3/29/2018 - Victor Davis Hanson Townhall.com
On March 17, ex-CIA
Director John Brennan tweeted about the current president of the United States:
"When the full extent of your venality, moral turpitude, and political
corruption becomes known, you will take your rightful place as a disgraced
demagogue in the dustbin of history. ... America will triumph over you."
That outburst from the
former head of the world's premier spy agency seemed a near threat to a sitting
president, and former U.N. Ambassador Samantha Power tweeted that it probably
was: "Not a good idea to piss off John Brennan."
If there is such a
thing as a dangerous "deep state" of elite but unelected federal
officials who feel that they are untouchable and unaccountable, then John
Brennan is the poster boy.
Immediately after the
2008 election of Barack Obama, the careerist Brennan quickly reinvented himself
as a critic of the very methodologies that he once, as a George W. Bush
administration official, had insisted were effective. Brennan was initially
appointed Obama's top counterterrorism adviser, and then took over the CIA
after the abrupt and mysterious resignation of Gen. David Petraeus following
the 2012 election.
Brennan claimed that
intelligence agencies had not missed clear indications in 2009 that Umar Farouk
Abdulmutallab, the so-called "underwear bomber," would try to take down
a U.S. airliner. Just days later when his denials were ridiculed, Brennan
flipped and blasted intelligence agencies for their laxity.
In 2011, Brennan
falsely alleged that the Obama administration's drone program had not caused a
single civilian death in Pakistan over the previous year. In truth, around 50
civilians had been killed by drones since the 9/11 attacks.
The same year, Brennan
offered various versions of the American killing of Osama bin Laden. His
misleading narratives required White House revisions.
In March 2014, Brennan
denied accusations that CIA analysts had hacked the computers of U.S. Senate
staffers to find out what they knew about possible CIA roles in enhanced
interrogations. After he was caught in a lie, Brennan was forced to apologize
to members of the Senate Intelligence Committee.
Most recently, in May
2017, Brennan testified under oath before Congress that he had no knowledge
during the 2016 presidential campaign of the origins of the Fusion
GPS/Christopher Steele dossier. Nor, Brennan claimed, was he aware that the FBI
and the Department of Justice had used the infamous file to obtain surveillance
warrants from the FISA court before and after the election.
Several sources,
however, have said that Brennan was not only aware of the Steele dossier, but
wanted the FBI to use it to pursue rumors about Trump. Brennan reportedly
briefed Democratic Sen. Harry Reid on the dossier. Armed with those rumors,
Reid then became insistent that they be leaked before the 2016 the election,
according to reports.
Brennan is typical of
the careerist deep state.
Former National
Security Adviser Susan Rice lied about the Benghazi tragedy, the nature of the
Bowe Bergdahl/Guantanamo detainee exchange, the presence of chemical weapons in
Syria, and her role in unmasking the identities of surveilled Americans.
Andrew McCabe, recently
fired from his job as FBI deputy director, openly admitted to lying to
investigators, claiming he was "confused and distracted." McCabe had
said that he was not a source for background leaks about the investigation of
the Clinton Foundation. He wrote in an op-ed for the Washington Post that
"some of my answers were not fully accurate ..."
Former FBI Director
James Comey likely lied about not drafting a statement exonerating Hillary
Clinton of wrongdoing in her email scandal before interviewing her.
Comey misled a FISA
court by not providing the entire truth about the Steele dossier. He falsely
assured the president that he was not under investigation while likely leaking
to others that Trump was, in fact, under investigation.
Former Director of
National Intelligence James Clapper lied under oath to the Senate Intelligence
Committee when he said that the National Security Agency did not collect data
on American citizens. When caught in the lie, Clapper claimed that he had given
the "least untruthful" answer to the committee that he could publicly
provide.
In the past, Clapper
had also misled the country about the "secular" nature of Egypt's
Muslim Brotherhood and the threat posed by the Islamic State.
Note that Brennan,
Clapper, Comey, McCabe and Rice so far have not been held to account for their
distortions. We cynically expect our politicians and even presidents to
fabricate, but we idealistically (and naively) assume that career government
servants do not.
A common strategy of
the deep state careerist is the psychological tactic known as
"projection." To square their own circles of lying, our so-called
best and brightest loudly accuse others of precisely the sins that they
themselves commit as a matter of habit.
In the ensuing chaos
and uproar, careerists such as Brennan, Clapper and Comey usually escape
scrutiny -- to proceed to their next political reincarnation, Beltway billet,
book deal or television gig.
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