
Russiagate’s Architects Suppressed Doubts to Peddle False Claims
Although Robert Mueller failed to find an election conspiracy between Donald Trump and Moscow, the former Special Counsel threw a lifeline to the Russiagate narrative by alleging that the Kremlin had engaged in a โsweeping and systematicโ effort to get Trump elected and โsow discordโ among Americans.ย
Six years later, that questionable but enduring claim continues to unravel.
According to newly declassified documents, U.S. intelligence leaders concealed high-level doubts about one of Russiagateโs foundational allegations: that Russia stole and leaked Democratic Party material to help Trump defeat Hillary Clinton. In a September 2016 report that was never made public until now, the NSA and the FBI broke with their intelligence counterparts and expressed โlow confidenceโ in the attribution to Russia.
The previously undisclosed dissent about Russiaโs alleged hacking activities in the 2016 election is among several revelations released last week by Tulsi Gabbard, Trumpโs Director of National Intelligence. According to Gabbard, President Obama and senior members of his cabinet โmanufactured and politicized intelligenceโ in its waning months to wage โa years-long coup against President Trump.โ
Gabbardโs material adds to a body of evidence previously reported by RealClearInvestigations that challenges the widely parroted claim about the quality of evidence and the extent of Russian โinterference operationsโ in the 2016 election. These conclusions โ based on questionable assertions presented as hard facts โ have been falsely portrayed as an intelligence consensus. When Trump, the nationโs commander-in-chief, cast doubt on the Russian interference allegations in a July 2018 news conference, former CIA chief John Brennan denounced him as โnothing short of treasonous.โ
It turns out that Trump was not out of sync with the U.S. intelligence community he was accused of betraying.
โLow Confidenceโ in Core Allegation
Until now, the purported U.S. intelligence consensus on Russian meddling has been conveyed to the public in three seminal reports.
The first was a January 2017 intelligence community assessment (ICA) released in the final days of the Obama administration under the direction of Brennan and then-Director of National Intelligence James Clapper. The ICA accused Russian President Vladimir Putin of ordering an โinfluence campaignโ to โdenigrateโ Democratic candidate Clinton and โhelpโ Trump win the 2016 election. Some of this effort involved propaganda on Russian media outlets and messaging on social media.
The larger component hinged on the allegation that the GRU, Russiaโs main intelligence agency, stole emails and documents from the Democratic Party and released that material principally via two online entities, DCLeaks and Guccifer 2.0, as well as the whistleblower organization WikiLeaks. Julian Assange, the founder of WikiLeaks, has long denied that Russia or any other state actor was his source. Nevertheless, the January 2017 ICA stated that U.S. intelligence had โhigh confidenceโ that Russia engineered the hack.
The Mueller report, issued more than two years later, advanced the ICAโs claims with even more confidence and specificity. A bipartisan Senate intelligence review, released in August 2020, endorsed the ICA and Mueller reports and was widely treated as a vindication of the conduct of the intelligence officials behind them.
The documents newly declassified by Gabbard show that the ICA, Mueller, and Senate reports all excluded the intelligence communityโs own secretly identified doubts and evidentiary gaps on the core allegation of Russian meddling.
In a previously unpublished Intelligence Community Assessment circulated within the government on Sept. 12,2016 (hereafter โSeptember ICAโ), the FBI and NSA expressed โlow confidenceโ that Russia was behind the hack and release of Democratic Party emails. U.S. intelligence agencies, the report explained, โlack sufficient technical detailsโ to link the stolen Democratic Party material released by WikiLeaks and other sources โto Russian state-sponsored actors.โ
The joint FBI-NSA dissent was especially significant given their central role in investigating Russiaโs alleged cyber meddling. With its sweeping foreign surveillance capability, the NSA is the agency best positioned to assess the source of the alleged hacking of the Democratic National Committee (DNC) and Democratic Congressional Campaign Committee (DCCC). Meanwhile, the FBI had taken the lead in probing the cyber-theft and release of stolen material from the Democratic Party networks. The private acknowledgment that these two agencies did not have the โtechnicalโ data to link the hacking to Russia bolsters longstanding criticism, overlooked by legacy media, that the โRussian interferenceโ allegations lacked supporting evidence.
Contrary to subsequent assertions, the September ICA shows that the U.S. intelligence community had no hard evidence that Putin ordered the theft of Democratic Party material as part of an influence campaign to help Trump.
โIf the disclosures of the DNC and DCCC documents were indeed orchestrated by the Russian intelligence services,โ the report stated, โthose services would very likely have sought Putinโs approval for the operation.โ This passage indicates that U.S. intelligence had declined to endorse assertions promoted by Brennan and leaked to the media during Trumpโs first term, that a highly placed Kremlin mole had captured Putinโs orders to meddle in the 2016 election in support of Trump. The alleged mole was later identified as a mid-level Kremlin official named Oleg Smolenkov, who left Russia to live in the Virginia suburbs under his own name.
President Obama Pushes Narrative
Rather than make the September ICA and its dissenting contents public, the Obama administration told a much different story, one that ensured that allegations of โRussian interferenceโ would hobble Trumpโs presidency even before he took office.
On Oct. 7, 2016, the Department of Homeland Security (DHS) and the Office of the Director of National Intelligence (ODNI) issued a joint statement claiming that the โU.S. Intelligence Community is confidentโ that Russia hacked the Democratic Party in order to โinterfere with the U.S. election process.โ No mention was made of the NSA and FBIโs shared โlow confidenceโ in that allegation, or their lack of technical evidence for it.
Notably, the FBI objected to formally accusing Russia and refused to participate. But by that point, the joint statement had a more powerful endorser. According to testimony from Jeh Johnson, who then served as DHS secretary, President Obama โapproved the statementโ and โwanted us to make [it].โ On December 6, 2016, Obama made another request, asking the intelligence community to produce a new version of the ICA that could be made public. As RCI has previously reported, and a recent CIA review has newly confirmed, that version of the ICA โ released in January 2017 and hereafter referred to as the โJanuary ICAโ โ was tainted by a hurried production schedule and the exclusion of key intelligence agencies under the close control of Brennan and Clapper.
Apart from references to the Steele dossier โ now debunked opposition research financed by Hillary Clintonโs campaign alleging a Trump/Russia conspiracy โ it contained no new evidence that would have reversed the previous assessments.
After ordering a replacement ICA, Obama administration officials moved to silence dissent. According to Gabbardโs Office of the Director of National Intelligence, a senior official who โledโ the September ICA on allegations of Russian meddling was โsidelinedโ from the new process. This unidentified official, whom Gabbardโs office describes as the โODNI Whistleblower,โ was shunned after โquestioning his leadership about why an IC assessment was being created that contradicted multiple IC assessments.โ The ODNI whistleblower also asserts that he was later pressured to accept unsupported findings in the January ICA, โincluding that the Russian government had a preference for President Trump.โ
Speculation Accepted as Fact
Meanwhile, in a newly disclosed Dec. 7 memo written one day after Obamaโs ICA tasking, the Office of the Director of National Intelligence acknowledged that the confidence level about alleged Russian hacking had barely changed.
The document claimed to have โhigh confidenceโ that Russia had, in 2015 and 2016, hacked into networks belonging to the Democratic National Committee and the Democratic Congressional Campaign Committee. But when it came to whether this Russian hacking actually led to exfiltration, dissemination, and public release to actors like WikiLeaks, the document used qualified, tepid language that reflected continued uncertainty. โMost IC agencies,โ the DNI wrote, only had โmoderate confidence that Russian services probably orchestrated at least some of the disclosuresโ of stolen Democratic Party material (emphasis added).
The Dec. 7 DNI memo also inadvertently confirmed another evidentiary gap: a reliance on evidence provided by Trumpโs campaign rival. The โattribution of the intrusionsโ to Russia, the DNI wrote, was โbased on the forensic evidence identified by a private cyber-firm and the ICโs review and understanding of cyber activities by the Russian Government.โ
That private cyber-firm is CrowdStrike, which worked directly for the Clinton campaign, and which had triggered Russiagate the previous June by accusing Russia of hacking the DNC servers. As RCI has previously reported, despite the high stakes involved, the FBI acceded to the DNCโs refusal to let the bureau independently analyze its server, deferring instead to CrowdStrikeโs analysis. The timing of the FBIโs โlow confidenceโ assessment suggests that it did not find CrowdStrikeโs initial attribution to Russia convincing. CrowdStrike submitted its third and final report to the FBI on Aug. 24, three weeks before the September ICA recorded the FBI and NSAโs dissent on the Russian hacking allegation.
The DNIโs reliance on the forensics of a firm working for Trumpโs political opponent โ just as the FBI simultaneously relied on the Clinton-funded Steele dossier in its fruitless hunt for collusion โ was kept under wraps. And as RCI has previously reported, so was another critical disclosure made in closed-door congressional testimony one year later.
In December 2017, CrowdStrike President Shawn Henry testified that his firm โdid not have concrete evidenceโ that Russian hackers had exfiltrated data from the DNC servers. He said there were signs of potential Russian malware on the servers, but no evidence that any information had been uploaded by them. Put another way, they might have had keys to the servers, but there was no proof that they had removed any content. Henryโs admission to the House Intelligence Committee was also kept from the public throughout the Mueller probe.
For unspecified reasons, the FBI again declined to endorse the intelligence assessment on alleged Russian meddling. On Dec. 8, one day after the DNI memo was circulated, an FBI official replied that the bureau was โdrafting a dissent,โ and asked that the ODNI โremove our seal [and] annotations of co-authorship.โ In response, an ODNI official opined that the FBIโs โonly differenceโ with the Dec. 7 memo โwas over confidence level on the attribution.โ The ODNI official also pointed out that the FBIโs disagreement was with โI&A.โ This was a reference to the Office of Intelligence and Analysis at DHS, which had co-authored, along with the Clapper-run ODNI, the Oct. 7 statement that the FBI had refused to endorse, and that falsely claimed to speak on behalf of the โU.S. Intelligence Community.โ
The FBIโs continued dissent underscores that, by the time Obama had ordered the production of a new ICA, the intelligence community still had not reached consensus on the attribution of the email hacking to Russia.
Despite the lingering divisions over the evidence for alleged Russian hacking, a meeting between President Obama and top principals just one day later claimed to have reached a united front. On Dec. 9, Obama huddled with top national security officials, including Clapper and Brennan, at the White House. Notably, the two agencies that had previously dissented on Russian hacking โ the FBI and NSA โ were not represented by their respective leaders, James Comey and Mike Rogers, but instead by deputies Andrew McCabe and Richard Ledgett. According to a newly declassified summary of that meeting, the Principals Committee resolved to โpublicly release and attribute to Russian intelligence services technical and other information โฆ in intelligence reporting โ from that same day. It is unclear why Obama and his principals suddenly felt confident publicly attributing the Democratic Party hack to Russia when the FBI and NSA had expressed “low confidence” in that judgment based on a lack of technical evidence.
Spreading the False Narrative
As Obama and senior intelligence officials concealed the communityโs doubts about the alleged Russian hack and releases, as well as their reliance on a Clinton campaign contractor to investigate it, more false claims were leaked to the public.
Two days after the DNIโs Dec. 7 memo, the Washington Post published a story claiming that a โsecret assessmentโ from the CIA had concluded that the hacking of Democratic Party emails was โpart of a wider Russian operation to boost Trump and hurt Clinton’s chancesโ in the 2016 election. A senior U.S. official told the Post that it was โthe assessment of the intelligence communityโ that Russia sought โto help Trump get elected. Thatโs the consensus view.โ In fact, there had been no such assessment or consensus, only strong doubts about the hacking allegation at the heart of the purported โRussian operation.โ
Rather than refute the erroneous Post story, the Obama administration continued to promote its unsupported narrative. Three weeks later, on Dec. 29, the Department of Homeland Security, this time joined by the FBI, issued a report that newly promoted the allegation of Russian email theft. Without mentioning the ICโs low-to-moderate confidence in Russian hacking or the integral role of Clinton contractor CrowdStrike, the joint report described the alleged Russian hacking effort as โlikely leading to the exfiltration of informationโ from Democratic Party networks. It is unclear how the FBI arrived at this conclusion after voicing at least two previous dissents. This pattern, where privately identified evidentiary holes were later supplanted by publicly confident assertions, was repeated time and time again to advance the Russia narrative.
After burying dissenting opinions on Russian meddling and leaking false claims to the media, Obama administration and intelligence officials released a newly sanitized version of the ICA on Jan. 6, 2017. Two other versions of that document with higher levels of classification were produced, one of which โ a โdowngradedโ product below the highest-level classified one, hereafter referred to as the Downgraded ICA โ has been newly released by Gabbard.
The Downgraded ICA points to more evidentiary gaps. When it comes to the ICAโs contention that Putin ordered Russian military intelligence to pass stolen Democratic Party material to WikiLeaks and other conduits, the ICA makes no reference to any evidence of such an order. Instead, it points to a speculative guess based on a psychological reading of Putinโs perceived grievances:
Putin most likely wanted his intelligence services to discredit Secretary Clinton because he has blamed her since 2011 for inciting mass protests against his regime in late 2011 and early 2012 and holds a grudge for comments he almost certainly saw as disparaging him, judging from press reporting. Given this, we assess with high confidence that the GRU was directed to pass material it collected to WikiLeaks and other intermediaries.
In the public version, the January ICA suggested that an online persona that released stolen Democratic material, Guccifer 2.0, had a โlikely Russian identityโ tied to the GRU. But the Downgraded ICA acknowledges that U.S. intelligence only has โmoderate confidenceโ that Guccifer 2.0 and another site, DCleaks.com, were โunder direct GRU control.โ By contrast, the Mueller report of March 2019 asserted as fact that the GRU โcreatedโ and โused both the DCLeaks and Guccifer 2.0 personasโ to release stolen material publicly and transfer it to WikiLeaks.
Most significantly, Gabbardโs new releases raise the question of how U.S. intelligence officials went from their low to moderate confidence in Russian interference allegations through the last months of 2016 into โhigh confidenceโ in the first week of January 2017, a stance they have clung to in the ensuing eight years even as the underpinnings of those claims have unraveled.
In its memo on the new documents, Gabbardโs office notes that the January ICAโs assertion of a Putin-ordered effort to defeat Clinton claimed to be drawing on โfurther informationโ that had โcome to lightโ since the 2016 election. That โfurther information,โ Gabbardโs office states, was later found to be the Steele dossier, which Brennan and others have falsely claimed played no part in their analysis.
Whatever the case, these new disclosures confirm that to make the case of Russian interference and present it to the public as a consensus view, U.S. intelligence officials in the Obama administration suppressed ample doubts within their highest ranks.
This article was originally published by RealClearInvestigations and made available via RealClearWire.