thinking about Mad Mike's beliefs and reasons for those beliefs.

Then I stack them on top of the knowledge that the Obola administration _gave the root password to the OPM database_ to a Chinese "corporation" and neither Mueller, nor Comey, nor the National Review, seemed to make all that great of a fuss over it.

Which makes me wonder what else they gave away and to whom. I already think the cork sucking iceholes gave gargantuan amounts of money to Iran that got forwarded to (gasp!) Russia, without much in the way of objection from any of those people.
Posted by: Thing From Snowy Mountain   2018-07-21 11:02  

#4  Ref #2: The lawyers will commence discovery, demanding all of Mueller's information regarding the case. Which almost certainly includes intelligence information we don't want them to have. Otherwise, how did he find out about what Russians are doing in Russia in a secret context?

None of which (the evidence) can be released to anyone, due to an 'ongoing investigation.' Conveniently, anything the Deep State desires has just become unreleasable evidence.
Posted by: Besoeker   2018-07-21 06:45  

#3   And being indicted under the laws of a constitutional republic shadow government with kangaroo courts and a complicit shill media hardly synonymous with earning the suspicion of the Russian autocracy.

This Shadow Goverment and the Deep State are operating more like "a Stasi controlled East Germany or the USSR".
Posted by: JohnQC   2018-07-21 06:35  

#2  Personally, I agree with Michael Z. Willimson on Mueller
Posted by: g(r)omgoru   2018-07-21 04:06  

#1  Trump needs to squash Putin’s ridiculous "parity" request immediately.

IMO, Trump using Putin to show just how ridiculous Mueller's investigation is.
Posted by: g(r)omgoru   2018-07-21 04:02  

00:00