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Month: July 2018

One little notice in today’s indictment

One little notice in today’s indictment

by digby


Way back in early 2017,
I wrote this piece about GOP candidates benefiting from the Russian hacking:

If there’s one thing you can say about the Donald Trump presidency so far, it isn’t boring. From horror stories at the border to Trump’s semi-triumphant teleprompter speech and Attorney General Jeff Sessions being personally connected to the growing Russia scandal, this week has been a doozy.

I was not surprised that Sessions finally recused himself from the campaign scandal. It was absurd that he was not required to do so before he was confirmed. What finally forced him to take the step was the report that he had met with the Russian ambassador twice during the summer and fall, after having told the Judiciary Committee that he had not had contact with any Russian officials during the campaign. Top Democrats are now calling for Sessions’ resignation, and the story of his contacts with the Russian ambassador is still unfolding with new details about whether he discussed the Trump campaign.

The upshot is that at the very least Sessions showed appalling judgment in agreeing to meet the Russian ambassador the day after The Wall Street Journal reported that the director of national intelligence had declared that the Russian government was behind the hacking of the Democratic National Committee. It’s very hard to believe that this didn’t come up in the conversation. Even if the two men were unaware of that comment, they must have been aware of the discussion the previous night in a presidential town hall forum with Matt Lauer, in which Trump praised Vladimir Putin in such florid terms that The New York Times story that morning began this way:

Donald J. Trump’s campaign on Thursday reaffirmed its extraordinary embrace of Russia’s president, Vladimir V. Putin, signaling a preference for the leadership of an authoritarian adversary over that of America’s own president, despite a cascade of criticism from Democrats and expressions of discomfort among Republicans.

One of those discomfited was House Speaker Paul Ryan who was quoted in the article saying, “Vladimir Putin is an aggressor who does not share our interests,” and accusing the Russian leader of “conducting state-sponsored cyberattacks” on our political system.

This was just one of the many times Ryan zigged and zagged during the campaign, constantly calibrating how far he could go in criticizing Trump while keeping Trump’s passionate voters off his back. This particular issue was a tough one, since until quite recently the Republicans had been inveterate Russia hawks and the abrupt switch to dovish goodwill was undeniably disorienting.

Prior to Sessions’ recusal on Thursday morning, Ryan held a press conference in which he blamed the Democrats for “setting their hair on fire” to prompt the press to cover the story. That was ridiculous. The press needs no prodding to cover this scandal; it’s as juicy as they get. Ryan also pooh-poohed the idea that Sessions had any obligation to remove himself from the investigation unless he was personally implicated and robotically repeated the contention that nobody had seen any evidence that there was collusion between the Trump campaign and the Russians.

That may be true, and presumably we’ll find out sooner or later. But it’s important to remember that DNC and Hillary Clinton’s campaign chair, John Podesta, were not the only targets of hacking. Russian agents also allegedly hacked the Democratic Congressional Campaign Committee. That story has been scandalously undercovered, something for which Paul Ryan is no doubt very grateful.

On Dec. 13 The New York Times published an article that laid out how the hacked material was used in various House races. At first the hackers just released a lot of personal information, which was used by hostile individuals to harass and threaten the candidates. Then the hacks and dumps by the person or group known as Guccifer 2.0 became more sophisticated and targeted certain close races, releasing politically valuable tactical information:

The seats that Guccifer 2.0 targeted in the document dumps were hardly random: They were some of the most competitive House races in the country. In [Annette] Taddeo’s district [in Florida], the House seat is held by a Republican, even though the district leans Democratic and Mrs. Clinton won it this year by a large majority.

To prepare for the race, the D.C.C.C. had done candid evaluations of the two candidates vying in the primary for the nomination. Those inside documents, bluntly describing each candidate’s weaknesses, are considered routine research inside political campaigns. But suddenly they were being aired in public.

Taddeo lost her primary race to another Democrat named Joe Garcia who used the hacked material against her. And then this happened:

After Mr. Garcia defeated Ms. Taddeo in the primary using the material unearthed in the hacking, the National Republican Campaign Committee and a second Republican group with ties to the House speaker, Paul Ryan, turned to the hacked material to attack him.

In Florida, Guccifer 2.0’s most important partner was an obscure political website run by an anonymous blogger called HelloFLA!, run by a former Florida legislative aide turned Republican lobbyist. The blogger sent direct messages via Twitter to Guccifer 2.0 asking for copies of any additional Florida documents.

By September, the hacker had released documents in close House races in Pennsylvania, New Hampshire, Ohio, Illinois and North Carolina, working with Republican bloggers who disseminated the information for them. They also posted information on Rep. Ben Ray Luján, D-N.M., the Democratic Congressional Campaign Committee chair, even though he was effectively running unopposed.

Both Luján and House Minority Leader Nancy Pelosi wrote letters to Ryan asking him not to use the material and received no response. His spokeswoman told the Times that Ryan had no control over how the stolen information was used. Nonetheless, there were some Republicans who refused to do so, saying it was inappropriate. They were rare.

I don’t think anyone believes it’s likely that Paul Ryan personally colluded with the Russians in this operation. The fact that many Republicans, some affiliated with the National Republican Congressional Committee and a group closely affiliated with Ryan, eagerly used it to win their campaigns is not surprising. But it is highly unlikely that Republican strategists or party officials with strong knowledge of the House campaigns didn’t collude with the hackers at some point, because it’s difficult to believe that Russians would have which House races to target without some help from people with expertise concerning the 2016 map.

Republican congressional leaders must be thanking their lucky stars daily that the Trump administration is such a scandal-ridden Dumpster fire. If things ever calm down in the White House, somebody might just turn his or her attention to the question of what Paul Ryan knew and when.

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The NATO-Strzok Circus

The NATO-Strzok Circus


by digby

My Salon column today on the shitshow abroad and at home:

After all the fireworks at the NATO meeting on Wednesday, I assumed they would wind down on Thursday and President Trump would head off to jolly old England with a smile on his face for a nice visit with the Queen and a few rounds of golf in Scotland. By acting like a crazed, unpredictable imbecile he had made his point: he’s got the biggest swinging hands in the free world and there’s nothing these pip squeak allies can do about it.

Unfortunately, he wasn’t finished. He showed up late for another meeting, took it over and started browbeating everyone again about spending and trade demanding they embark on a massive military build-up and insisting they spend that money on American equipment because it’s the best. Then he held a press conference and much like the one he held after the Singapore pageant it was delusional. He declared himself a hero for getting the allies to agree to spend more (he didn’t) saying “If you ask Secretary General Stoltenberg, he gives me total credit.” He said NATO is much stronger than it was two days before.

When asked if he would contradict any of these statements in a tweet after the meeting he actually repeated one of the most absurd comments he’s ever made, and that’s saying something. He said:

That’s other people that do that. I don’t. I’m very consistent. I’m a very stable genius.

Fact check: False.

He’s not just unstable, he seems to be coming apart at the seams. Politico reported that the NATO allies have concluded, in so many words,that the president of the United States is nuts.

British Prime Minister Teresa May might have thought her conversations with Trump were confidential, what with the “special relationship” between the two countries and all but she got a big surprise after the big state dinner with Trump in London last night:

Trump told the tabloid that he threatened May that if she followed through with her soft-Brexit plan the US would not make a bilateral trade deal and would go with the EU instead. I think we know that’s fatuous nonsense but he wanted to make sure it was public because May’s job is very tenuous and it’s pretty clear that Trump wants to help topple her, apparently in order to install his pal Boris Johnson. This would be unusual for any other president, but Trump is a big fan of foreign interference in the democratic process on his behalf so he just went for it.

He also said that he told May how to do Brexit right but she wouldn’t listen. Sure he did …

The Brits were not amused:

By the time you read this, we’ll probably know just how bad it is.

Meanwhile, back in the States my hoped for congressional counter-balance took a hard right turn and went over the cliff. While the Senate earlier in the week had taken some symbolic bipartisan votes about NATO and trade to send a message that Trump’s diplomatic misconduct was not reflective of the entire US government, the Republicans in the House of Representatives said,”you want crazy? We’ll give you crazy.”

The all day House oversight and judiciary committees grilling of Peter Strzok, the top counter-intelligence FBI agent who had been involved in both the Clinton email case and the early months of the Russia investigation until he was found to have texted rude remarks about Trump to his girlfriend was a three ring circus. The Republicans were the clowns.

Apparently believing that their best chance of deflecting whatever the special prosecutor finds out about the Russian interference is to destroy the reputation of the FBI and the Department of Justice, they decided to become the human version of Donald Trump’s twitter feed. It wasn’t pretty.

Strzok’s monumental bad judgment in using a government phone to insult Donald Trump has landed him in this hot water and will probably end his career. But he was effective as a witness and it’s unlikely the Republican clown show played very well outside the Fox News Big Top. He was straightforward about his contempt for Trump but made a sound case for why that not only didn’t but couldn’t interfere in his investigation. He was passionate in his defense of the FBI and was not intimidated by the Trumpian insults and browbeating from the Republicans.

His testimony once more showed the deeply illogical nature of their “counter-narrative” that the FBI was out to get Trump and help Clinton. They insist that Strzok’s “bias” tainted the investigation but they cannot explain how it is that he never said a word in advance of the election. Indeed, the FBI put reporters off the scent rather than confirm information they’d obtained elsewhere. Hillary Clinton was the person sabotaged by the FBI director, not Trump.

At one point, Congressman Darrell Issa R-CA asked Strzok about a text in which he wrote that Trump would have “no idea how destabilizing his presidency will be.” Issa seemed to think this was some sort of a threat from the “deep state” but Strzok explained that it came on the heels o fcomments by then candidate Trump who said he didn’t know whether or not the United States should honor its commitments under NATO, that it would depend on whether he believed a particular ally had been good to the US. That’s not how it works.

Strzok was right about all that as we’ve seen this week in Europe. Politico’s Michael Crowley aptly described Trump’s dealings with foreign leaders on MSNBC by quoting some lines from Apocalypse Now:

Capt. Benjamin Willard [the allies]: They told me that you had gone totally insane, and that your methods were unsound.

Colonel Kurtz [Trump]: Are my methods unsound?

Capt. Benjamin Willard: I don’t see any method at all, sir.

There is no method. But there is a pattern to his madness, which foreign leaders are starting to understand. He creates a phony crisis, then sweeps in, puts on a show insulting and bullying everyone and declares he’s fixed the crisis that never existed in the first place. In the meantime he’s destroyed America’s reputation and turned the world upside down, creating chaos for no end other than TV ratings and pleasing his rabid followers.

The allies can only try to contain the damage. After all, they are seeking stability and predictability. But adversaries do have much to gain by the US self-destructing this way and are figuring out how to take advantage of this ill-equipped man for their own ends. We’ll see how that plays out next week in Helsinki.

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Blowing it up by @BloggersRUs

Blowing it up
by Tom Sullivan

As difficult as it is to think the sitting president follows any kind of strategy in world affairs, he does have a certain atavistic energy that, if steered, could do more damage to the world at large than he has already done to the United States.

Sneering at democratic leaders and sucking up to authoritarians and tyrants is his M.O., and on his global disruption tour 2018, he’s already done the first in Brussels and London, the second in Singapore, and he’s headed to Helsinki Monday for more sucking up to Vladimir Putin.

After insulting and berating NATO allies in Brussels over a security pact he clearly does not understand, Donald Trump headed to England to undermine Prime Minister Theresa May. May rolled out a red carpet for him at a black-tie dinner at Blenheim Palace. Rupert Murdoch’s The Sun newspaper later published an interview in which Trump blasted May’s Brexit plan. May ignored his advice and opted for a “soft” Brexit plan, he said, which would doom a future trade deal with the U.S.

But that wasn’t enough. Trump told the paper May-rival Boris Johnson would “make a great Prime Minister.” Johnson resigned from May’s cabinet on Monday over her soft Brexit strategy.

Trump also took a swipe at London mayor Sadiq Khan, a Muslim, saying he had “done a very bad job on terrorism” by allowing migrants into the city. Trump will not visit London after Khan allowed protesters to fly a “Trump baby” balloon over London during his visit. “I guess when they put out blimps to make me feel unwelcome, no reason for me to go to London,” said the self-styled tough guy. “The ego has landed,” said a Daily Mirror headline.

But what happens at Trump’s private meeting with Putin in Helsinki is more cause for concern than his ill-temper. Russia observers, both Republican and Democrat, tell The New Yorker‘s Susan B. Glasser they are resigned to Putin outmatching Trump. A former State Department official described the summit as “an amateur boxer going up against Muhammad Ali.”

Glasser writes:

Beyond the allure of aggrandizement and the mystery of President Trump’s affinity for the Russian strongman, why the meeting is taking place now remains a mystery. Is the purpose to discuss arms control? Syria? Ukraine? To rehash the 2016 election? Remarkably, it’s not clear, and that in and of itself marks this as a most unusual summit. In Brussels on Thursday, after two days of, at times, openly hostile meetings with his NATO allies, Trump was asked whether he would consider scrapping military exercises in the Baltic states neighboring Russia if Putin asked him to on Monday. “Perhaps we’ll talk about that,” he replied, to the great alarm and consternation of Europeans who had been publicly reassured by American officials that Trump would do no such thing. Who knows? Despite the buildup, the Helsinki summit, the President acknowledged, is just a “loose meeting.”

Loose canon is more like it.

Methodical breakup

But perhaps the most worrisome tweet this morning comes in a thread from London journalist Paul Mason:

Those moves are already underway.

If Trump has any defining characteristics, they are avarice and vengefulness. Besides those, others have observed Trump’s tendency to reflect the views of the last person to speak with him. It is difficult to see an impulsive, needy, insecure, corrupt and cruel American president having any kind of focused strategy. Of his own.

The question is will Americans, Democrats, and Trump’s own party do anything to stop him from blowing up the global order?

Update:

Do Brexit how you want so we can do a trade deal, Trump tells UK PM May

So which is it?

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So much for that “special relationship”

So much for that “special relationship”

by digby

It looks like Trump is trying to interfere in Britain’s democratic processes by taking down May and trying to install Boris Johnson in her place.:

DONALD Trump today accuses the PM of wrecking Brexit — and warned she may have killed off any chance of a vital US trade deal.

In an extraordinary intervention timed to coincide with his UK visit, the US President said Theresa May had ignored his advice by opting for a soft Brexit strategy.

In a world-exclusive interview with The Sun, Donald Trump said Theresa May had ignored his advice by opting for a soft Brexit strategy

And he warned her any attempts to maintain close ties with the EU would make a lucrative US trade deal very unlikely.

Mr Trump said: “If they do a deal like that, we would be dealing with the European Union instead of dealing with the UK, so it will probably kill the deal.”

His comments, deeply damaging to Mrs May, came in a world-exclusive interview with The Sun in which he also:

  • Accused EU leaders of destroying its culture and identity by allowing in millions of migrants
  • Tore into London Mayor Sadiq Khan for not standing up to terrorists
  • Blamed Khan for spiralling crime in the capital
  • Insisted former Foreign Secretary Boris Johnson would make “a great Prime Minister”.
  • Denied once branding Theresa May a “bossy schoolteacher”
  • Maintained he would keep ties with Russian tyrant Vladimir Putin despite the Salisbury Novichok poisonings
  • Demanded Britain and other Nato countries spend more on defence
  • Spoke of his sadness at feeling unwelcome in the capital by anti-Trump protesters
  • Claimed millions of Brits backed his policies
  • Told of his pride at taking wife Melania to meet the Queen

Mr Trump’s damaging outbursts come as he prepares to meet the PM for a working lunch at Chequers.

If only they really had “stopped” it

If only they really had “stopped” it

by digby



The most salient observation about Peter Strzok and the FBI investigation during the election:

If there was such a conspiracy, of course, it didn’t work. Trump is president and, before the election, there was barely a public whiff that any investigation even existed. If Strzok’s idea was to “stop” Trump from becoming president, it was a spectacular failure.

In a written statement offered before he testified before the House Oversight Committee on Thursday, Strzok pointedly noted that there was no effort on his part to keep Trump from winning the White House — and, further, that he was one of only a few people who could have potentially leaked details from the investigation in an effort to block Trump’s victory.

“In the summer of 2016,” Strzok wrote, “I was one of a handful of people who knew the details of Russian election interference and its possible connections with members of the Trump campaign. This information had the potential to derail, and quite possibly, defeat Mr. Trump. But the thought of exposing that information never crossed my mind.”

No matter what they say and what they do, they can’t get past this fact.

If they had wanted to stop him they could have done it. They were investigating him at the time for colluding with Vladimir Putin. They waved off the New York Times instead.

They helped him win. The fact that they are holding this one sideshow of a public hearing in which they are pretending the opposite just proves how far down the rabbit hole we’ve gone.

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And here I thought this was already done

And here I thought this was already done

by digby

Remember when Trump said that hundreds of parents of Korean War vets (all of whom had to have been at least 105 years old) had begged him to get the remains of the dead soldiers back and Trump later said he’d gotten it done?

Yeah:

North Korean officials did not show up on Thursday for a meeting with Americans at the inter-Korean border to discuss the return of remains of United States soldiers killed in the Korean War, officials said.

Kim Jong-un, the North’s leader, committed to repatriating American soldiers’ remains in his June talks with President Trump. Secretary of State Mike Pompeo said last week, after meeting with officials in North Korea, that working-level talks on the matter would be held on or around Thursday in Panmunjom, the so-called truce village on the border between North and South Korea.

Though American military officials went to Panmunjom for the meeting on Thursday, their North Korean counterparts did not, according to a United States defense official who spoke on the condition of anonymity because of the sensitivity of the matter. A South Korean government official, who also asked for anonymity, confirmed that the North Koreans had not shown up at Panmunjom.

I have a feeling that nobody will care. His cult has already absorbed the idea that he did it. They won’t hear anything else.

At least they released the hostages up front. It looks like that’s going to end up being the only concession.

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Crazy time in Brussels

Crazy time in Brussels

by digby

You can read about Trump’s weird impromptu press conference at this link. I’ll just leave this here:

One reporter, during the press conference, asked if Trump’s message would change once he departed on Air Force One, perhaps referring to tweets that followed G7 talks, in which Trump turned on Canadian Prime Minister Justin Trudeau and Macron. 

“That’s other people that do that,” Trump replied. “I don’t. I’m very consistent. I’m a very stable genius.” 

Trump, who is scheduled to meet with Russian President Vladimir Putin in Helsinki Monday, blasted Germany earlier this week for its billion-dollar natural gas deal with Moscow. But on Thursday, he said he was ready to sit down with Putin. 

“He’s a competitor,” Trump said. “Somebody was saying is he an enemy? He’s not my enemy. Is he your friend? No, I don’t know him very much. But the couple of times I’ve met him, we’ve gotten along well…. Hopefully, someday, maybe he’ll be a friend. It could happen.” 

One he “gets to know him” he’ll be a friend.

He has a 6th grade mentality.

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Is he an asset?

Is he an asset?

by digby

That’s funny but I think it’s becoming a serious question. We know he’s “an asset” to Russia because he’s clearly trying to blow up the western military and economic alliances. He’s made it clear that the only people for whom he has any respect are US adversaries. The rest of the world are either shit-hole countries or “taking advantage” of America and they need to pay some bills he’s decided they owe us.

It’s been a year and a half and he’s not adjusting his behavior. Instead seems to be pushing for a new alliance with these autocrats and dictators with whom he feels personally comfortable. And since he’s a cretinous moron, it’s still very unclear as to why. It could be anything from him being a straight-up foreign agent to him just saying “I will do the opposite of Obama” as a guiding principle because he’s in so far over his head that it’s the only thing he can do.

Anyway, for a run-down of the facts as we know them so far with respect to Russia, I recommend this series by Emptywheel from a couple of months ago. It’s dense but if you’re interested in the details it’s a must read:

Part One: The Mueller Questions Map Out Cultivation, a Quid Pro Quo, and a Cover-Up

Part Two: The Quid Pro Quo: a Putin Meeting and Election Assistance, in Exchange for Sanctions Relief

Part Three: The Quo: Policy and Real Estate Payoffs to Russia

Part Four: The Quest: Trump Learns of the Investigation

Part Five: Attempting a Cover-Up by Firing Comey

Part Six: Trump Exacerbates His Woes

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Trump’s Global Chaos Tour: Act I

Trump’s Global Chaos Tour: Act I


by digby

A float in a Dusseldorf parade

My Salon column this morning:

In anticipation of Trump’s Global Chaos Tour a couple of days ago I told everyone to get ready, it was going to be wild. Upon arrival in Brussels Belgium for the annual NATO meeting, the president opened the show with a fusillade of insults toward America’s allies, a grand display of ignorance of every key issue and a total disregard for history, diplomacy or the national security of the United States. And then it got really crazy.

He started off at a morning breakfast photo-op with the NATO Secretary General Jens Stoltenberg and members of their staffs. Trump proceeded to whine, complain and caterwaul once again about how the NATO countries aren’t contributing enough money to what he still portrays as some common NATO piggy bank and implied that they owe the US for overdue payments which is simply daft. But he made some big news when he claimed that Germany is “totally controlled by Russia” which he apparently believes makes Angela Merkel Putin’s puppet.

He based this upon a bogus claim that Germany gives vast sums of money to Russia in exchange for 70 percent of its energy and therefore, they are a “captive of Russia” and are the ones betraying the NATO charter. (As usual, he was wrong on the facts. Germany gets about 9 percent of its energy from natural gas, which is the energy in question, and about 70 percent of that comes from Russia. )

When Stoltenberg tried to explain that NATO was not about trade, Trump replied:

How can you be together when a country is getting its energy from the person you want protection against or from the group that you want protection against? I think it is a very bad thing for NATO and I don’t think it should have happened and I think we have to talk to Germany about it.

The fact is that of course NATO countries trade with Russia. So does America. But there’s little point in trying to make sense of what he was saying because he clearly had no idea himself.

Later, Press Secretary Sarah Sanders released a statement saying that that instead of the 2 percent of GDP that the NATO countries have agreed to budget for military spending by 2024, Trump is now demanding that they double that to 4 percent. Shortly thereafter, Trump tweeted this, which slightly walked back his imperious demand:

No one knows why he is so intent upon everyone arming themselves to the teeth but we know it isn’t because he wants America to cut back. He wants to raise US defense spending that high as well. Evidently, he wants everyone putting vast amounts of resources into a global war machine. What could go wrong?

The truth is that this is completely unrealistic and so the more obvious reason is that he is seeking to break up the NATO alliance the same way that he tore up the Paris climate accords and the Iran Deal and plans to abrogate NAFTA, withdraw from the WTO and, who knows what else? ( He says right in that tweet, “what good is NATO …?”)

At least that’s how Russia State TV saw it:

#Russia‘s state TV:
Tatyana Parkhalina:
“I never thought I’d live to see this—neither the USSR nor Russia, who tried many times to drive the wedge between transatlantic allies, but Washington is doing everything to break down the foundations of transatlantic alliance & unity.”©️ pic.twitter.com/AlG3QytN8S

— Julia Davis (@JuliaDavisNews) July 11, 2018

Perhaps that’s one of Trump’s “deliverables” to the summit with Vladimir Putin in Helsinki.

Meanwhile, back at home there was some highly unusual activity happening in the congress. You’ll recall that a delegation of Republican Senators visited Moscow over the July 4th holiday and were quoted being extremely accommodating if not downright servile to their hosts. The leader of the delegation, Sen. Richard Shelby R-AL said they were there to “strive for a better relationship, not accuse Russia of this or that or so forth.” Others were even more generous:

Sen. Ron Johnson reportedly said that Russian interference in the 2016 presidential election “is not the greatest threat to our Democracy,” after a group of Republican lawmakers returned from a trip to Moscow. pic.twitter.com/VXk3rkWHCP

— MSNBC (@MSNBC) July 12, 2018

Someone must have pointed out that they had come off as useful idiots because according to the Daily Beast, several of the senators who were there are now saying that the meetings were confrontational and tense with the Russians leaning heavily on the Senators about the sanctions and insisting that the election interference never happened.

Sen. John Kennedy R-LA said the Russians had been under the impression that only Democrats believed that Russia had been involved. It’s not hard to understand why they would have made that assumption. This is the first we’ve seen of any Republican elected officials beyond the few retiring Senators give even the slightest indication that they are concerned about it.

And surprisingly, both the House and the Senate passed nearly unanimous bipartisan resolutions affirming support for NATO. They don’t actually mean anything and neither will they do anything serious to restrain Trump but it’s possible that Republicans making even the slightest attempt to tell the world that Trump’s bellicose comments are not endorsed by his party will provide some reassurance.

And that wasn’t all. The Senate also voted 88-11 for a non-binding resolution to stop Trump from using national security as a rationale for imposing tariffs willy nilly when he wakes up on the wrong side of the bed in the morning. Analysts are saying that it was a test vote to see if they can override a veto.  It’s unknown how many Republicans would hang tough if it came to that, however.

And finally, a bipartisan group of Senators have introduced a  resolution condemning Russian incursion in Crimea and calling on the Trump administration to formalize a policy of non-recognition of Russia’s land acquisition. It too will not be binding, but its timing just before the summit with Putin is not an accident.

Perhaps this is all just CYA behavior for Republicans seeing the handwriting on the wall in a tough election season. Or maybe they only manage to find their lost intestinal fortitude when the president is out of town. But it’s also possible that Trump is starting to scare some of them as much as he’s scaring the rest of the planet.

This NATO debacle was just the opening act of the Global Chaos Tour. Now he’s off to the United Kingdom where he’ll meet the Queen and be followed around by a gigantic Donald Trump Baby Blimp. It should be very entertaining. It’s when Vladimir Putin joins him on the stage for the big finale in Helsinki that we’ll see the real pyrotechnics.

In case you were wondering what might have Trump so agitated:

Moats. EU countries need more moats. by @BloggersRUs

Moats. EU countries need more moats.
by Tom Sullivan

Moats are what’s needed! Moats with alligators. And walls of barbed wire. The kind that stopped Steve McQueen and his motorcycle. Guard towers with machine guns. Free travel in EU = BAD.


Steve McQueen, stopped by barbed wire in The Great Escape (1963).

After opening the NATO summit yesterday by insulting Germany and other allies, the sitting U.S. president, in an unannounced press conference in Brussels this morning, repeated with a smirk that he is a very stable genius.

Just ahead of that news conference, Axios reported the sitting president doesn’t like the paint job on Air Force One. He calls it “a Jackie Kennedy color.” He wants something bolder, something “more American” in red, white, and blue. The Air Force will love it. Axios notes Donald Trump will likely have to win a second term to ride on it. The new pair of tricked-out Boeing 747s are not due to go into service before January 20, 2021.

He wants a new, bigger bed on board too, more like the one he has on his private plane. There’s no word on whether Donald Trump has asked yet for a Doomsday Machine.

Mike Allen writes:

When I told presidential historian Michael Beschloss about Trump’s plans, he replied: “Why would anyone want to discard an Air Force One design that evokes more than a half-century of American history?”

The question answers itself, doesn’t it?

Grand Bargain

If you have not been following Marcy Wheeler (emptywheel), you need to. The text message she revealed getting 14 hours after the 2016 polls closed that predicted Michael Flynn would be working with “Team Al-Assad” within 48 hours? It now appears it is connected to a deal for Trump to strike a “Grand Bargain” with Russian president Putin. Israel, Saudi Arabia, and the U.A.E. hope to coax Putin into pushing Iran out of Syria in exchange for acceding to his annexation of Crimea. For that, foreign players needed a cooperative U.S. president and a secret meeting in the Seychelles.

Wheeler believes her mysterious source has ties to the “grand bargain“:

Subsequent to my interview with the FBI, I realized certain things about publicly available information. I’ve never shared that realization with the government, but it’s a realization they undoubtedly came to on their own from the same publicly available information.

And that realization I had and the government surely also had would have changed the importance of evidence Mueller received via means unrelated to Peter Strzok.

That evidence likely implicates the President directly.

You want to be following this. Besides Ukraine, what else is the very stable genius ready to deal away next week in Helsinki?

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