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Showing Original Post only (View all)Don't fall for Trump's latest whataboutism - By the Washington Post Editorial Board [View all]
By Editorial Board
August 11 at 7:00 PM
PRESIDENT TRUMP tweets it repeatedly: Yes, there was collusion with Russia except the real colluders were Hillary Clinton and the Democratic Party. The president was back at it again Thursday, quoting a conservative cable hosts assertion that Hillary Clinton & the Democrats colluded with the Russians to fix the 2016 election. This inflammatory argument may play well with the presidents supporters and others inclined to believe the worst about Ms. Clinton. But the claim that Ms. Clintons 2016 opposition- research activities were on the same moral or legal plane with the Trump teams direct interactions with Russians represents a preposterous effort to confuse and distract.
Here is what the Trump team did: Senior campaign officials, including then-chairman Paul Manafort, Donald Trump Jr. and Jared Kushner, met in June 2016 with Natalia Veselnitskaya, a Kremlin-connected lawyer. They were told the lawyer could give them very high level and sensitive information on Ms. Clinton, as part of Russia and its governments support for Mr. Trump.
Here is what the Clinton campaign did: It employed a U.S. law firm that hired a U.S. research outfit that brought in Christopher Steele, a British ex-spy, to gather information on Mr. Trump from his network of sources. That network included Russians.
For all of Mr. Trumps efforts to muddy the waters, the two cases are decidedly different. There is no evidence of any direct meetings or even tenuous connections between Ms. Clintons senior staff and Russian operatives. When the information he was gathering on Mr. Trump seemed alarming, Mr. Steele informed the Federal Bureau of Investigation about his concerns. When the Russian government offered dirt on Mr. Trumps opponent, his campaign didnt alert authorities about this sketchy behavior. It eagerly took the meeting.
Mr. Trumps whataboutism obscures the fundamental difference between engaging in opposition research that includes contacting foreign sources and lapping up information peddled by a foreign government. Mr. Steele, a well-regarded ex-spy, was acting as a compensated researcher with a specialty in Russia, not as a Kremlin cutout. He worked his network to deliver information to his client.
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