Victor Davis Hanson
One of the media and beltway orthodoxies we constantly hear is that
just a few bad apples under James Comey at the FBI explain why so many
FBI elites have been fired, resigned, reassigned, demoted, or retired —
or just left for unexplained reasons. The list is long and includes
director James Comey himself, deputy director Andrew McCabe,
counterintelligence agent Peter Strzok, attorney Lisa Page, chief of
staff James Rybicki, general counsel James Baker, assistant director for
public affairs Mike Kortan, Comey’s special assistant Josh Campbell,
executive assistant director James Turgal, assistant director for office
of congressional affairs Greg Bower, executive assistant director
Michael Steinbach, and executive assistant director John Giacalone. In
short, in about every growing scandal of the past two years — FISA,
illegal leaking, spying on a presidential candidate, lying under oath,
obstructing justice — someone in the FBI is involved.
We are told, however, that the FBI’s culture and institutions are
exempt from the widespread wrongdoing at the top. Such caution is a fine
and fitting thing, given the FBI’s more than a century of public
service. Nonetheless, many of those caught up in the controversies over
the Russian-collusion hoax were not recent career appointees. Rather,
many came up through the ranks of the FBI. And that raises the question,
for example, of where exactly Peter Strzok (22 years in the FBI)
learned that he had a right to interfere in a U.S. election to damage a
candidate that he opposed.
And why would an Andrew McCabe (over 21 years in the FBI) think he had
the duty to formulate an “insurance policy” to take out a presidential
candidate? Or why would he even consider overseeing an FBI investigation
of Hillary Clinton’s improper use of emails when his wife had been a
recent recipient of Clinton-related PAC money? And why would McCabe
contemplate leaking confidential FBI information to the press or even
dream of setting up some sort of operation to remove a sitting president
under the 25th Amendment? And how did someone like the old FBI vet
Peter Strozk ever end up at the center of the entire mess — opening up
the snooping on the Trump campaign while hiding that fact and while
briefing the candidate on Russian interference in the election,
interviewing Michael Flynn, preening as a top FBI investigator for
Robert Mueller’s dream team, right-hand man of “Andy” McCabe, convincing
Comey to change the wording of his writ in the Clinton-email-scandal
investigation, softball coddling of Huma Abedin and Cheryl Mills,
instrumental in the Papadopoulos investigation con — all the while
conducting an affair with fellow FBI investigator and attorney Lisa Page
and bragging about his assurance that the supposedly odious Trump would
be prevented from being elected. If a group of Trump zealots were to
call up the FBI tomorrow and allege that a member of Joe Biden’s family
has had unethical ties with the Ukrainian or Chinese government, would
that gambit “alarm” the FBI enough to prompt an investigation of Biden
and his campaign? How many career-professional Peter Strozks are still
at the agency?
Issues of concern to people who live in the west: property rights, water rights, endangered species, livestock grazing, energy production, wilderness and western agriculture. Plus a few items on western history, western literature and the sport of rodeo... Frank DuBois served as the NM Secretary of Agriculture from 1988 to 2003. DuBois is a former legislative assistant to a U.S. Senator, a Deputy Assistant Secretary of Interior, and is the founder of the DuBois Rodeo Scholarship.
1 comment:
Christopher Wray is as dirty as the rest of them. Mark my words.
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