Opinion

Counterintelligence is likely the focus of ongoing Trump investigations -- which explains many of those Mueller redactions

The entire campaign by Russia to interfere in the presidential election of 2016 is best described as an influence operation, a term of art in the business of intelligence. According to former FBI intelligence agent Clint Watts, it was a “wildly successful Russian influence operation from start to finish.” The evidence that this was true is right there in the Mueller report. He indicted 12 Russian officers of the GRU, the main Russian intelligence agency, for hacking Democratic Party emails and distributing them through WikiLeaks and other measures. Mueller also indicted 13 Russian citizens and three companies including the Internet Research Agency for conspiring to interfere in the election using fake ads and other measures on American platforms such as Facebook, Instagram, and Twitter. The Internet Research Agency was funded by a billionaire close to Russian President Vladimir Putin and is thought to be closely associated with Russian intelligence agencies such as the GRU.

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A new Michael Cohen recording hurts his credibility -- but it makes the case against Trump look even stronger

A new Michael Cohen tape is making waves — and this time it’s Cohen who was recorded without his knowledge

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Mitch McConnell's long-term strategy of packing the Supreme Court is becoming an obscene reality

The Supreme Court heard arguments today on the Trump administration’s decision to alter the 2020 Census to ask people if they are American citizens.

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Trump is now obstructing justice right before our eyes -- and he shows no signs of stopping

Last week, the public finally got to read (most of) a report by special counsel Robert Mueller detailing the results of an investigation into Donald Trump and his campaign's involvement with Russian efforts to interfere with American democracy and Trump's efforts to obstruct justice. The report was damning enough, chronicling both the Trump campaign's extensive efforts to collude that, only through sheer incompetence, failed to rise to the level of criminal conspiracy, and multiple instances of obstruction that would likely lead to criminal indictment if Trump wasn't a sitting president.

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Kushner provides a chilling preview of Trump's shamelessly deceitful 2020 campaign tactics

It appears the Trump White House has decided to stonewall every bit of congressional oversight, hoping to either run out the clock until the election or have their handpicked Supreme Court majority rule in their favor. There was a time when I would have thought the second option was unthinkable, even with a conservative majority, but after the court intervened in the 2000 Florida recount, I was disabused of that naive assumption. If they have to destroy constitutional checks and balances to keep Trump in power, they may very well do it.This article was originally published at Salon

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Here's the real reason Trump supporters are not fazed by his brazen lying and corruption

There is nothing new in trying to figure out Trump. His appeal and his personality have been the subject of countless analyses and speculations since long before he ran for President. Yet the mysteries continue. Why do people like him? Why does he act so badly?

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Look again: The Mueller report spells it out -- Putin's Russian hack delivered America to Donald Trump

As we collectively devour the Mueller Report, there are two gigantic questions surrounding the entire Russiagate saga that transcend the deeply problematic behavior of Donald Trump and his campaign. 1) Is the Russian government engaged in an ongoing attack against the United States and our elections, and 2) did the 2016 phase of the attack change the outcome of the election, handing the victory to Trump?

Robert Mueller and his investigators are clear and unequivocal about the first question, and it’s an answer we’ve been aware of since at least June of 2016 when we first heard about the linkage between the hacking of the DNC and the Russian military intelligence agency, the GRU. Yes, Russia absolutely attacked the United States with the explicit goal of helping Trump win the election. Mission accomplished. Trump narrowly won the electoral vote, due in part to wafer-thin victories in battleground states like Michigan, Wisconsin and Pennsylvania.

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Trump's crackdown on Iran's oil exports could backfire badly – with serious risks to global economy

The US has unnerved the world oil market by ramping up the pressure in its long-running dispute with Iran. It has announced that, after May 1, it won’t renew the exemptions given to eight countries that enable them to buy Iranian oil. Those affected, which include China, India, Japan, Italy and South Korea, will face sanctions from Washington if they don’t comply. The move will likely squeeze global oil supply at a time when it is already struggling from disruptions in Venezuela, Libya and Nigeria. Indeed, the Brent crude price has already risen on the back of the announcement to US$74 (£57) per barrel, the highest since last November.

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Trump's authoritarianism can never be treated like business as usual

American society is failing at the most essential covenant of any civilization; that is, the identification and elimination of movements that threaten the very essence of civilization. It is a challenge to any journalist, no matter how committed and observant, to monitor all of the horrific, ignorant and false utterances that President Donald Trump projectile vomits at the American people on a daily basis, but one of his recent verbal explosions demonstrates dangerous flirtation with the other “f” word that the FCC has, evidently, prohibited from the television news — “fascism.”

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Robert Mueller knows a great deal more than he put in his richly detailed 448-page report

He says so again and again right in the report.

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Mueller report: A harsh indictment of Donald Trump — and also of America's ruling elites

It must a comforting thing to be rich, white, male and a member of the Republican Party because it means that you are insulated from responsibility for your own bad behavior while still being able to pander to the rest of the world with blatant falsehoods about "personal responsibility."

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Why Bible belt states are the biggest consumers of online adult content

Red State conservatives may insist that the rest of us should keep aspirin between our knees and be forced to bear Divine Justice Babies when we don’t. They may refuse to provide cake or flowers for gay weddings, or even to attend. They may pretend that teens won’t do it if we just don’t tell them how. They may adopt the Church Lady posture if anyone mentions sex that doesn’t involve one man, one woman, the missionary position and a pulsing desire for more offspring . . . . But online search traffic from behind closed doors in Jesusland suggests that the bad, nasty sexual impulses that righteous believers are trying so hard to shut down may be their own. And if Google search patterns mean anything, they’re not succeeding too well.

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This is what the Steele dossier got all wrong

The 35-page dossier that purported to outline Russian interference in the election and the Trump campaign’s alleged role in that interference is facing renewed scrutiny following the release of special counsel Robert Mueller’s report, according to the New York Times.

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