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The Senate Intelligence Committee held its first hearing on Russian interference in the 2016 election today. A panel of foreign policy scholars were invited to provide an analysis of Russia’s international agenda and its disinformation propaganda methods against the West.

The following are the eye-opening testimonies of two experts:


RUSSIAN ACTIVE MEASURES AND INFLUENCE CAMPAIGNS

Eugene B. Rumer Senior Fellow and Director Russia and Eurasia Program Carnegie Endowment for International Peace Testimony before U.S. Senate Select Committee on Intelligence March 30, 2017

Chairman Burr, Vice Chairman Warner, distinguished members of Senate Select Committee on Intelligence! It is a great honor to appear here today. The issue before this panel is Russian active measures and influence campaigns. It rose to the top of our national agenda in 2016, when we became aware of Russian interference in our presidential campaign. It remains one of the most contentious issues in our national conversation, for the very idea that another nation could put at risk the integrity of our country’s most essential institution—the process of electing our president—is hard for us to comprehend.

I would like to state at the outset that based on media reporting, on statements of senior U.S. and other countries’ law enforcement and intelligence officials, and my professional experience as a student of Russian foreign policy, I am convinced that Russian intelligence services, their proxies, and other related actors directly intervened in our election in 2016.

You might ask why I am so confident of this. I have not seen the classified evidence that supports the findings presented in the Intelligence Community Assessment “Assessing Russian Activities and Intentions in Recent US Elections” published by the Office of the Director of National Intelligence on January 6, 2017. Some observers have been critical of that Assessment for not presenting detailed evidence of Russian cyber intrusions or covert activities. They miss the mark—it is the totality of the Russian effort to interfere, mislead, misinform, outright falsify, influence, etc. that is just as, if not more convincing than the cyber evidence of the Russian break in into the Democratic National Committee (DNC) server and other intrusions.

That Russian effort is before us in plain sight—in state-sponsored propaganda broadcasts on RT (Russia Today), in countless internet trolls, fake or distorted news spread by fake news services, in the recent Kremlin get together of Russian president Vladimir Putin with the French far right presidential candidate Marine Le Pen. The list can go on. That effort is also an integral part of Russian foreign policy and domestic politics.

It’s More than the Economy To understand why the Russian government is engaged in this large-scale and diversified influence operation, which blends overt and covert activities, one needs to step back and put it in the context of events of the quarter century since the end of the Cold War. Every country’s foreign policy is a product of its history, its geography, and its politics. Russia is no exception to this rule, and to understand the pattern of Russian behavior at home and abroad, we need to look at Russian history, Russian geography, and Russian domestic politics.

War in Europe is integral to the formative experience of every Russian. The country’s national narrative is impossible without the record of two wars—the Patriotic War of 1812, which Russians view as a war of liberation from Napoleon’s invasion of Russia, and the Great Patriotic War of 1941-1945. Both wars were fought to liberate Patria, the Fatherland, from foreign occupiers. In 1812, Napoleon entered Moscow and the city was burned. In 1941, Hitler’s armies were stopped 2 just outside the city limits of Moscow. Americans, too, had their war of 1812, and Washington too was burned, but few Russians know or remember it, just as they think little of the fighting in the Pacific theater against Japan in the second world war. Stalin’s armies didn’t enter it until nearly the very end, three months after the war in Europe ended.

The end of the Great Patriotic War is celebrated in Russia every year as a great national holiday on May 9. The greatest Russian novel of all times is Leo Tolstoy’s War and Peace, all Russians read it in high school. They are also taught in history classes that their country’s greatest accomplishment of the 20th century was the defeat of fascism in the Great Patriotic War. The war of 1812 ended for Russia when the armies of Tsar Alexander I entered Paris in 1814. The Great Patriotic War ended in 1945 when Stalin’s armies entered Berlin. From 1945 to 1989, when the Berlin Wall came down, Russia was at its most secure, or so successive generations of Russian leaders have been taught to believe. The history and the strategy taught in Russian military academies for decades after it ended were the history and the strategy of the Great Patriotic War.

The map for tabletop exercises at the Military Academy of the General Staff in 2001 was a giant map of the European theater. U.S. strategists were by that time “done” with Europe and shifting their focus from the Balkan edge of the continent to South Asia and the Middle East. Russia was not “done” with Europe. Little appreciated in the West at the time was the trauma suffered by the Russian national security establishment when it lost its outer and inner security buffers—the Warsaw Pact and the Soviet empire. The sense of physical security afforded by this dual buffer between NATO’s armies and the Russian heartland was gone.

Russian declaratory policy may have been to sign on to the 1990 Charter of Paris as the Cold War ended, but the historical legacy and the geography of Russian national security could not be altered with the stroke of a pen. Even as the Communist system was dismantled and the Soviet Union disbanded, Russia’s national security establishment, which had been brought up for generations to think in terms of hard power, could not and did not embrace the new vision of European security based on shared values.

In 1991, with their society in turmoil, their economy in tatters, their military in retreat from the outer and inner empires, and their country literally falling apart, Russian leaders had no choice but to go along with that vision. They also accepted as given that history is written by the victors, and that the victors would also make the rules for the new era. Russia would have to go along with it for as long as it remained weak.

The 1990s were a terrible decade for Russia. Its domestic politics remained in turmoil, its economy limped from one crisis to the next, and its international standing—only recently that of a superpower—collapsed. Western students of Russia were entertaining the prospect of a world without Russia. It was not lost on Russian political elites that the 1990s were also a time of great prosperity and global influence for the West. For them, brought up on the idea of importance of hard power, the dominance of the West was inextricably tied to its victory in the Cold War, the defeat of Russia, its retreat from the world stage, and the expansion of the West in its wake. 3 Russia Is Back But Russia would not remain weak indefinitely.

Its economic recovery after the turn of the century, buoyed by soaring global prices for commodities and hydrocarbons, and its domestic political consolidation around Vladimir Putin and his brand of increasingly authoritarian leadership, so different from the leadership of Boris Yeltsin, have laid the groundwork for a return to Russia’s more assertive posture on the world stage.

That increasingly assertive posture has manifested itself on multiple occasions and in different forms over the past decade and a half—in Vladimir Putin’s speech at the Munich Security Conference in 2007; in the war with Georgia in 2008 and the statement in its aftermath by then president Dmitry Medvedev about Russia’s claim to a sphere of “privileged interests” around its periphery; and finally in the annexation of Crimea in 2014 and the undeclared war in eastern Ukraine to keep Ukraine from slipping from Russia’s orbit.

For the West, Russia’s return to the world stage has been nothing more than pure revanchism. It violates the basic, core principles of the post-Cold War European security architecture—which Russia pledged to observe over a quarter-century ago. For Russia, it is restoring a balance—not the old balance, but some semblance of it. Currently, NATO troops are deployed to deter Russian aggression against Estonia. (Curiously, former speaker of the House Newt Gingrich has described it as the “suburbs of St. Petersburg.”) Russia’s security establishment views this commitment by NATO countries to its vulnerable ally as a threat to the heartland.

The narrative of restoring the balance, correcting the injustice and the distortions of the 1990s, when the West took advantage of Russia’s weakness, has been the essential element of Russian state-sponsored propaganda since the beginning of the Putin era. Whether or not we choose to accept this narrative, these beliefs undergird Russia’s comeback on the world stage and political consolidation at home.

In public and private, top Russian officials proclaim that the wars in Georgia and Ukraine were fought to prevent Western encroachment on territories vital to Russian security. The military deployment in Syria merely restores Russia’s traditional foothold in the Middle East, from which Russia withdrew when it was weak, and where it was replaced by the West with consequences that have been tragic for the entire region.

In domestic politics, Putin’s authoritarian restoration is treated by the majority of average and elite members of Russian society as the return to the country’s traditional political health, free from foreign interference in its political and economic life. The more pluralistic system and dramatic decline of the 1990s are linked in this narrative to the influence of the United States and other foreign interests in Russia’s economy and politics, to their desire to introduce alien values in Russia’s political culture and take Russia’s oil. U.S. support for Russian civil society is an effort to undermine the Russian state, to bring Russia back to its knees, and take advantage of it, both at home and abroad.

Western economic sanctions imposed on Russia in the wake of its annexation of Crimea and the undeclared war in eastern Ukraine are a form of warfare designed to weaken Russia and gain unfair advantage over it. Western support for democracy in countries around Russia’s periphery is an effort to encircle it and weaken it too. This narrative has dominated the airwaves inside Russia, where the Kremlin controls the television, which is the principal medium that delivers news to most Russians.

With independent media in retreat and alternative sources of information marginalized, this narrative has struck a responsive chord with many Russians. The narrative has been effective because it contains an element of truth—Russia did implode in the 1990s, and the West prospered; Russia did recover from its troubles and regained a measure of its global standing on Putin’s watch; the West did promote democracy in Russia, which coincided with its time of troubles; and the West has been critical of the Russian government’s retreat from democracy as Russia regained strength.

Moreover, foreign policy traditionally was and is the preserve of the country’s political elite and its small national security establishment. Whereas there are some voices inside Russia who, like the leading anti-corruption activist Alexei Navalny, have challenged the many domestic failings and authoritarian leanings of the Putin government, there are hardly any who have challenged its foreign policy record.

Worse yet, the Kremlin propaganda has been apparently so effective, and the legal constraints imposed by it so severe, that few Russian opposition voices dare to challenge the government’s foreign policy course for fear of being branded as foreign agents, enemies of the people, and fifth columnists. Warfare by Other Means For all the talk about Russian recovery and resurgence on the world stage, its capabilities should not be overestimated. Its GDP is about $1.3 trillion vs. U.S. GDP of over $18 trillion. The Russian economy is not “in shambles,” but in the words of a leading Russian government economist it is doomed to “eternal stagnation” unless the government undertakes major new reforms.

Russian defense expenditures are estimated at about $65 billion, or little more than President Trump’s proposed increase in U.S. defense spending for FY 2018. The Russian military is estimated at just over 750,000—well short of its authorized strength of one million—vs. U.S. 1.4 million active duty military personnel. By all accounts, the Russian military has made huge strides in the past decade, benefiting from farreaching reforms and generous defense spending.

It is undeniably far superior militarily to its smaller, weaker neighbors and enjoys considerable geographic advantages in theaters around its periphery. Yet, the overall military balance does not favor Russia when it is compared to the United States and its NATO allies. They have bigger economies, spend more on defense, have bigger, better equipped militaries, and are more technologically sophisticated. A NATO-Russia war would be an act of mutual suicide, and the Kremlin is not ready for it.

Its campaign against the West has to be prosecuted by other means. That is the backdrop for the subject of today’s hearings. Since Russia cannot compete toe-to-toe with the West, its leaders have embraced a wide range of tools—information warfare in all its forms, including subversion, deception, dis- and mis-information, intimidation, espionage, economic tools, including sanctions, bribery, selective favorable trading regimes, influence campaigns, etc.

This toolkit has deep historical roots in the Soviet era and performs the function of the equalizer that in the eyes of the Kremlin is intended to make up for Russia’s weakness vis-à- vis the West. In employing this toolkit, the Kremlin has a number of important advantages. There is no domestic audience before which it has to account for its actions abroad. The Kremlin has few, if any external restraints in employing it, and its decisionmaking mechanism is streamlined. There is no legislature to report to, for the Duma is a rubber stamp body eager to sign off on any Kremlin foreign policy initiative.

The circle of deciders is far smaller than the Soviet-era Politburo, and it is limited to a handful of Putin associates with similar worldviews and backgrounds. They are determined to carry on an adversarial relationship with the West. They can make decisions quickly and have considerable resources at their disposal, especially given the relatively inexpensive nature of most of the tools they rely on. A handful of cyber criminals cost a lot less than an armored brigade and can cause a great deal more damage with much smaller risks.

Shame and reputational risks do not appear to be a factor in Russian decision-making. In early- 2016, Russian Foreign Minister Sergei Lavrov did not shy away from repeating a patently false fake media story about the rape of a Russian-German girl by a Syrian asylum-seeker in Germany. Moreover, a version of selective naming and shaming—or targeting of political adversaries with false allegations of misconduct—has been used by Russian propaganda to discredit political adversaries in the West.

Russian propaganda, and Putin personally, have sought to deflect the attention from the fact of the intrusion into the DNC server and the top leadership of Hillary Clinton’s presidential campaign to the information released as a result of it that has presented various political operatives in an unfavorable light. This not only deflects the attention from Russia’s role in this episode, it helps the Kremlin convey an important message to its domestic audience about the corrupt nature of U.S. politics.

Russia therefore is no worse than the United States, which has no right to complain about corruption and democracy deficit in Russia. Russian meddling in the 2016 U.S. presidential election is likely to be seen by the Kremlin as a major success regardless of whether its initial goal was to help advance the Trump candidacy.

The payoff includes, but is not limited to a major political disruption in the United States, which has been distracted from many strategic pursuits; the standing of the United States and its leadership in the world have been damaged; it has become a common theme in the narrative of many leading commentators that from the pillar of stability of the international liberal order the United States has been transformed into its biggest source of instability; U.S. commitments to key allies in Europe and Asia have been questioned on both sides of the Atlantic and the Pacific.

And last, but 6 not least, the Kremlin has demonstrated what it can do to the world’s sole remaining global superpower. It Is Not a Crisis, It Is the New Normal Events of the past three years, since the annexation of Crimea by Russia, have been referred to as a crisis in relations between Russia and the West. However, this is no longer a crisis. The differences between Russia and the West are profound and are highly unlikely to be resolved in the foreseeable future without one or the other side capitulating.

The U.S.-Russian relationship is fundamentally broken, and this situation should be treated as the new normal rather than an exceptional period in our relations. For the foreseeable future our relationship is likely to remain competitive and, at times, adversarial.

The full extent of Russian meddling in the 2016 presidential election is not yet publicly known. But the melding of various tools (e.g, the use of cyber operations to collect certain information covertly) and the provision of this information to outlets such as Wikileaks and the news media was certainly a first.

Unfortunately, it is not a first for U.S. allies and partners in Europe and Eurasia. It is not the last either. Just a few days ago, Vladimir Putin received France’s right-wing presidential candidate Marine Le Pen in the Kremlin. Previously, her National Front had received a loan from a Moscow-based bank, and Russian media outlets have tried to injure the reputation of her chief opponent Emmanuel Macron by spreading rumors about his sexuality and ties to financial institutions.

The chiefs of British and German intelligence services have warned publicly about the threat from Russia to their countries’ democratic processes. The Netherlands recently chose to forego reliance on certain computer vote tabulation systems due to elevated fears of Russian interference and hacking.

The experience of Russian meddling in the 2016 U.S. election should be judged an unqualified success for the Kremlin. It has cost it little and paid off in more ways than can be easily counted. To be sure, U.S. officials should expect it to be repeated again and again in the future. 2016 was a crisis, but it was not an aberration and should be treated as the new normal. Cyber is merely a new domain. Deception and active measures in all their incarnations have long been and will remain a staple of Russia’s dealings with the outside world for the foreseeable future. Link
 
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Trump, Ryan Both Hit Record Low Approval

PPP's newest national poll finds Donald Trump's approval rating falling to its lowest level yet in our polling. Only 40% of voters approve of the job he's doing, to 53% who disapprove.

Health Care:

The upshot of last week's health care debate is that the Affordable Care Act is now the most popular it's ever been in our polling, with 52% of voters approving of it to only 37% who disapprove. By contrast there is only 23% support for the American Health Care Act, with 56% of voters in opposition to it. Asked which of the two plans voters prefer, the Affordable Care Act wins out by 21 points at 49-28. At this point just 32% of voters think the best path forward on health care is to repeal the ACA, with 62% saying they'd rather keep it and fix whatever needs to be fixed in it.

Donald Trump blamed the failure of the AHCA last week on Congressional Democrats, but voters aren't buying that. Just 31% think Democrats are responsible for the bill's failure, to 52% who pin the blame on Congressional Republicans. Trump may be losing out to Democrats on this issue, but he's coming out ahead on the health care blame game within his own party. Overall voters blame Paul Ryan more than Trump for the failure of the AHCA, 42/33. But specifically among GOP voters, 54% blame Ryan to only 13% who pin the blame on Trump.

This issue has made Paul Ryan into the most unpopular politician in the country. At the start of the Trump administration he had a 33% approval rating, with 43% of voters disapproving of him. Now his approval has plunged to 21%, with his disapproval spiking all the way up to 61%. Ryan's particularly seen his image crater with Trump voters- what was a 53/23 approval rating with them in mid-January is now negative at 35/41.

Congress as a whole isn't doing too well in the wake of the health care discussion, with its approval rating as a body standing at 11%, with 68% of voters disapproving of it. Mitch McConnell has a 19% approval rating, with 54% of voters disapproving of him but for the first time ever that at least gives him a better net approval rating than Ryan has. Democrats lead the generic Congressional ballot 48-43 at this early point in the cycle.


Russia:


Our new poll gives a clear picture of just how damaging continued revelations about Russia could be to Donald Trump's political standing. As it stands a plurality of voters- 44%- think Trump's campaign team worked in association with Russia to help Trump win the election for President. 42% don't think it did, and another 14% are unsure. We find that if evidence comes out that proves conclusively that members of Trump's campaign team worked in association with Russia to help him win the election, 53% of voters think he should resign to only 39% who believe he should continue to serve as President. Already 44% of voters support impeaching Trump to 45% who are opposed to impeachment, and these numbers suggest that more Russia revelations could very well lead to majority support for impeachment.

Voters are taking the issue pretty seriously. 62% support an independent investigation into Russia's involvement with the election, to only 28% who are opposed. That's an outgrowth of 60% of voters believing that Russia wanted Trump to win the election last year, to 22% who think it wanted Hillary Clinton win. (Although among Trump voters, 41% say Russia wanted Clinton to win to only 26% who say it wanted Trump to win.) Just 39% of voters consider the Russia story to be 'fake news,' to 48% who say it's not. And as we've consistently found in our polling both Russia as a whole (13/64 favorability) and Vladimir Putin specifically (9/72 favorability) are very unpopular.

2020:

We took an early look ahead to 2020 and how Trump would match up right now against some hypothetical Democratic opponents for reelection. He trails Joe Biden 54/40, Bernie Sanders 52/41, Elizabeth Warren 48/43, Al Franken 46/41, and Cory Booker 45/42 in head to head match ups. Biden (56/33 favorability) and Sanders (53/36) are among the most popular political figures in the country. Voters are more divided on Warren (42/39) and Franken (34/34). Booker is not as well known nationally as the rest of this group yet, coming in at 27/24.

Other Notes:

-Voters continue to have a lot of the same transparency concerns about Trump that they've had ever since he took office. 61% think he should release his tax returns, to just 33% who don't think it's necessary for him to. On a related note 58% of voters would support a law requiring that a candidate for President release 5 years of tax returns in order to appear on the ballot, to 33% opposed to that. Additionally, 64% of voters think Trump should fully divest himself from his business interests, to only 30% who don't think he should.

-Trump continues to come out on the wrong side when it comes to who voters trust more between him and the media outlets he's attacked most recently. By a 54/39 spread voters say NBC has more credibility than Trump, 53/38 they say ABC has more credibility than Trump, and 53/39 they say CNN has more credibility than Trump.

-Voters continue to be uninterested in paying for the wall with Mexico. Only 37% support it if American taxpayers have to front the cost for it, to 55% who are opposed to the wall in that case.

-Only 30% of voters think Barack Obama tapped Trump's phone during the election last year, to 59% who don't think Trump did that. Among Trump voters though, 62% think Obama did tap Trump's phone to 18% who don't believe he did. When it comes to their conflicting sides of the story, voters say they trust Obama more than Trump 53/42. That's an outgrowth of general trust issues Trump is facing with voters though- only 39% consider him to be honest compared to 55% who say he's dishonest. And in fact 50% of voters come right out and say they think Trump is a liar, compared to 44% who disagree with that characterization.


http://www.publicpolicypolling.com/main/2017/03/trump-ryan-both-hit-record-low-approval.html
 
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The Senate Intelligence Committee held its first hearing on Russian interference in the 2016 election today. A panel of foreign policy scholars were invited to provide an analysis of Russia’s international agenda and its disinformation propaganda methods against the West.

The following are the eye-opening testimonies of two experts:


RUSSIAN ACTIVE MEASURES AND INFLUENCE CAMPAIGNS

Eugene B. Rumer Senior Fellow and Director Russia and Eurasia Program Carnegie Endowment for International Peace Testimony before U.S. Senate Select Committee on Intelligence March 30, 2017

Chairman Burr, Vice Chairman Warner, distinguished members of Senate Select Committee on Intelligence! It is a great honor to appear here today. The issue before this panel is Russian active measures and influence campaigns. It rose to the top of our national agenda in 2016, when we became aware of Russian interference in our presidential campaign. It remains one of the most contentious issues in our national conversation, for the very idea that another nation could put at risk the integrity of our country’s most essential institution—the process of electing our president—is hard for us to comprehend.

I would like to state at the outset that based on media reporting, on statements of senior U.S. and other countries’ law enforcement and intelligence officials, and my professional experience as a student of Russian foreign policy, I am convinced that Russian intelligence services, their proxies, and other related actors directly intervened in our election in 2016.

You might ask why I am so confident of this. I have not seen the classified evidence that supports the findings presented in the Intelligence Community Assessment “Assessing Russian Activities and Intentions in Recent US Elections” published by the Office of the Director of National Intelligence on January 6, 2017. Some observers have been critical of that Assessment for not presenting detailed evidence of Russian cyber intrusions or covert activities. They miss the mark—it is the totality of the Russian effort to interfere, mislead, misinform, outright falsify, influence, etc. that is just as, if not more convincing than the cyber evidence of the Russian break in into the Democratic National Committee (DNC) server and other intrusions.

That Russian effort is before us in plain sight—in state-sponsored propaganda broadcasts on RT (Russia Today), in countless internet trolls, fake or distorted news spread by fake news services, in the recent Kremlin get together of Russian president Vladimir Putin with the French far right presidential candidate Marine Le Pen. The list can go on. That effort is also an integral part of Russian foreign policy and domestic politics.

It’s More than the Economy To understand why the Russian government is engaged in this large-scale and diversified influence operation, which blends overt and covert activities, one needs to step back and put it in the context of events of the quarter century since the end of the Cold War. Every country’s foreign policy is a product of its history, its geography, and its politics. Russia is no exception to this rule, and to understand the pattern of Russian behavior at home and abroad, we need to look at Russian history, Russian geography, and Russian domestic politics.

War in Europe is integral to the formative experience of every Russian. The country’s national narrative is impossible without the record of two wars—the Patriotic War of 1812, which Russians view as a war of liberation from Napoleon’s invasion of Russia, and the Great Patriotic War of 1941-1945. Both wars were fought to liberate Patria, the Fatherland, from foreign occupiers. In 1812, Napoleon entered Moscow and the city was burned. In 1941, Hitler’s armies were stopped 2 just outside the city limits of Moscow. Americans, too, had their war of 1812, and Washington too was burned, but few Russians know or remember it, just as they think little of the fighting in the Pacific theater against Japan in the second world war. Stalin’s armies didn’t enter it until nearly the very end, three months after the war in Europe ended.

The end of the Great Patriotic War is celebrated in Russia every year as a great national holiday on May 9. The greatest Russian novel of all times is Leo Tolstoy’s War and Peace, all Russians read it in high school. They are also taught in history classes that their country’s greatest accomplishment of the 20th century was the defeat of fascism in the Great Patriotic War. The war of 1812 ended for Russia when the armies of Tsar Alexander I entered Paris in 1814. The Great Patriotic War ended in 1945 when Stalin’s armies entered Berlin. From 1945 to 1989, when the Berlin Wall came down, Russia was at its most secure, or so successive generations of Russian leaders have been taught to believe. The history and the strategy taught in Russian military academies for decades after it ended were the history and the strategy of the Great Patriotic War.

The map for tabletop exercises at the Military Academy of the General Staff in 2001 was a giant map of the European theater. U.S. strategists were by that time “done” with Europe and shifting their focus from the Balkan edge of the continent to South Asia and the Middle East. Russia was not “done” with Europe. Little appreciated in the West at the time was the trauma suffered by the Russian national security establishment when it lost its outer and inner security buffers—the Warsaw Pact and the Soviet empire. The sense of physical security afforded by this dual buffer between NATO’s armies and the Russian heartland was gone.

Russian declaratory policy may have been to sign on to the 1990 Charter of Paris as the Cold War ended, but the historical legacy and the geography of Russian national security could not be altered with the stroke of a pen. Even as the Communist system was dismantled and the Soviet Union disbanded, Russia’s national security establishment, which had been brought up for generations to think in terms of hard power, could not and did not embrace the new vision of European security based on shared values.

In 1991, with their society in turmoil, their economy in tatters, their military in retreat from the outer and inner empires, and their country literally falling apart, Russian leaders had no choice but to go along with that vision. They also accepted as given that history is written by the victors, and that the victors would also make the rules for the new era. Russia would have to go along with it for as long as it remained weak.

The 1990s were a terrible decade for Russia. Its domestic politics remained in turmoil, its economy limped from one crisis to the next, and its international standing—only recently that of a superpower—collapsed. Western students of Russia were entertaining the prospect of a world without Russia. It was not lost on Russian political elites that the 1990s were also a time of great prosperity and global influence for the West. For them, brought up on the idea of importance of hard power, the dominance of the West was inextricably tied to its victory in the Cold War, the defeat of Russia, its retreat from the world stage, and the expansion of the West in its wake. 3 Russia Is Back But Russia would not remain weak indefinitely.

Its economic recovery after the turn of the century, buoyed by soaring global prices for commodities and hydrocarbons, and its domestic political consolidation around Vladimir Putin and his brand of increasingly authoritarian leadership, so different from the leadership of Boris Yeltsin, have laid the groundwork for a return to Russia’s more assertive posture on the world stage.

That increasingly assertive posture has manifested itself on multiple occasions and in different forms over the past decade and a half—in Vladimir Putin’s speech at the Munich Security Conference in 2007; in the war with Georgia in 2008 and the statement in its aftermath by then president Dmitry Medvedev about Russia’s claim to a sphere of “privileged interests” around its periphery; and finally in the annexation of Crimea in 2014 and the undeclared war in eastern Ukraine to keep Ukraine from slipping from Russia’s orbit.

For the West, Russia’s return to the world stage has been nothing more than pure revanchism. It violates the basic, core principles of the post-Cold War European security architecture—which Russia pledged to observe over a quarter-century ago. For Russia, it is restoring a balance—not the old balance, but some semblance of it. Currently, NATO troops are deployed to deter Russian aggression against Estonia. (Curiously, former speaker of the House Newt Gingrich has described it as the “suburbs of St. Petersburg.”) Russia’s security establishment views this commitment by NATO countries to its vulnerable ally as a threat to the heartland.

The narrative of restoring the balance, correcting the injustice and the distortions of the 1990s, when the West took advantage of Russia’s weakness, has been the essential element of Russian state-sponsored propaganda since the beginning of the Putin era. Whether or not we choose to accept this narrative, these beliefs undergird Russia’s comeback on the world stage and political consolidation at home.

In public and private, top Russian officials proclaim that the wars in Georgia and Ukraine were fought to prevent Western encroachment on territories vital to Russian security. The military deployment in Syria merely restores Russia’s traditional foothold in the Middle East, from which Russia withdrew when it was weak, and where it was replaced by the West with consequences that have been tragic for the entire region.

In domestic politics, Putin’s authoritarian restoration is treated by the majority of average and elite members of Russian society as the return to the country’s traditional political health, free from foreign interference in its political and economic life. The more pluralistic system and dramatic decline of the 1990s are linked in this narrative to the influence of the United States and other foreign interests in Russia’s economy and politics, to their desire to introduce alien values in Russia’s political culture and take Russia’s oil. U.S. support for Russian civil society is an effort to undermine the Russian state, to bring Russia back to its knees, and take advantage of it, both at home and abroad.

Western economic sanctions imposed on Russia in the wake of its annexation of Crimea and the undeclared war in eastern Ukraine are a form of warfare designed to weaken Russia and gain unfair advantage over it. Western support for democracy in countries around Russia’s periphery is an effort to encircle it and weaken it too. This narrative has dominated the airwaves inside Russia, where the Kremlin controls the television, which is the principal medium that delivers news to most Russians.

With independent media in retreat and alternative sources of information marginalized, this narrative has struck a responsive chord with many Russians. The narrative has been effective because it contains an element of truth—Russia did implode in the 1990s, and the West prospered; Russia did recover from its troubles and regained a measure of its global standing on Putin’s watch; the West did promote democracy in Russia, which coincided with its time of troubles; and the West has been critical of the Russian government’s retreat from democracy as Russia regained strength.

Moreover, foreign policy traditionally was and is the preserve of the country’s political elite and its small national security establishment. Whereas there are some voices inside Russia who, like the leading anti-corruption activist Alexei Navalny, have challenged the many domestic failings and authoritarian leanings of the Putin government, there are hardly any who have challenged its foreign policy record.

Worse yet, the Kremlin propaganda has been apparently so effective, and the legal constraints imposed by it so severe, that few Russian opposition voices dare to challenge the government’s foreign policy course for fear of being branded as foreign agents, enemies of the people, and fifth columnists. Warfare by Other Means For all the talk about Russian recovery and resurgence on the world stage, its capabilities should not be overestimated. Its GDP is about $1.3 trillion vs. U.S. GDP of over $18 trillion. The Russian economy is not “in shambles,” but in the words of a leading Russian government economist it is doomed to “eternal stagnation” unless the government undertakes major new reforms.

Russian defense expenditures are estimated at about $65 billion, or little more than President Trump’s proposed increase in U.S. defense spending for FY 2018. The Russian military is estimated at just over 750,000—well short of its authorized strength of one million—vs. U.S. 1.4 million active duty military personnel. By all accounts, the Russian military has made huge strides in the past decade, benefiting from farreaching reforms and generous defense spending.

It is undeniably far superior militarily to its smaller, weaker neighbors and enjoys considerable geographic advantages in theaters around its periphery. Yet, the overall military balance does not favor Russia when it is compared to the United States and its NATO allies. They have bigger economies, spend more on defense, have bigger, better equipped militaries, and are more technologically sophisticated. A NATO-Russia war would be an act of mutual suicide, and the Kremlin is not ready for it.

Its campaign against the West has to be prosecuted by other means. That is the backdrop for the subject of today’s hearings. Since Russia cannot compete toe-to-toe with the West, its leaders have embraced a wide range of tools—information warfare in all its forms, including subversion, deception, dis- and mis-information, intimidation, espionage, economic tools, including sanctions, bribery, selective favorable trading regimes, influence campaigns, etc.

This toolkit has deep historical roots in the Soviet era and performs the function of the equalizer that in the eyes of the Kremlin is intended to make up for Russia’s weakness vis-à- vis the West. In employing this toolkit, the Kremlin has a number of important advantages. There is no domestic audience before which it has to account for its actions abroad. The Kremlin has few, if any external restraints in employing it, and its decisionmaking mechanism is streamlined. There is no legislature to report to, for the Duma is a rubber stamp body eager to sign off on any Kremlin foreign policy initiative.

The circle of deciders is far smaller than the Soviet-era Politburo, and it is limited to a handful of Putin associates with similar worldviews and backgrounds. They are determined to carry on an adversarial relationship with the West. They can make decisions quickly and have considerable resources at their disposal, especially given the relatively inexpensive nature of most of the tools they rely on. A handful of cyber criminals cost a lot less than an armored brigade and can cause a great deal more damage with much smaller risks.

Shame and reputational risks do not appear to be a factor in Russian decision-making. In early- 2016, Russian Foreign Minister Sergei Lavrov did not shy away from repeating a patently false fake media story about the rape of a Russian-German girl by a Syrian asylum-seeker in Germany. Moreover, a version of selective naming and shaming—or targeting of political adversaries with false allegations of misconduct—has been used by Russian propaganda to discredit political adversaries in the West.

Russian propaganda, and Putin personally, have sought to deflect the attention from the fact of the intrusion into the DNC server and the top leadership of Hillary Clinton’s presidential campaign to the information released as a result of it that has presented various political operatives in an unfavorable light. This not only deflects the attention from Russia’s role in this episode, it helps the Kremlin convey an important message to its domestic audience about the corrupt nature of U.S. politics.

Russia therefore is no worse than the United States, which has no right to complain about corruption and democracy deficit in Russia. Russian meddling in the 2016 U.S. presidential election is likely to be seen by the Kremlin as a major success regardless of whether its initial goal was to help advance the Trump candidacy.

The payoff includes, but is not limited to a major political disruption in the United States, which has been distracted from many strategic pursuits; the standing of the United States and its leadership in the world have been damaged; it has become a common theme in the narrative of many leading commentators that from the pillar of stability of the international liberal order the United States has been transformed into its biggest source of instability; U.S. commitments to key allies in Europe and Asia have been questioned on both sides of the Atlantic and the Pacific.

And last, but 6 not least, the Kremlin has demonstrated what it can do to the world’s sole remaining global superpower. It Is Not a Crisis, It Is the New Normal Events of the past three years, since the annexation of Crimea by Russia, have been referred to as a crisis in relations between Russia and the West. However, this is no longer a crisis. The differences between Russia and the West are profound and are highly unlikely to be resolved in the foreseeable future without one or the other side capitulating.

The U.S.-Russian relationship is fundamentally broken, and this situation should be treated as the new normal rather than an exceptional period in our relations. For the foreseeable future our relationship is likely to remain competitive and, at times, adversarial.

The full extent of Russian meddling in the 2016 presidential election is not yet publicly known. But the melding of various tools (e.g, the use of cyber operations to collect certain information covertly) and the provision of this information to outlets such as Wikileaks and the news media was certainly a first.

Unfortunately, it is not a first for U.S. allies and partners in Europe and Eurasia. It is not the last either. Just a few days ago, Vladimir Putin received France’s right-wing presidential candidate Marine Le Pen in the Kremlin. Previously, her National Front had received a loan from a Moscow-based bank, and Russian media outlets have tried to injure the reputation of her chief opponent Emmanuel Macron by spreading rumors about his sexuality and ties to financial institutions.

The chiefs of British and German intelligence services have warned publicly about the threat from Russia to their countries’ democratic processes. The Netherlands recently chose to forego reliance on certain computer vote tabulation systems due to elevated fears of Russian interference and hacking.

The experience of Russian meddling in the 2016 U.S. election should be judged an unqualified success for the Kremlin. It has cost it little and paid off in more ways than can be easily counted. To be sure, U.S. officials should expect it to be repeated again and again in the future. 2016 was a crisis, but it was not an aberration and should be treated as the new normal. Cyber is merely a new domain. Deception and active measures in all their incarnations have long been and will remain a staple of Russia’s dealings with the outside world for the foreseeable future. Link
Every American should read this. Mr. Clint Watts testified at the Senate intelligence committee’s hearing:

Clint Watts
• Robert A. Fox Fellow, Foreign Policy Research Institute • Senior Fellow, Center for Cyber and Homeland Security, the George Washington University Statement Prepared for the U.S. Senate Select Committee on Intelligence hearing: “Disinformation: A Primer In Russian Active Measures And Influence Campaigns” 30 March 2017 On 26 October 2015, I authored a post at the Foreign Policy Research Institute (FPRI) entitled “Russia Returns As Al Qaeda And The Islamic State’s Far Enemy” noting: “The Russians have used social media driven information campaigns to discredit the U.S. for years. Facebook and Twitter remain littered with pro-Russian, Western looking accounts and supporting automated bots designed to undermine the credibility of the U.S. government.”1 Just a few weeks later in November 2015, the FBI visited FPRI notifying their leadership that I had been targeted by a cyber attack. The FBI didn’t say who exactly had targeted me, but I had a good idea who it might be. In the eighteen months prior to the above quote and in the three years leading up to today, two colleagues and I watched and tracked the rise of Russia’s social media influence operations witnessing their update of an old Soviet playbook known as Active Measures.

For me, I began watching these influence operations in January 2014 after I co-authored an article in Foreign Affairs entitled “The Good and The Bad of Ahrar al Sham.” Hecklers appearing to be English-speaking Europeans and Americans trolled me for my stance on Syrian President Bashar Assad. But these social media accounts, they didn’t look right - their aggression, persistence, biographies, speech patterns and synchronization were unnatural. I wasn’t the only one who noticed this pattern. Andrew Weisburd and J.M. Berger, the two best social media analysts I’d worked with in counterterrorism, noticed similar patterns around the troll discussions of Syria, Assad, al Qaeda and the Islamic State.

Shortly after, in March 2014, we noticed a petition on the WhiteHouse.gov website. “Alaska Back To Russia” appeared as a public campaign to give America’s largest state back to the nation from which it was purchased. 3 Satirical or nonsensical petitions appearing on the White House website are not out of the norm. This petition was different though, having gained more than 39,000 online signatures in a short time period. Our examination of those signing and posting on this petition revealed an odd pattern – the accounts varied considerably from other petitions and appeared to be the work of automated bots. These bots tied in closely with other social media campaigns we had observed pushing Russian propaganda.

Through the summer and fall of 2014, we studied these pro-Russia accounts and automated bots. Hackers proliferated the networks and could be spotted amongst recent data breaches and website defacements. Closely circling them were honeypot accounts, attractive looking women or passionate political partisans, which appeared to be befriending certain audience members through social engineering. Above all, we observed hecklers, synchronized trolling accounts that would attack political targets using similar talking points and follower patterns. These accounts, some of which overtly supported the Kremlin, promoted Russian foreign policy positions targeting key English speaking audiences throughout Europe and North America. From this pattern, we realized we were observing a deliberate, well organized, well resourced, well funded, wide ranging effort commanded by only one possible adversary – Russia.

Active Measures: Everything Old Is New Again

Soviet Active Measures strategy and tactics have been reborn and updated for the modern Russian regime and the digital age. Today, Russia seeks to win the second Cold War through “the force of politics as opposed to the politics of force”. As compared to the analog information wars of the first Cold War, the Internet and social media provide Russia cheap, efficient and highly effective access to foreign audiences with plausible deniability of their influence.

Russia’s new and improved online Active Measures shifted aggressively toward U.S. audiences in late 2014 and throughout 2015. They launched divisive messages on nearly any disaffected U.S. audience. Whether it be claims of the U.S. military declaring martial law during the Jade Helm exercise , chaos amongst Black Lives matter protests or tensions in the Bundy Ranch standoff in Oregon7 , Russia’s state sponsored outlets of RT and Sputnik News, characterized as “white” influence efforts in information warfare, churned out manipulated truths, false news stories and conspiracies. Four general themes outlined these propaganda messages:

• Political Messages – Designed to tarnish democratic leaders and undermine democratic institutions

• Financial Propaganda – Created to weaken confidence in financial markets, capitalist economies and Western companies

• Social Unrest – Crafted to amplify divisions amongst democratic populaces to undermine citizen trust and the fabric of society

• Global Calamity – Pushed to incite fear of global demise such as nuclear war or catastrophic climate change


From these overt Russian propaganda outlets, a wide range of English language conspiratorial websites (“gray” outlets), some of which mysteriously operate from Eastern Europe and are curiously led by pro-Russian editors of unknown financing, sensationalize conspiracies and fake news published by white outlets further amplifying their reach in American audiences. American looking social media accounts, the hecklers, honeypots and hackers described above, working alongside automated bots further amplify and disseminate Russian propaganda amongst unwitting Westerners. These covert, “black” operations influence target audience opinions with regards to Russia and undermine confidence in Western elected leaders, public officials, mainstream media personalities, academic experts and democracy itself.

Through the end of 2015 and start of 2016, the Russian influence system outlined above began pushing themes and messages seeking to influence the outcome of the U.S. Presidential election. Russia’s overt media outlets and covert trolls sought to sideline opponents on both sides of the political spectrum with adversarial views toward the Kremlin. The final months leading up to the election have been the predominate focus of Russian influence discussions to date. However, Russian Active Measures were in full swing during both the Republican and Democratic primary season and may have helped sink the hopes of candidates more hostile to Russian interests long before the field narrowed.

The final piece of Russia’s modern Active Measures surfaced in the summer of 2016 as hacked materials from previous months were strategically leaked. On 22 July 2016, Wikileaks released troves of stolen communications from the Democratic National Committee and later batches of campaign emails. Guccifer 2.0 and DC Leaks revealed hacked information from a host of former U.S. government officials throughout July and August 2016. For the remainder of the campaign season, this compromising material powered the influence system Russia successfully constructed in the previous two years.

On the evening of 30 July 2016, my colleagues and I watched as RT and Sputnik News simultaneously launched false stories of the U.S. airbase at Incirlik being overrun by terrorists. Within minutes, pro-Russian social media aggregators and automated bots amplified this false news story and expanded conspiracies asserting American nuclear missiles at the base would be lost to extremists. More than 4,000 tweets in the first 78 minutes after launching of this false story linked back to the Active Measures accounts we’d tracked in the previous two years. These previously identified accounts, almost simultaneously appearing from different geographic locations and communities, amplified this fake news story in unison. The hashtags incrementally pushed by these automated accounts were #Nuclear, #Media, #Trump and #Benghazi. The most common words found in English speaking Twitter user profiles were: God, Military, Trump, Family, Country, Conservative, Christian, America, and Constitution. These accounts and their messages clearly sought to convince Americans a U.S. military base was being overrun in a terrorist attack like the 2012 assault on a U.S. installation in Benghazi, Libya. 8 In reality, a small protest gathered outside the Incirlik gate and the increased security at the airbase sought to secure the arrival of the U.S. Chairman of the Joint Chiefs of Staff the following day.

This pattern of Russian falsehoods and social media manipulation of the American electorate continued through Election Day and persists today. Many of the accounts we watched push the false Incirlik story in July now focus their efforts on shaping the upcoming European elections, promoting fears of immigration or false claims of refugee criminality. They’ve not forgotten about the United States either. This past week, we observed social media campaigns targeting Speaker of the House Paul Ryan hoping to foment further unrest amongst U.S. democratic institutions, their leaders and their constituents.

As we noted two days before the Presidential election in our article describing Russian influence operations, Russia certainly seeks to promote Western candidates sympathetic to their worldview and foreign policy objectives. But winning a single election is not their end goal. Russian Active Measures hope to topple democracies through the pursuit of five complementary objectives:

• Undermine citizen confidence in democratic governance • Foment and exacerbate divisive political fractures

• Erode trust between citizens and elected officials and democratic institutions

• Popularize Russian policy agendas within foreign populations

• Create general distrust or confusion over information sources by blurring the lines between fact and fiction


From these objectives, the Kremlin can crumble democracies from the inside out creating political divisions resulting in two key milestones: 1) the dissolution of the European Union and 2) the break up of the North American Treaty Organization (NATO). Achieving these two victories against the West will allow Russia to reassert its power globally and pursue its foreign policy objectives bilaterally through military, diplomatic and economic aggression. Russia’s undeterred annexation of Crimea, conflict in Ukraine and military deployment in Syria provide recent examples.

Why did Soviet Active Measures fail during the Cold War but succeed for Russia today?

Russia’s Active Measures today work far better than that of their Soviet forefathers. During the Cold War, the KGB had to infiltrate the West, recruit agents and promote communist parties and their propaganda while under watch by Western counterintelligence efforts. Should they be too aggressive, Soviet spies conducting Active Measures amongst U.S. domestic groups could potentially trigger armed conflict or would be detained and deported.

Social media provides Russia’s new Active Measures access to U.S. audiences without setting foot in the country, and the Kremlin smartly uses these platforms in seven ways to win Western elections.
First, Russia chooses close democratic contests where a slight nudge can usher in their preferred candidate or desired outcome.

Second, Russia targets specific audiences inside electorates amenable to their messages and resulting influence – in particular alt-right audiences incensed over immigration, refugees and economic hardship.

Third, Russia plans and implements their strategy long before an election allowing sufficient time for cultivating an amenable audience ripe for manipulation.

Fourth, their early entry into electoral debates allows them to test many messages and then reinforce those messages that resonate and bring about a measurable, preferred shift in public opinion.

Fifth, Russia brilliantly uses hacking to compromise adversaries and power their influence messaging – a tactic most countries would not take.

Sixth, their employment of social media automation saturates their intended audience with narratives that drown out opposing viewpoints.

Finally, Russia plays either side should the contest change – backing an individual candidate or party so long as they support a Kremlin policy position and then turning against the same party should their position shift against Russia.


The implications of Russia’s new Active Measures model will be two fold. The first is what the world is witnessing today – a Russian challenge to democracies throughout the West. Russian influence surfaced in Eastern Europe elections and the United Kingdom’s Brexit vote before the U.S. Presidential election, helped bolster a losing far-right candidate recently in the Netherlands and right now works diligently to shape the upcoming 2017 elections in France and Germany. Over the horizon, Russia has provided any authoritarian dictator or predatory elite equipped with hackers and disrespectful of civil liberties a playbook to dismantle their enemies through information warfare. Fledgling democracies and countries rife with ethnic and social divisions will be particularly vulnerable to larger authoritarian regimes with the time, resources and patience to foment chaos in smaller republics.

The U.S. Can Counter Russia’s Modern Active Measures

America can defuse Russia’s Active Measures online by undertaking a coordinated and broad range of actions across the U.S. government. Currently, the U.S. ignores, to its own detriment, falsehoods and manipulated truths generated and promoted by Russia’s state sponsored media and their associated conspiratorial websites. While many Active Measures claims seem ridiculous, a non-response by the U.S. government introduces doubt and fuels social media conspiracies. The U.S. should generate immediate public refutations to false Russian claims by creating two official government webpages acting as a U.S. government “Snopes” for disarming falsehoods. The U.S. State Department would host a website responding to false claims regarding U.S. policy and operations outside U.S. borders. The U.S. Department of Homeland Security would host a parallel website responding to any and all false claims regarding U.S. policy and operations domestically – a particularly important function in times of emergency where Russian Active Measures have been observed inciting panic.

Criminal investigations bringing hackers to justice will continue to be vital. However, the FBI must take a more proactive role during investigations to analyze what information has been stolen by Russia and then help officials publicly disclose the breach in short order. Anticipating rather than reacting to emerging Russian data dumps through public affairs messaging will help U.S. officials and other American targets of kompromat prepare themselves for future discrediting campaigns.

Russian propaganda sometime peddles false financial stories causing rapid shifts in American company stock prices that hurt consumer and investor confidence and open the way for predatory market manipulation and short selling. At times, U.S. business employees unwittingly engage with Russian social media hecklers and honeypots putting themselves and their companies at risk. The Departments of Treasury and Commerce should immediately undertake an education campaign for U.S. businesses to help them thwart damaging, false claims and train their employees in spotting nefarious social media operations that might compromise their information.

The Department of Homeland Security must continue to improve existing public-private partnerships and expand sharing of cyber trends and technical signatures. This information will be critical in helping citizens and companies prevent the hacking techniques propelling Russian kompromat. Finally, U.S. intelligence agencies have a large role to play in countering Russian Active Measures in the future, but my recommendations in this regard are not well suited for open discussion.

The most important actions to diffuse Russia’s modern Active Measures actually come from outside the U.S. government – the private sector and civil society. Russia’s social media influence campaigns achieve great success because mainstream media outlets amplify the salacious claims coming from stolen information. If forewarned by law enforcement of a Russian compromise (as noted above), the world’s largest newspapers, cable news channels and social media companies could join in a pact vowing not to report on stolen information that amplified Russia’s influence campaigns. While they would stand to lose audience in the near term to fringe outlets, Russia’s Active Measures would be far less effective at discrediting their adversaries and shaping polities if they lacked access to mainstream media outlets. Mainstream media outlets unifying and choosing not to be Kremlin pawns would also be a counter to Russia’s suppression of free speech and harsh treatment of journalists and the press.

Social media companies have played an outsized role in recent elections as they increasingly act as the primary news provider for their users. Tailored news feeds from social media platforms have created information bubbles where voters see only stories and opinions suiting their preferences and biases – ripe conditions for Russian disinformation campaigns. In the lead up to the 2016 election, fake news stories were consumed at higher rates than true stories. As a result, Facebook initiated a noble effort to tag fake news stories for their readers. But Facebook’s push must be expanded and joined by other social media companies or they will be overwhelmed by the volume of stories needing evaluation and will find difficulty protecting freedom of speech and the freedom of the press.

Social media companies should band together in the creation of an Information Consumer Reports. This non-governmental agency would evaluate all media organizations, mainstream and otherwise, across a range of variables producing news ratings representative of the outlet’s accuracy and orientation. The score would appear next to each outlet’s content in web searches and social media streams providing the equivalent of a nutrition label for information. Consumers would not be restricted from viewing fake news outlets and their erroneous information, but would know the risks of their consumption. The rating, over time, would reduce consumption of Russian disinformation specifically and misinformation collectively, while also placing a check on mainstream media outlets that have all too often regurgitated false stories.

Over the past three years, Russia has implemented and run the most effective and efficient influence campaign in world history. Russian propaganda and social media manipulation has not stopped since the election in November and continues fomenting chaos amongst the American populace. American allies in Europe today suffer from an onslaught of hacks and manipulation, which threaten alliances that brought U.S. victory in the Cold War. The U.S., in failing to respond to Russia’s Active Measures, will surrender its position as the world’s leader, forgo its role as chief promoter and defender of democracy, and give up on over seventy years of collective action to preserve freedom and civil liberties around the world.

Our nation’s democratic principles and ideals are under attack by a kleptocratic Russian regime sowing divisions amongst the American public and Western society through information warfare. Russia’s strategic motto is “divided we stand, divided we fall”. It’s time the United States remind the world, that despite our day-to-day policy debates and political squabbles, we stand united, alongside our allies, in defending our democratic system of government from the meddling of power-hungry tyrants and repressive authoritarians that prey on their people and suppress humanity.

For references please visit the Link






Clinton Watts said during his testimony to the Senate Intelligence Committee hearing on Russian intelligence activities that Russia's efforts were successful in meddling in the U.S. election because Donald Trump used Russia's active measures against his political opponents while the mainstream media also fed into fake news being distributed.
 
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A judge rules Trump may have incited violence … and Trump again has his own mouth to blame

By Aaron Blake April 2 2017

The courts keep taking Donald Trump both seriously and literally. And the president's word choices are proving to be a real headache.

A federal judge in Kentucky is the latest to take Trump at his word when he says something controversial. Judge David J. Hale ruled against efforts by Trump's attorneys to throw out a lawsuit accusing him of inciting violence against protesters at a March 2016 campaign rally in Louisville.

At the rally, Trump repeatedly said “get 'em out of here” before, according to the protesters, they were shoved and punched by his supporters. Trump's attorneys sought to have the case dismissed on free speech grounds, arguing that he didn't intend for his supporters to use force. But Hale noted that speech inciting violence is not protected by the First Amendment and ruled that there is plenty of evidence that the protesters' injuries were a “direct and proximate result” of Trump's words.

“It is plausible that Trump’s direction to ‘get 'em out of here’ advocated the use of force,” Hale wrote. “It was an order, an instruction, a command.”

It's merely the latest example of Trump's team arguing that his controversial words shouldn't be taken literally. But though that argument may have held water politically during the 2016 campaign, it has since repeatedly hurt Trump's cause when his words have been at issue in legal proceedings.

Just last week, a federal judge in Hawaii rejected an argument from Trump's attorneys asking that his travel ban executive order be evaluated without considering Trump's and his team's past comments about the motive behind the ban and whether it targets Muslims.

Trump's campaign in 2015 proposed a blanket ban on all Muslim immigration to the United States — the news release remains on his campaign website — and the courts ruled that this rhetoric was relevant when it halted his first travel ban, despite Trump's team arguing that it wasn't a Muslim ban. In striking down the first travel ban, the courts cited Rudolph W. Giuliani's comments that suggested Trump sought to make his Muslim ban idea legally practical.

“So when first announced it, he said, 'Muslim ban,'" Giuliani said. “He called me up. He said, 'Put a commission together. Show me the right way to do it legally.'”

When Trump and his team issued a revised travel ban a few weeks ago, the courts again halted it and again cited that past rhetoric.

And in extending that order last week, the federal judge in Hawaii yet again cited the words of Trump's team — specifically, top adviser Stephen Miller, who had suggested the second ban would be, practically speaking, the same as the first.

“Fundamentally, you're still going to have the same basic policy outcome for the country, but you're going to be responsive to a lot of very technical issues that were brought up by the court, and those will be addressed,” Miller said. “But, in terms of protecting the country, those basic policies are still going to be in effect.”

Trump and his team will undoubtedly dismiss this latest example as yet another activist judge who is out to get him. But yet again, they are forced into the position of saying that Trump's words shouldn't be taken at face value — that he didn't mean what he actually, literally said.

I've argued before that this is a completely unworkable standard when it comes to the media's coverage of Trump. It allows Trump team members to retroactively downgrade whatever they want to, while leaving the good stuff intact — essentially a Get Out of Jail Free card they can redeem anytime they want.

But while Trump's supporters have certainly bought into that arrangement, the courts have yet again proved unwilling to grant the president that Get Out of Jail Free card. Link




 
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I really cannot understand how can poor blue-collar workers vote for him and think that this filthy rich man was going to take care of them? Hopefully they will learn their lesson and next time will vote more wisely.

Because there's implicit racism involved here. Majority of folks on Medicaid are white and blue-collar, this goes unnoticed by Trump supporters, of course. But many of them believe that minorities -- and illegal immigrants -- are taking the lion share. Of course, there's no proof for this, but then again we are living in the era of "fake news."

@RabzonKhan were you not one of the many liberals that was occussing Trump of not paying any taxes for the last 20 years?

Wasn't it Trump who bragged about paying little to no taxes? Interesting that of all the tax returns that was made public, it happens to be the one where he may have paid the most.
 
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Eric Prince the founder of Blackwater, met with a confident of Putin secretly in Seychelles to establish Trump – Putin back channel. Prince was a major donor to the Trump campaign and is the brother of Betsy DeVos who is Trump’s Secretary of Education and is a friend of Steve Bannon. Something is very fishy.

Blackwater founder held secret Seychelles meeting to establish Trump-Putin back channel

By Adam Entous, Greg Miller, Kevin Sieff and Karen DeYoung April 3 2017

The United Arab Emirates arranged a secret meeting in January between Blackwater founder Erik Prince and a Russian close to President Vladimir Putin as part of an apparent effort to establish a back-channel line of communication between Moscow and President-elect Donald Trump, according to U.S., European and Arab officials.

The meeting took place around Jan. 11 — nine days before Trump’s inauguration — in the Seychelles islands in the Indian Ocean, officials said. Though the full agenda remains unclear, the UAE agreed to broker the meeting in part to explore whether Russia could be persuaded to curtail its relationship with Iran, including in Syria, a Trump administration objective that would be likely to require major concessions to Moscow on U.S. sanctions.

Though Prince had no formal role with the Trump campaign or transition team, he presented himself as an unofficial envoy for Trump to high-ranking Emiratis involved in setting up his meeting with the Putin confidant, according to the officials, who did not identify the Russian.

Prince was an avid supporter of Trump. After the Republican convention, he contributed $250,000 to Trump’s campaign, the national party and a pro-Trump super PAC led by GOP mega-donor Rebekah Mercer, records show. He has ties to people in Trump’s circle, including Stephen K. Bannon, now serving as the president’s chief strategist and senior counselor. Prince’s sister Betsy DeVos serves as education secretary in the Trump administration. And Prince was seen in the Trump transition offices in New York in December.

U.S. officials said the FBI has been scrutinizing the Seychelles meeting as part of a broader probe of Russian interference in the 2016 U.S. election and alleged contacts between associates of Putin and Trump. The FBI declined to comment.

The Seychelles encounter, which one official said spanned two days, adds to an expanding web of connections between Russia and Americans with ties to Trump — contacts that the White House has been reluctant to acknowledge or explain until they have been exposed by news organizations.

“We are not aware of any meetings, and Erik Prince had no role in the transition,” said Sean Spicer, the White House press secretary.

A Prince spokesman said in a statement: “Erik had no role on the transition team. This is a complete fabrication. The meeting had nothing to do with President Trump. Why is the so-called under-resourced intelligence community messing around with surveillance of American citizens when they should be hunting terrorists?” Read more
 
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Devin Nunes' 16 days from leader of House Russia investigation to target of ethics probe

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(CNN) - House Intelligence Chairman Devin Nunes stepped aside from leading the House investigation into Russia's meddling in the US election Thursday, capping a chaotic ride that began with a secret trip to the White House grounds that would eventually form the core of President Donald Trump's counter-offensive.

In just 16 days, Nunes fell from leading the House's Russia's probe to becoming the target of a House probe himself, as House Ethics investigators announced their inquiry into whether Nunes illegally revealed classified intelligence.

It marked a stunning change for the former cattle rancher from Central California who drew as much heat himself as the Russia probe itself. Nunes' decision to present intelligence gathered by the White House, almost derailed the House investigation, but instead Nunes was forced aside.

The timeline of Nunes' fall starts the day after the stunning public hearing Nunes led where FBI Director James Comey announced that federal investigators have been examining ties between the campaign of President Donald Trump and Russian operatives since last July.

Tuesday, March 21 -- Nunes takes a secret trip to the White House grounds, where he reviews intelligence gathered for him by two top White House staffers that Trump and his supporters would say backs the President's claims that he was a victim of surveillance. The intelligence will later form the core of Trump's counter-offensive against the Russia investigations.

Wednesday, March 22 -- Nunes calls a news conference where he reveals that he has seen new evidence that communications from Trump's transition aides -- and possibly Trump himself -- were picked up in "incidental" collection by US intelligence. Nunes travels to the White House to personally brief Trump on his findings (although it remains unclear why Trump's staff did not directly brief him on the findings they presented to Nunes).

Thursday, March 23 -- Nunes apologizes to other members of the House Russia investigation for not showing them the intelligence he viewed before going to Trump with it. Nunes promises lawmakers they will soon get copies of the same reports he viewed.

Friday, March 24 -- Nunes announces he is delaying a public hearing with former acting Attorney General Sally Yates because he wants Comey and National Security Agency Director Mike Rogers instead in a private briefing. It later reported by the Washington Post that the White House attempted, but failed, to block Yates' testimony, which is expected to focus on communications between former national security adviser Michael Flynn and Russian ambassador Sergey Kislyak. The White House denies it sought to prevent Yates' testimony.

Meanwhile, former Trump campaign chairman Paul Manafort, former Trump foreign policy adviser Carter Page and former Trump adviser Roger Stone said they would gladly testify before investigators.

Monday, March 27 -- House Democratic Leader Nancy Pelosi and Rep. Adam Schiff, the lead Democrat on the House Russia investigation, call on Nunes to recuse himself, following reports from CNN and others that Nunes secretly gathered his intelligence on the White House grounds. Nunes, meanwhile, cancels all meetings of the House intelligence committee for the week -- the newest sign that the House Russia investigation is close to running off the rails.

Nunes says he sees no reason to step aside.

Tuesday, March 28 -- House Russia investigators were supposed to have their second public hearing with Yates -- instead Republicans and Democrats are locked in a power struggle over who will testify. Comey alerts House Russia investigators he won't return to testify before them if they can't agree on a plan.

Wednesday, March 29 -- House Speaker Paul Ryan continues saying in public that he supports Nunes and will not ask for him to step aside. But in an interview with CBS, Ryan keeps Nunes at arm's length -- downplaying how much Nunes told him about the intelligence he gathered at the White House.

Thursday, March 30 -- Nunes and Schiff talk for the first time since the ranking Democrat said the chairman had to be removed from the investigation. Flynn's lawyer, a former "Never Trump" Republican, announces that Flynn is ready to testify before House and Senate investigators in return for a guarantee of immunity from prosecution.

Friday, March 31 -- CNN and others report that Nunes' sources were not whistleblowers, but instead top staff on the National Security Council -- a former Nunes staffer, Mike Ellis, and a close Flynn ally, Ezra Cohen-Watnick. Schiff travels to the White House to review the intelligence Nunes saw and emerges Friday evening, accusing Nunes and the White House engaging in sleight of hand to distract investigators from the Russia investigation.
Schiff meets briefly with Trump at the White House that evening. Trump promises him that all members of the House intelligence committee will be allowed to view the same intelligence, Schiff says.

Monday, April 3 -- Nunes responds to the growing chorus of critics calling for him to step aside: "I don't really listen to what anyone says." Nunes says the Russia investigation is moving along fine and that witnesses could be called in for interviews as the second week of the House's Easter Recess.

The White House, meanwhile, grasps hold of news that the intelligence Nunes viewed at the White House shows former National Security Adviser Susan Rice approved the "unmasking" of Trump aides in intelligence reports -- the charge that becomes the centerpiece of Trump's counter-offensive against the Russia investigations.

Tuesday, April 4 -- Ryan meets with Republicans on the House intelligence committee. Later that day, Nunes stops answering questions from the press. Pelosi's staff travels to the White House to view the intelligence reports. House Democrats are briefed on the contents of the intelligence reports that Nunes reviewed.

Wednesday, April 5 -- Nunes meets with Ryan that night, where he says he will step aside the next day. A Ryan aide refuses to say whether Ryan asked for Nunes to leave the Russia investigation.

Trump tells the New York Times that he thinks Susan Rice committed a crime, but says he doesn't want to talk about the intelligence documents that would show that, when asked if he would declassify them.

Thursday, April 6 -- Shortly after 9:30 a.m., Nunes announces he is stepping aside and the House ethics committee announces it is investigating whether Nunes illegally revealed classified information.

A spokesperson for Trump said the White House will not comment on Nunes: "This is an internal matter for the House."

http://www.cnn.com/2017/04/06/politics/devin-nunes-russia-investigation-ethics/
 
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Pres. Trump has done the right thing, so far, I think this was the biggest security crisis his administration faced and he handled it very appropriately (thanks to McMaster, Mattis and Kushner) and I for one, fully support the strikes on Syria, it was long overdue.

Although I was little surprised for his decision, because it clearly represented a reversal from his noninterventionist campaign promises.

I have no doubt, Putin knew, now the million-dollar question is, why did he allowed dictator Assad to carry out chemical attack on its own people, was Putin trying to test or undermine Trump?


Excellent job, I have started to like our ambassador:

Devin Nunes' 16 days from leader of House Russia investigation to target of ethics probe
One more, Russiangate casualty. I'm loving it!:usflag:
 
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Pres. Trump has done the right thing, so far, I think this was the biggest security crisis his administration faced and he handled it very appropriately (thanks to McMaster, Mattis and Kushner) and I for one, fully support the strikes on Syria, it was long overdue.

Although I was little surprised for his decision, because it clearly represented a reversal from his noninterventionist campaign promises.


Agreed. Though the hypocrisy is unbelievable. :)

IMG_20170407_081912.jpg
 
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Agreed. Though the hypocrisy is unbelievable. :)

View attachment 389714

Trump clearly has dramabaaz pumping in him hehe. Anyone that uses twitter/social media as much as he has and continues to do....is just setting themselves up for hypocrisy related fact checking.

But he understood there is much bigger problem for him if confronted with military grade (forget CIA grade) evidence of what Assad did and he still chose to do nothing (for the sake/optics of improving Russian relations etc)....because simply put at the very basic level....there are US military bases and larger interests that simply cannot afford chemical warfare in the region (even if its "just" phosgene instead of sarin as claimed earlier).

It is why even though I do not support regime change and other neocon agenda...I am willing to extend him support to this level to draw and enforce a red line esp after the agreement previous admin (Obama) made with russia/assad concerning chemical weapon stockpiles/use.

I am very dissapointed in Tulsi Gabbard and bunch of others spouting their "disappointment" etc.. to be honest. US "establishment" is not always 100% wrong no matter which perspective you may be viewing them from. Assad is no saint and Putin is no angel. They definitely do need to be managed within a threshold....even while allowing optics of "greater good" (i.e strategic fight againt ISIS etc) to proceed.

I wanted to ask both you and @RabzonKhan about it earlier....but forgot....thanks for your views.

have no doubt, Putin knew, now the million-dollar question is, why did he allowed dictator Assad to carry out chemical attack on its own people, was Putin trying to test or undermine Trump?

Will have to give some more time to analyse this. I have a suspicion that all is not wunderbar in the Russia-Iran-Assad triangle. Assad was desperate earlier (so a complete sop under his leash)....he decided to strain against the leash (and fling his poop wherever he wanted for whatever reason) as he has felt more assured and just got a big fat smack from the park ranger...and the leash handler/owner may not be happy about it....but maybe he also kinda wanted it to happen deep down ( so the mutt is back to being more controllable/servile as before)...so he didn't have to do it. Lets wait and see how this all plays out. We can speculate now....but only confirm in hindsight.
 
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I for one, fully support the strikes on Syria


why do you American "liberals" love ISIS, al qaeda and military interventions so much ?

I am very dissapointed in Tulsi Gabbard and bunch of others spouting their "disappointment" etc..
and I am very disappointed in your jihad loving neocon attitude to these developments

look at the people cheering for this, CNN rat fareed zarakia "today trump became president" , McCain, Graham, the saudis, the "rebels".. only the absolute scum of the earth support this.

not looking good for Trump going forward but I'm willing to give him a chance, it's very possible that this was a carefully choreographed exercise for sake of optics at home (get all the naysayers on board) and as a negotiation tactic when he's hosting Premier Xi.

but given that his anti regime change/intervention stance was pretty much the only reason I supported him strongly, I'm fecking disgusted by Trump helping the murderous salafist scumbag rebel filth and ISIS in Syria. That lot deserves to be gassed, and nuked...
 
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jihad loving

Jihad loving? Haha....you want to know how many jihadi lunatics Assad has used to fight for him as well? I mean like as bad as ISIS. No side is clean here regarding extremism and civilian murder.

This is not a black and white world out there buddy.

This was a correction for Assad to get back to playing within the rules (and get the job done)...he was probably testing Trump to see if he could get away with it.

All I'm asking is we give this more time to develop so we have a clearer picture rather than jumping up and down like neocons, lefties and alt-right are in all different ways on social media and the MSM. None of them have access to the military intelligence that prompted this move.

but given that his anti regime change/intervention stance was pretty much the only reason I supported him strongly,

Well you better unsupport him and fast then if this was enough to disgust you...because WMD use after a deal that explicitly called for their destruction is not something any US president...no matter how globalist or isolationist they may be...is going to ignore....not with US bases in the area and Israel and NATO right next door as well (past the optics of civilian populations getting phosgened). Taking out such infrastructure that accomplished WMD delivery in a red line move is pretty much SOP if its not a major power. Reagan notably did purely punitive strikes on Gaddafi without pushing for his removal (which Obama rather recklessly did). I doubt Trump is going to press the regime change button either.....this is rather a mid course guidance re-establishing boundaries.

Latest news is that Trump ordered a CBG deployment to the korean peninsula as well. So stay tuned. There are some chess pieces being moved here and the position needs to settle before we can analyse deeply.

I grounded my support for Trump much more on his domestic economic and immigration policy. So far he is chugging along on that alright....could be doing better, but also a lot worse. I am looking to hire at least 10 Americans this year for a new project at my company, first time we have considered it in 5 years at least past the regular attrition/retirement replacing.
 
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Jihad loving? Haha....you want to know how many jihadi lunatics Assad has used to fight for him as well? I mean like as bad as ISIS. No side is clean here regarding extremism and civilian murder.

This is not a black and white world out there buddy.
it's clear as day to me, you have the sharia freak rebel terrorist jihadi alliance on side, and then there's those who are killing them.

I strongly support killing the shit out of the rebels and isis, I want max brutality, turn it to 11 and roast them alive, zero sympathy from me.

This was a correction for Assad to get back to playing within the rules (and get the job done)...he was probably testing Trump to see if he could get away with it.
no, he had no reason to do this, the "rebels" had everything to gain from this, and they did.

what's worrying is that now that their false flag has worked, I fear we're pretty much guaranteed another chemical incident, one that will draw the US all in, not good.

All I'm asking is we give this more time to develop so we have a clearer picture rather than jumping up and down like neocons, lefties and alt-right are in all different ways on social media and the MSM. None of them have access to the military intelligence that prompted this move.
intelligence my ***, those who fail to learn from history..

1-Colin-Powell-WMD-iraq-lie-usa-war.jpg


Well you better unsupport him and fast then if this was enough to disgust you...because WMD use after a deal that explicitly called for their destruction is not something any US president...no matter how globalist or isolationist they may be...is going to ignore....not with US bases in the area and Israel and NATO right next door as well (past the optics of civilian populations getting phosgened). Taking out such infrastructure that accomplished WMD delivery in a red line move is pretty much SOP if its not a major power. Reagan notably did purely punitive strikes on Gaddafi without pushing for his removal (which Obama rather recklessly did). I doubt Trump is going to press the regime change button either.....this is rather a mid course guidance re-establishing boundaries.
like I said, I'm willing to give him a chance because it might have been a carefully choreographed move, all this going down during the Xi visit, hmm..

Latest news is that Trump ordered a CBG deployment to the korean peninsula as well. So stay tuned. There are some chess pieces being moved here and the position needs to settle before we can analyse deeply.
yep, I'm watching that too but the MENA front is the bigger festering wound, that's where the big visible moves will happen.

Trump also recently said that isis is just one of many groups he wants to take out, so that gives me hope, and the recent bombing of the terror mosque where they attacked people running away from the initial bombing, that was some good shit. :smokin:

let's see, fun times ahead but I still hate that he helped the rebels in Syria on this one.
 
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it's clear as day to me, you have the sharia freak rebel terrorist jihadi alliance on side, and then there's those who are killing them.

I strongly support killing the shit out of the rebels and isis, I want max brutality, turn it to 11 and roast them alive, zero sympathy from me.


no, he had no reason to do this, the "rebels" had everything to gain from this, and they did.

what's worrying is that now that their false flag has worked, I fear we're pretty much guaranteed another chemical incident, one that will draw the US all in, not good.


intelligence my ***, those who fail to learn from history..

1-Colin-Powell-WMD-iraq-lie-usa-war.jpg



like I said, I'm willing to give him a chance because it might have been a carefully choreographed move, all this going down during the Xi visit, hmm..


yep, I'm watching that too but the MENA front is the bigger festering wound, that's where the big visible moves will happen.

Trump also recently said that isis is just one of many groups he wants to take out, so that gives me hope, and the recent bombing of the terror mosque where they attacked people running away from the initial bombing, that was some good shit. :smokin:

let's see, fun times ahead but I still hate that he helped the rebels in Syria on this one.

Well you seem to be banned now. Please tag me when you are back. More will have developed by then probably so more hindsight offered. In the mean time I suggest you to watch blackpigeonspeaks on kabuki theatre....he brings up quite a few good points to the end of the video.....which if how it plays out is very interesting move by Trump.
 
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He’s a tough guy and a straight shooter, and that’s why I like him.

Mattis Sends Don't-Mess-With-Us Message to Syria
Military.com | 11 Apr 2017 | by Richard Sisk and Oriana Pawlyk

mattis-listens-hearing-1500-18-jan-2017-ts600.jpeg



Don't even think about it, Defense Secretary Jim Mattis said Monday to the Syrian regime of President Bashar al-Assad on employing chemical weapons.


"The Syrian government would be ill-advised ever again to use chemical weapons," Mattis said, suggesting that the U.S. response would far more intense than the 59 Tomahawk cruise missiles launched last Thursday from the Arleigh Burke-class destroyers Ross and Porter in the eastern Mediterranean.

In a characteristically brief statement, Mattis rejected the claims of Russia, Assad's chief supporter, that many of the T-LAMs, or Tomahawk Land Attack Missiles, missed their targets and the rest caused little damage to the Shayrat airfield north of Damascus.

"The assessment of the Department of Defense is that the strike resulted in the damage or destruction of fuel and ammunition sites, air defense capabilities, and 20 percent of Syria's operational aircraft," he said.

Mattis also suggested that Syrian state TV showing aircraft taking off the day after the attacks was meant to cover up the severe damage that had been inflicted. The Pentagon said on the night of the attacks that the runways deliberately were not targeted since they were easy to repair.

Mattis said, "The Syrian government has lost the ability to refuel or rearm aircraft at Shayrat airfield and, at this point, use of the runway is of idle military interest."

The missile strikes were the latest sign of the more aggressive stance taken by the Pentagon since Mattis took over in January. The U.S. has sent more troops into Iraq and Syria in line with what Mattis has called an "accelerated" campaign against the Islamic State of Iraq and Syria.
Link
 
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