Despite the Robert Mueller reportās conclusion that Donald Trump and his campaign did not collude with Russia during the 2016 presidential race, the new Cold War with Moscow shows little sign of abating. It is used to justify the expansion of NATO to Russiaās borders, a move that has made billions in profits for U.S. arms manufacturers. It is used to demonize domestic critics and alternative media outlets as agents of a foreign power. It is used to paper over the Democratic Partyās betrayal of the working class and the partyās subservience to corporate power. It is used to discredit dĆ©tente between the worldās two largest nuclear powers. It is used to justify both the curtailment of civil liberties in the United States and U.S. interventions overseasāincluding in countries such as Syria and Venezuela. This new Cold War predates the Trump presidential campaign. It was manufactured over a decade ago by a war industry and intelligence community that understood that, by fueling a conflict with Russia, they could consolidate their power and increase their profits. (Seventy percent of intelligence is carried out by private corporations such as Booz Allen Hamilton, which has been called the worldās most profitable spy operation.)
āThis began long before Trump and āRussiagate,ā ā Stephen F. Cohen said when I interviewed him for my television show, āOn Contact.ā Cohen is professor emeritus of politics at Princeton University, where he was the director of the Russian studies program, and professor emeritus of Russian studies and history at New York University. āYou have to ask yourself, why is it that Washington had no problem doing productive diplomacy with Soviet communist leaders. Remember Richard Nixon and Leonid Brezhnev? It was a love fest. They went hunting together [in the Soviet Union]. Yet along comes a post-Soviet leader, Vladimir Putin, who is not only not a communist but a professed anti-communist. Washington has been hating on him ever since 2003, 2004. It requires some explanation. Why do we like communist leaders in Russia better than we like Russiaās anti-communist leader? Itās a riddle.ā
āIf youāre trying to explain how the Washington establishment has dealt with Putin in a hateful and demonizing way, you have to go back to the 1990s before Putin,ā said Cohen, whose new book is āWar With Russia? From Putin & Ukraine to Trump & Russiagate.ā The first post-Soviet leader is Boris Yeltsin. Clinton is president. And they have this fake, pseudo-partnership and friendship, whereas essentially the Clinton administration took advantage of the fact that Russia was in collapse. It almost lost its sovereignty. I lived there in the ā90s. Middle-class people lost their professions. Elderly people lost their pensions. I think itās correct to say that industrial production fell more in the Russian 1990s than it did during our own Great Depression. It was the worst economic and social depression ever in peacetime. It was a catastrophe for Russia.ā
In September 1993 Russians took to the streets to protest the collapse of the economyāthe gross domestic product had fallen by 50% and the country was convulsed by hyperinflationāalong with the rampant corruption that saw state enterprises sold for paltry fees to Russian oligarchs and foreign corporations in exchange for lavish kickbacks and bribes; food and fuel shortages; the nonpayment of wages and pensions; the lack of basic services, including medical services; falling life expectancy; the explosion of violent crime; and Yeltsinās increasing authoritarianism and his unpopular war with Chechnya.
In October 1993 Yeltsin, after dissolving the parliament, ordered army tanks to shell the Russian parliament building, which was being occupied by democratic protesters. The assault left 2,000 dead. Yet during his presidency Yeltsin was effusively praised and supported by Washington. This included U.S. support for a $10.2 billion International Monetary Fund loan to Russia during his 1996 re-election campaign. The loan enabled the Yeltsin government to pay huge sums in back wages and pensions to millions of Russians, with checks often arriving on the eve of the election. Also, an estimated $1.5 billion from the loan was used to directly fund the Yeltsin presidential campaign. But by the time Yeltsin was forced out of office in December 1999 his approval rating had sunk to 2%. Washington, losing Yeltsin, went in search of another malleable Russian leader and, at first, thought it had found one in Putin.
āPutin went to Texas,ā Cohen said. āHe had a barbecue with Bush, second Bush. Bush said he ālooked into his eyes and saw a good soul.ā There was this honeymoon. Why did they turn against Putin? He turned out not to be Yeltsin. We have a very interesting comment about this from Nicholas Kristof, the New York Times columnist, who wrote, I think in 2003, that his own disillusion with Putin was that he had turned out not to be āa sober Yeltsin.ā What Washington was hoping for was a submissive, supplicant, post-Soviet Russian leader, but one who was younger, healthier and not a drinker. They thought they had that in Putin. Yeltsin had put Putin in power, or at least the people around Yeltsin did.ā
āWhen Putin began talking about Russiaās sovereignty, Russiaās independent course in world affairs, theyāre aghast,ā Cohen said of the Washington elites. āThis is not what they expected. Since then, my own thinking is we were pretty lucky after the 1990s to get Putin because there were worst contenders in the wings. I knew some of them. I donāt want to name names. But some of these guys were really harsh people. Putin was kind of the right person for the right time, both for Russia and for Russian world affairs.ā
āWe have had three years of this,ā Cohen said of Russiagate. āWe lost sight of the essence of what this allegation is. The people who created Russiagate are literally saying, and have been for almost three years, that the president of the United States is a Russian agent, or he has been compromised by the Kremlin. We grin because itās so fantastic. But the Washington establishment, mainly the Democrats but not only, have taken this seriously.ā
āI donāt know if there has ever been anything like this in American history,ā Cohen said. āThat accusation does such damage to our own institutions, to the presidency, to our electoral system, to Congress, to the American mainstream media, not to mention the damage itās done to American-Russian relations, the damage it has done to the way Russians, both elite Russians and young Russians, look at America today. This whole Russiagate has not only been fraudulent, itās been a catastrophe.ā
āThere were three major episodes of dĆ©tente in the 20th century,ā Cohen said. āThe first was after Stalin died, when the Cold War was very dangerous. That was carried out by Dwight Eisenhower, a Republican president. The second was by Richard Nixon, advised by Henry Kissingerāit was called āthe Nixon dĆ©tente with Brezhnev.ā The third, and we thought most successful, was Ronald Reagan with Mikhail Gorbachev. It was such a successful dĆ©tente Reagan and Gorbachev, and Reaganās successor, the first Bush, said the Cold War was over forever.ā
āThe wall had come down,ā Cohen said of the 1989 collapse of East Germany and the fall of the Berlin Wall. āGermany was reunifying. The question became āwhere would a united Germany be?ā The West wanted Germany in NATO. For Gorbachev, this was an impossible sell. Twenty-seven point five million Soviet citizens had died in the war against Germany in the Second World War on the eastern front. Contrary to the bunk weāre told, the United States didnāt land on Normandy and defeat Nazi Germany. The defeat of Nazi Germany was done primarily by the Soviet army. How could Gorbachev go home and say, āGermany is reunited. Great. And itās going to be in NATO.ā It was impossible. They told Gorbachev, āWe promise if you agree to a reunited Germany in NATO, NATO will not moveāthis was Secretary of State James Bakerāone inch to the east. In other words, NATO would not move from Germany toward Russia. And it did.ā
āAs we speak today, NATO is on Russiaās borders,ā Cohen said. āFrom the Baltics to Ukraine to the former Soviet Republic of Georgia. So, what happened? Later, they said Gorbachev lied or he misunderstood. [That] the promise was never made. But the National Security Archive in Washington has produced all the documents of the discussion in 1990. It was not only [President George H.W.] Bush, it was the French leader FranƧois Mitterrand, it was Margaret Thatcher of England. Every Western leader promised Gorbachev NATO would not move eastward.ā
āWhat do you end up with today?ā he asked. āBetrayal. Any kind of discussion about Russian-American relations today, an informed Russian is going to say, āWe worry you will betray us again.ā⦠Putin said he had illusions about the West when he came to power.ā
āTrump comes out of nowhere in 2016 and says, āI think we should cooperate with Russia,ā ā Cohen said. āThis is a statement of dĆ©tente. Itās what drew my attention to him. Itās then that this talk of Trump being an agent of the Kremlin begins. One has to wonderāI canāt prove itābut you have to think logically. Was this [allegation] begun somewhere high up in America by people who didnāt want a pro-dĆ©tente president? And [they] thought that Trump, however small it seemed at the time that he could wināthey really didnāt like this talk of cooperation with Russia. It set in motion these things we call Russiagate.ā
āThe forefathers of dĆ©tente were Republicans,ā Cohen said. āHow the Democrats behaved during this period of dĆ©tente was mixed. There was what used to be called the Henry Jackson wing. This was a very hard-line, ideological wing of the Democratic Party that didnāt believe in dĆ©tente. Some Democrats did. I lived many years in Moscow, both Soviet and post-Soviet times. If you talk to Russian, Soviet policymakers, they generally prefer Republican candidates for the presidency.ā
Democrats are perceived by Russian rulers as more ideological, Cohen said.
āRepublicans tend to be businessmen who want to do business in Russia,ā he said. āThe most important pro-dĆ©tente lobby group, created in the 1970s, was called the American Committee for East-West Accord. It was created by American CEOs who wanted to do business in Soviet Russia.ā
āThe single most important relationship the United States has is with Russia,ā Cohen went on, ānot only because of the nuclear weapons. It remains the largest territorial country in the world. It abuts every region we are concerned about. DĆ©tente with Russiaānot friendship, not partnership, not allianceābut reducing conflict is essential. Yet something happened in 2016.ā
The accusations made repeatedly by James Clapper, the former director of the National Security Agency, and John Brennan, the former director of the Central Intelligence Agency, concerning the Kremlinās supposed control of Trump and Russiaās alleged theft of our elections are deeply disturbing, Cohen said. Clapper and Brennan have described Trump as a Kremlin āasset.ā Brennan called Trumpās performance at a news conference with the Russian president in Finland ānothing short of treasonous.ā
Clapper in his memoir, āFacts and Fears: Hard Truths From a Life in Intelligence,ā claims Putinās interference in the 2016 presidential election on behalf of Trump was āstaggering.ā
āOf course, the Russian efforts affected the outcome,ā writes Clapper. āSurprising even themselves, they swung the election to a Trump win. To conclude otherwise stretches logic, common sense and credulity to the breaking point. Less than eighty thousand votes in three key states swung the election. I have no doubt that more votes than that were influenced by this massive effort by the Russians.ā
Brennan and Clapper have on numerous occasions been caught lying to the public. Brennan, for example, denied, falsely, that the CIA was monitoring the computers that Senate staff members were using to prepare a report on torture. The chairwoman of the Senate Intelligence Committee, Dianne Feinstein, took to the Senate floor to accuse Brennan and the CIA of potentially violating the U.S. Constitution and of criminal activity in its attempts to spy on and thwart her committeeās investigations into the agencyās use of torture. She described the situation as a ādefining momentā for political oversight. Brennan also claimed there was not a āsingle collateral deathā in the drone assassination program, that Osama bin Laden used his wife as a human shield before being gunned down in a U.S. raid in Pakistan, and insisted that torture, or what is euphemistically called āenhanced interrogation,ā has produced valuable intelligence. None of these statements are true.
Clapper, who at the time of the U.S. invasion of Iraq was the head of the National Geospatial-Intelligence Agency, the Pentagon unit responsible for interpreting spy-satellite photos and intelligence such as air particles and soil samples, concocted a story about Saddam Hussein spiriting his nonexistent weapons of mass destruction and the documents that verified his program to Syria on the eve of the invasion. He blatantly committed perjury before the Senate when being questioned about domestic surveillance programs of the American public. He was asked, āDoes the NSA [National Security Agency] collect any type of data at all on millions, or hundreds of millions of Americans?ā Clapper responded, āNo, sir. ⦠Not wittingly.ā It was, as Clapper knew very well, a lie.
Our inability to oversee or control senior intelligence officials and their agencies, which fabricate information to push through agendas embraced by the shadow state, signals the death of democracy. Intelligence officials seemingly empowered to lieāBrennan and Clapper have been among themāominously have in their hands instruments of surveillance, intimidation and coercion that effectively silence their critics, blunt investigations into their activities, even within the government, and make them and their agencies unaccountable.
āWe have the Steele dossier that was spookily floating around American media,ā Cohen said of the report compiled by Christopher Steele.
The report was commissioned by Fusion GPS and paid for by the Hillary Clinton presidential campaign and the Democratic National Committee. Bob Woodward reported that Brennan pushed to include the Steele dossier in the intelligence community assessment of Russian election interference.
āHe [Steele] got it from newspapers,ā Cohen said. āI donāt think he had a single source in Russia. Steele comes forward with this dossier and says, āIāve got information from high-level sources.ā The Clinton campaign is funding this operation. But Steele is very important. Heās a former U.K. intelligence officer, if heās really former, who had served in Russia and ran Russian cases. He says he has this information in the dossier about Trump frolicking with prostitutes. About Trump having been corrupted decades ago. He got it from āhigh-levelā Kremlin sources. This is preposterous. Itās illogical.ā
āThe theory is Putin desperately wanted to make Trump president,ā Cohen said. āYet, guys in the Kremlin, around Putin, were feeding Trump dirt to a guy called Steele. Even though the boss wantsādoes it make any sense to you?ā
āWhy is this important?ā Cohen asked. āRight-wing American media outlets today, in particularly Fox News, are blaming Russia for this whole Russiagate thing. Theyāre saying that Russia provided this false information to Steele, who pumped it into our system, which led to Russiagate. This is untrue.ā
āWho is behind all this? Including the Steele operation?ā Cohen asked. āI prefer a good question to an orthodox answer. Iām not dogmatic. I donāt have the evidence. But all the surface information suggests that this originated with Brennan and the CIA. Long before it hit Americaāmaybe as early as late 2015. One of the problems we have today is everybody is hitting on the FBI. Lovers who sent emails. But the FBI is a squishy organization, nobody is afraid of the FBI. Itās not what it used to be under J. Edgar Hoover. Look at James Comey, for Godās sake. Heās a patsy. Brennan and Clapper played Comey. They dumped this stuff on him. Comey couldnāt even handle Mrs. Clintonās emails. He made a mess of everything. Who were the cunning guys? They were Brennan and Clapper. [Brennan,] the head of the CIA. Clapper, the head of the Office of [the Director of] National Intelligence, who is supposed to oversee these agencies.ā
āIs there any reality to these Russiagate allegations against Trump and Putin?ā he asked. āWas this dreamed up by our intelligence services? Today investigations are being promised, including by the attorney general of the United States. They all want to investigate the FBI. But they need to investigate what Brennan and the CIA did. This is the worst scandal in American history. Itās the worst, at least since the Civil War. We need to know how this began. If our intelligence services are way off the reservation, to the point that they can try to first destroy a presidential candidate and then a president, and I donāt care that itās Trump, it may be Harry Smith next time, or a woman; if they can do this, we need to know it.ā
āThe second Bush left the Anti-Ballistic Missile Treaty in 2002,ā Cohen said. āIt was a very important treaty. It prevented the deployment of missile defense. If anybody got missile defense that worked, they might think they had a first strike [option]. Russia or the United States could strike the other without retaliation. Once Bush left the treaty, we began to deploy missile defense around Russia. It was very dangerous.ā
āThe Russians began a new missile program which we learned about last year,ā he said. Hypersonic missiles. Russia now has nuclear missiles that can evade and elude any missile defense system. We are in a new and more perilous point in a 50-year nuclear arms race. Putin says, āWeāve developed these because of what you did. We can destroy each other.ā Now is the time for a serious, new arms control agreement. What do we get? Russiagate. Russiagate is one of the greatest threats to national security. I have five listed in the book. Russia and China arenāt on there. Russiagate is number one.ā
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