Again: What does Putin have on Trump?

Lost in all the October surprises and scandals involving Donald Trump — the betrayal of our Kurd allies, the deal to trade military aid to Ukraine for dirt on a political opponent and the failed attempt to use a Trump property for the next G-7 conference — was the bipartisan Senate Intelligence Committee’s report that Russia tried to influence American voters to support Trump in the last election.

The finding by the 19-member committee, chaired by Republican Sen. Richard Burr of North Carolina, wasn’t exactly a surprise. The senators agreed with every intelligence agency in concluding there’s no doubt that the Kremlin “sought to influence the 2016 U.S. presidential election by harming Hillary Clinton’s chances of success and supporting Donald Trump.”

The committee said Russia tried to help Trump and hurt Clinton in the 2016 campaign with Russian hackers known as the Internet Research Agency. “Russia is waging an information warfare campaign against the U.S. that didn’t start and didn’t end with the 2016 election,” said Chairman Burr. “Their goal is broader: to sow societal discord and erode public confidence in the machinery of government.”

And so, as Donald Trump faces possible impeachment proceedings, he stands alone in denying the veracity of every intelligence agency he heads by insisting the allegation that Russia interfered in the 2016 election to defeat Hillary Clinton and elect him is nothing more than a hoax, the result of a well organized witch hunt.

The witch hunters, by the way, were and are the Central Intelligence Agency, Office of National Intelligence, Federal Bureau of Investigation, National Security Agency, Justice Department and Department of Homeland Security, along with the Democratic-controlled House Intelligence Committee and the Republican-controlled Senate Select Committee on Intelligence.

Despite this formidable lineup, there are still Americans who believe the president because they always believe the president and because a lie repeated often enough, especially by an authority figure as formidable as the president, can evolve into the truth over time.

And, as we know only too well, the president is not only a formidable authority figure, he is also a formidable liar, having passed the 13,000 mark around his 1,000th day in office, according to a meticulous, detailed account kept by The Washington Post.

Trump’s business and personal ties with Russia and Putin go way back. Businessman Trump’s personal association with the Russian dictator dates to 2013 when he brought his Miss Universe pageant to Moscow and reveled in his ability to visit the contestants’ dressing room unannounced and in his new friendship with Vladimir Putin.  

That friendship was renewed at the infamous Helsinki meeting in July of 2018 when, standing next to Putin, Trump was asked if he believed his intelligence agencies about Russian interference in his election or Putin’s denial. Trump went with Putin, calling his denials “strong and powerful.”

John McCain called it “one of the most disgraceful performances by an American president in memory.”

But McCain didn’t live to see the betrayal of the Kurds.

Trump twice defended Putin to interviewers who had observed Putin’s penchant for disposing of dissidents by killing them. In 2015, when Joe Scarborough asked how he could defend a dictator who “kills journalists that don’t agree with him,” Trump opined that, “Our country does plenty of killing too.”  

More famously, he repeated the same answer during a Super Bowl halftime interview shortly after his inauguration. The interviewer, Bill O’Reilly, said, “Putin is a killer” and Trump replied, “We have a lot of killers.  Do I think our country is so innocent?”

Two weeks ago, as quoted from The Washington Post, Russia “projected itself as a rising power broker in the Middle East,” by sending troops into the area vacated by the United States as 150,000 former Kurd allies fled. A week later, The Wall Street Journal reported, “Russia agreed to help Turkey drive out Kurdish militias from a safe zone in northeast Syria, representing a rebalance of power in war-torn Syria as U.S. troops leave.”  

Republican and Democratic House members had rebuked Trump for betraying the Kurds and House Speaker Nancy Pelosi upbraided him in a widely circulated photo taken as she walked out of a meeting with the president.

“At that moment,” said Pelosi, “I was probably saying, ‘All roads lead to Putin.’”

In 1974, during the congressional hearings leading to the impeachment of Richard Nixon, Senator Howard Baker frequently asked, “What did the president know and when did he know it?”

Today, Speaker Pelosi and many others are wondering, “What does Vladimir Putin know and what does he have on Donald Trump?”

 Simsbury resident Dick Ahles is a retired journalist. Email him at rahles1@outlook.com.

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