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Month: November 2019

US requires Ukraine to keep Javelin missiles 100’s of miles from battlefield @spockosbrain

US requires Ukraine to keep Javelin missiles 100’s of miles from battlefield 


by Spocko

Remember those additional javelin missiles that Ukrainian President Zelensky wanted? It turns out that the US requires they be kept 100’s of miles from the battlefield.

Far From the Front Lines, Javelin Missiles Go Unused in Ukraine

“Under the conditions of the foreign military sale, the Trump administration stipulates that the Javelins must be stored in western Ukraine—hundreds of miles from the battlefield. “

“I see these more as symbolic weapons than anything else,” said Samuel Charap, a senior political scientist at Rand Corp. Experts say the conditions of the sale render them useless in the event of a sustained low-level assault—the kind of attack Ukraine is most likely to face from Russia.”

 — Foreign Policy, October 3rd, 2019  

A U.S. Marine fires a Javelin at a simulated enemy tank at Pohakuloa Training Area in Hawaii. (Photo: U.S. Marine Corps) From Raytheon Javelin Weapon System gallery

 So who wins with the sale of these missiles that aren’t available to use? Raytheon and Lockheed Martin. Each missile costs $109,000 each.

When the discussion of military aide came up Sen. John McCain taunted Obama for giving the Ukrainians “blankets and meals,” instead of lethal support. Trump picked up on that attack on Obama during his meeting with Zelensky

A reporter asked about military aid and Trump replied that “we’re working with Ukraine and we want other countries to work with Ukraine.”

“Well, we’re working with Ukraine and we want other countries to work with Ukraine. When I say ‘work,’ I’m referring to money. They should put up more money. We put up a lot of money. I gave you anti-tank busters that — frankly, President Obama was sending you pillows and sheets, and I gave you anti-tank busters. And a lot of people didn’t want to do that. But I did it,” Trump said.

“And I really hope that Russia, because I believe that President Putin would like to do something. I really hope that you and President Putin get together and can solve your problem. That would be a tremendous achievement. I know you’re trying to do that,” he added.

Trump wanted to position Obama as weak. Offering the missiles made Trump look like a tough guy, even if they weren’t an effective deterrent. From the Foreign Policy article:

But as part of the agreement of the sale, the Javelins are not deployed on the battlefield but stored hundreds of miles away in western Ukraine—far from the front lines of the Donbass, which could radically diminish their deterrent effect, said Mike Carpenter, who served as the deputy assistant secretary of defense for Russia and Eurasia under Obama.

“If the Russians know that the Javelins are not there, the deterrent effect is negated,” said Carpenter, though he noted that the missiles could be transferred to the battlefield in the event of an attack. Michael Kofman, a weapons expert with CNA, described the Javelins as an “insurance policy”—but one with little impact in the balance of power on the conflict.

The decision in 2017 to go ahead with the sale under Trump is often held up as evidence that, despite the president’s puzzling affinity for Russia, his administration has pursued a hawkish Russia policy.

Shortly after the first batch of Javelins arrived in Ukraine in 2018, they were tested by the Ukrainian military in what then-President Petro Poroshenko described as a “dream come true.” The Ukrainian military has been trained on how to use the Javelins, but with no tank battles in eastern Ukraine since 2015, they haven’t yet had the chance to use them for real.

These last two paragraphs are important

“It became this sort of embodiment of U.S. support for Ukraine,” said Charap, who previously served as a senior advisor to the State Department’s undersecretary for arms control. “It’s much more headline-grabbing than helping them with their logistics, which by the way is a real problem.

“While generals and politicians in Kyiv played up the Javelins, in my own experience, soldiers in the field talked more about getting insufficient quantities of the nonlethal aid that they really needed—secure communications, armored vehicles, counterbattery radars,” said Olga Oliker, the director for Europe and Central Asia at the International Crisis Group.

Watching the hearings reminds people that Russia started this war and thousands have been killed and wounded.

“Some 13,000 people have been killed, a quarter of them civilians, and as many as 30,000 wounded in the war in eastern Ukraine since it broke out in April 2014.

UN Office of the High Commissioner for Human Rights (OHCHR) “estimates the total number of conflict-related casualties in Ukraine…at 40,000-43,000” from April 14, 2014 to January 31, 2019, the statement said, including “12,800-13,000 killed.” (link)

There are many ways we can support Ukraine in the face of Russian aggression.  I’m glad someone in the military and/or state department understood they needed a way to let Trump look like a tough guy, but limit the possibility of upsetting Russia with active deployment of weapons that could lead to esclation.

 I’m not an expert, but this looks like a fairly clever move that solved three problems at once, so I assume that no one currently in the White House had anything to do with it.

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It can’t happen here — unfortunately

It can’t happen here — unfortunately

by digby

Trump’s good buddy is a lot like Trump:

Israel’s attorney general unveiled charges of bribery, fraud and breach of trust against Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu in three separate corruption investigations Thursday, marking the first time in the country’s history that a sitting prime minister faces indictment in criminal investigations.

Netanyahu has proclaimed his innocence ever since the criminal investigations became public nearly three years ago. He was expected to make an announcement on Thursday evening.

Even though a formal indictment may be months away, the charges are a blow to the political and personal future of Israel’s longest-serving Prime Minister, who has held office for more than thirteen years in total.

I assume that will have an effect on this:

Chances for a third Israeli election in less than a year rose on Wednesday after Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu’s chief rival announced he would miss a deadline to form a ruling coalition.

Benny Gantz, the leader of the centrist Kahol Lavan party, announced that he was unable to put together a government by Wednesday’s midnight deadline following Netanyahu’s own failure to do so.

The Israeli parliament, known as the Knesset, now starts a 21-day period in which it can try to nominate any one of its 120 lawmakers to try and establish a coalition.

Should that effort fail, an election is triggered within 90 days, sending Israelis to the polls for an unprecedented third time in under a year.

Gantz said he had turned over every possible stone in the 28-day period he was allotted to form a coalition but expressed confidence that his support would grow in a third election, according to a translation of his comments by The Hill.

It’s hard to imagine Likud going to election with Netanyahu at this point but what do I know?

Are all right-wingers corrupt? I’m beginning to think it’s definitional.

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Serious dissonance on Fox News

Serious dissonance on Fox News

by digby

For those who don’t spend a lot (any) time watching Fox, the following may surprise you. It surprised me:

She concludes with this:

TL;DR Fox News has no long term strategy for damage control after getting too close to president crimes so they’re throwing it all against the wall to see if advertisers don’t notice

This is important. A very large part of the Fox audience is retired people.  They’re home all day and they’re watching Fox. (The president is one of them.)

I don’t know if they feel dissonance over this but it’s notable that there are two different storylines emerging on Trump TV. It affects Trump, who sees this and reacts to it.  And his cult is seeing just a bit of reality.  I’m sure they self-sooth with a triple shot of Hannity Carlson and Ingraham at night, but real facts and information are, at least, in front of some of them.

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The stress is getting to him

The stress is getting to him

by digby

Trump has been incoherently screaming “I want nothing! I want nothing! There’s no quid pro quo!”  which is what Sondland quoted him saying in a text to former Ambassador Bill Taylor on September, 9th, 2019.  This supposedly exonerated him.

Unfortunately, he seems to think no one will notice one salient fact about that quote:

This really is “Stupid-Watergate.”

By the way, he’s losing it:

One day, he’s up. One day, he’s down. Other days he’s just angry.

President Donald Trump has gone through a range of emotions since House Democrats started their public impeachment hearings last week about whether he threatened to withhold Ukrainian security aid unless the country opened politically advantageous investigations, according to more than half a dozen people who have spoken to Trump in the last several days.

On Wednesday, Trump was frustrated, defiant and uncharacteristically terse.

Running more than an hour late, the president emerged from the White House shortly before noon, carrying a few notes he jotted down on White House stationary. For once, he stuck his talking points.

“I want nothing! I want nothing!” Trump told reporters, responding to the eye-opening testimony of Gordon Sondland, the ambassador to the European Union, who had just told lawmakers that everyone understood there to be a quid pro quo regarding Ukraine, even if the president had never told him directly.

“I want no quid pro quo,” he reiterated. “This is the final word from the president of the United States. I want nothing.”

With that, Trump got in the waiting helicopter and lifted off.

It was the latest in a series of ever-shifting Trump reactions — which can change by the hour — to the public portion of the impeachment inquiry.

“Sometimes he’s super calm and cheery and other times he’s pissed when he sees something,” a White House official said. “His reactions are human.”

White House press secretary Stephanie Grisham has repeatedly insisted the president is busy working and doesn’t have time to watch the testimony. Other people around Trump say he has watched some of the witnesses, while getting a readout on those he doesn’t watch before responding the way America has come to expect — via Twitter.
[…]
Instead of merely tweeting, Trump decided to speak to reporters after watching a slice of Sondland’s testimony in the White House residence. Before meeting the press, he worked with Grisham and the counsel’s office on a few notes, essentially writing down Sondland’s own recollection of a phone call with Trump, during which the EU ambassador said the president insisted he didn’t want a quid pro quo, just for Zelensky to “do the right thing.”

A senior administration official said Trump latched on to the language because it was a recollection of his own communications.

Trump’s language mimicked a talking point Trump’s team was circulating on Wednesday. The bullet points were developed in war rooms across Washington that brought together staffers from the White House, Trump’s campaign and the Republican National Committee.

“Ambassador Sondland said in his opening remarks that he followed President Trump’s direction,” read one bullet point. “This would include, by Sondland’s own testimony, the President’s insistence on no quid pro quo.”

Pathetic. As you can see from the tweets above, this is an absurd line of defense. I guess it’s the best they can do.

But it speaks to Trump’s current flailing that he’s reduced to standing before a group of reporters with a paper in front of him full of (gigantic) notes screaming “I want nothing!” over and over again.

He’s losing faith in his ability to get through this on his own.

A person close to the president said Trump is unsure if Democrats or Republicans are winning the public perception battle over the last two weeks.

“I think he’s in a decent mood under the circumstances,” the person said. “He’s frustrated and irritated but he’s not overly frustrated and irritated given the situation he’s in.”

Trump had been privately and publicly fuming for weeks that Republicans weren’t doing enough to defend him. But that changed last week when the hearings started and he could watch the full-tilt defenses from allies on Capitol Hill, including Reps. Devin Nunes (Calif.) and Jim Jordan (Ohio).

“I think when you’re trying to issue somebody the death sentence politically, even a guy with a constitution as strong as his … that’s got to bother anyone,” said Sen. Mike Braun (R-Ind.). “But mostly they’re building the case for why he’s going to get re-elected because the American public doesn’t like it either.”

Still, Trump’s feelings have risen and fallen based on the story of the moment.

On the first day of public hearings last week, Trump was feeling more optimistic because he thought William Taylor, the top U.S. diplomat in Ukraine, was a weak opening witness, given that he had little firsthand knowledge of the situation, said two people with knowledge of the president’s thinking.

But on Friday, the second day of hearings, he felt frustrated after multiple people inside and outside the White House told him he made a mistake by criticizing a Marie Yovanovitch, the former ambassador to Ukraine, as she was testifying. Democrats immediately accused him of trying to intimidate a witness.

House Democrats expect to wrap up their public Ukraine hearings on Thursday.

“There are good days. There are bad days,” said a former Trump campaign adviser. “He fully expects that. He knows in a big rolling production like this there are going to be both.”

On Wednesday, Trump’s production was all about the notes. After touring an Apple plant in Texas, the president pulled them out again when he got another question on the subject.

“I want nothing,” he said.

He’s losing his mind, I’m sorry. This was weird even for him:

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Fiona Hill, Russia expert, tells Trump and Nunes they’re full of it

Fiona Hill, Russia expert, tells Trump and Nunes they’re full of it

by digby

Former NSC official Fiona Hill looked these morons in the eye and laid it out in clear and unambiguous terms:

I thought I could help them with President Trump’s stated goal of improving relations with Russia, while still implementing policies designed to deter Russian conduct that threatens the United States, including the unprecedented and successful Russian
operation to interfere in the 2016 presidential election.

This relates to the second thing I want to communicate. Based on questions and statements I have heard, some of you on this committee appear to believe that Russia and its security services did not conduct a campaign against our country—and that perhaps, somehow, for some reason, Ukraine did. This is a fictional narrative that has been perpetrated and propagated by the Russian security services themselves.

The unfortunate truth is that Russia was the foreign power that systematically attacked our democratic institutions in 2016. This is the public conclusion of our intelligence agencies, confirmed in bipartisan Congressional reports. Itis beyond dispute, even if some of the underlying details must remain classified.

The impact of the successful 2016 Russian campaign remains evident today. Our nation is being torn apart. Truth is questioned. Our highly professional and expert career foreign service is being undermined. U.S. support for Ukraine—which continues to face armed
Russian aggression—has been politicized.

The Russian government’s goal is to weaken our country—to diminish America’s global role and to neutralize a perceived U.S. threat to Russian interests. President Putin and the Russian security services aim to counter U.S. foreign policy objectives in Europe,
including in Ukraine, where Moscow wishes to reassert political and economic dominance.

I say this not as an alarmist, but as a realist. I do not think long-term conflict with Russia is either desirable or inevitable. I continue to believe that we need to seek ways of stabilizing our relationship with Moscow even as we counter their efforts to harm us. Right now, Russia’s security services and their proxies have geared up to repeat their interference in the 2020 election. We are
running out of time to stop them. In the course of this investigation, I would ask that you please not promote politically driven falsehoods that so clearly advance Russian interests.

As Republicans and Democrats have agreed for decades, Ukraine is a valued partner of the United States, and it plays an important role in our national security. And as I told this Committee last month, I refuse to be part of an effort to legitimize an alternate narrative that the Ukrainian government is a U.S. adversary, and that Ukraine—not Russia—attacked us in 2016. These fictions are harmful even if they are deployed for purely domestic political purposes. President Putin and the Russian security services operate like a Super PAC. They deploy millions of dollars to weaponize our own political opposition research and false narratives. When we are consumed by partisan rancor, we cannot combat these external forces as they seek to divide us against each another, degrade our institutions and destroy the faith of the American people in our democracy.

I appreciate Hill breaking through the bullshit to inform the Trumpies they are being duped.

I just wrote this for Salon yesterday FWIW:

Now that we’ve watched three long days of hearings it’s pretty clear that the Republicans aren’t just interested in challenging witnesses or offering a defense of the president’s actions. They see this as an opportunity to advance the same conspiracy theories that Trump and Giuliani were pressing the Ukrainians to announce they would investigating.

Despite being thoroughly and repeatedly debunked, largely on the basis of a timeline that refutes their premise, the bogus corruption scandal around Joe and Hunter Biden remains a live issue, as far as Republicans are concerned. The facts of the case are of little interest to them. They simply want to keep talking about it in order to justify the president’s actions and keep the so-called scandal viable as a political weapon should Biden win the Democratic nomination. It is the patented “but her emails” strategy, which you have to admit was highly successful.

It’s somewhat more interesting that Republicans are spending a lot of time talking about the other investigation Trump so desperately wanted. That would be the alternative narrative in which the Ukrainians framed the Russian government for the 2016 election interference in an effort to help Hillary Clinton, what Trump referred to as “CrowdStrike” in the infamous call. I won’t go into the details here. If you are unfamiliar with the so-called details of this loony conspiracy theory, you can read about it in this Salon article by Bob Cesca. Suffice it to say there is no basis for any of this and the main people who benefit from its continued dissemination are Donald Trump and Vladimir Putin.

This isn’t just another crazy right-wing distraction, however. The consensus in the American intelligence community, as well as that of our allies, is that it was the Russians who hacked into Democratic emails and had them distributed, much to Trump’s delight. The president and the Republican Party are spreading this counter-narrative blaming Ukraine — a narrative allegedly planted by Russian agents — as a green light to Russia to interfere in the 2020 election.

I’ll say that again: The entire Republican Party is now acting as a Russian ally, eager to spread Putin’s lies blaming Russia’s regional adversary for what his own agents did. Even if Trump doesn’t win next year, the Russians will have successfully pumped these toxic narratives into the American body politic, and made it very ill.

In the hearing on Tuesday, Republicans repeatedly slandered Speaker Nancy Pelosi with this doctored quote:

That’s not correct. What Pelosi actually said was this:

The weak response to these hearings has been, “Let the election decide.” That dangerous position only adds to the urgency of our action, because the President is jeopardizing the integrity of the 2020 elections.

Even after the Mueller report was released, Pelosi didn’t want impeachment. She and many others in the Democratic Party believed it would be a mistake to take the president on for his 2016 actions and the subsequent cover-up when another election was imminent. But when evidence emerged that Trump was actively trying to sabotage the 2020 election by letting Russia off the hook for 2016 — and was trying to bribe or extort foreign leaders into smearing Democrats — she really had no choice.

Trump doesn’t have a lot of running room to set up any more foreign shakedown schemes before 2020, so the impeachment process is probably doing some good in keeping him confined. But Republicans have taken the baton and are running with it as best they can in these hearings, basically saying, “Russia, if you’re listening, we have your back.” Indeed, they are sending that signal to anyone who wants to interfere. The best hope the Democrats have is that the electorate as a whole will see through it this time.

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Devin Nunes is committed by @BloggersRUs

Devin Nunes is committed
by Tom Sullivan

“I thank the gentleman, always, for his remarks,” a bemused committee chairman Rep. Adam Schiff (D-Calif.) said to laughter in the hearing room after Rep. Devin Nunes (R-Calif.), ranking member, completed his remarks after a long day of impeachment inquiry testimony. Nunes hits all his marks during these now-familiar derisive opening and closing speeches before the House Permanent Select Committee on Intelligence: circus, hoax, sham, Star Chamber, three-card monte, con game, Spanish inquisition, story-time-hour.

“Ambassador Sondland, you are here today to be smeared,” Nunes said Wednesday morning. He was clearly unprepared for testimony by European Union Ambassador Gordon Sondland that implicated “everyone” in the Ukraine arms-for-political dirt scheme, including President Donald Trump, Vice President Pence, Secretary of State Mike Pompeo, and Rudy Giuliani. “Everyone was in the loop.

In his opening remarks, Nunes listed a series of facts he claimed Special Counsel Robert Mueller failed to prove. Salon sampled a few from what Nunes branded false charges:

“Trump had a diabolical plan to build a Trump Tower in Moscow,” he said. (True.) “Trump changed the Republican National Committee platform to hurt Ukraine and benefit Russia,” he added. (True.) “Trump’s son-in-law lied about his Russian contacts while obtaining his security clearance,” he continued. (True.)

“It’s a long list of charges, all false,” Nunes declared of the largely corroborated list of allegations.

Nunes insists it was Ukraine and the Democrats that interfered in the 2016 election, that “their operatives got campaign dirt from Ukrainians in the 2016 election” [timestamp 3:16:15]. Why do that? Because Nunes is not speaking to “those of you at home,” as he claims. He is playing to an audience of one in the White House, to someone who actually believes this nonsense and/or wants to see his minions repeat it.

The audience in the hearing room thinks Nunes and his spewings are as much a joke as his suing a fake cow earlier this year. Nunes is committed to debasing himself to serve his liege.

Betsy Swan breaks news that Nunes and his aides traveled to Europe in 2018 to search out foreign origins for Special Counsel Robert Mueller’s Russian election-meddling investigation. Attorney Ed MacMahon, representing indicted Rudy Giuliani associate Lev Parnas, told The Daily Beast Parnas had helped arrange meetings and calls for Nunes’ team. A Nunes spokesperson declined comment:

Nunes has been at the center of the broader story about foreign influence in President Donald Trump’s Washington. When congressional investigators began probing Russian interference in the 2016 campaign, Nunes made a late-night visit to the White House and announced the next day he’d found evidence of egregious wrongdoing by Intelligence Community officials. The move appeared to be an effort to corroborate a presidential tweet claiming that Obama wiretapped Trump Tower. Nunes then stepped back from the committee’s work scrutinizing Russian efforts. Instead, he ran a parallel probe looking at the origins of Mueller’s Russia probe. The undertaking made him a hero to the president and Sean Hannity, and a bête noire of Democrats and Intelligence Community officials. That work was still underway when he traveled to Europe in 2018.

Prosecutors from the Southern District of New York last month charged Parnas and colleague Igor Fruman with (among other things) conspiring to violate campaign finance laws by laundering foreign money through straw donors and dummy businesses to U.S. campaigns. Parnas and Fruman, U.S. nationals, sought to “advance the political interests of… a Ukrainian government official who sought the dismissal of the U.S. ambassador to the Ukraine.”

The Ukrainian government official was Ukraine’s former chief prosecutor Yuriy Lutsenko. The U.S. ambassador eventually forced out in May is Marie Yovanovitch. Lutsenko had “sharp disagreements with Yovanovitch over his handling of corruption cases, and was also seeking to curry favor with the Trump administration,” according to two former U.S. officials.

It was not a good day for Nunes. Twitter took notice.

It was not the first time this week Nunes was the butt of viral jokes.

But let’s not pile on.

Update: Earlier version identified Nunes as a Florida congressman. I had a Matt Gaetz moment.

A volcano just erupted all over Pompeo

A volcano just erupted all over Pompeo

by digby

Oops:

Gordon D. Sondland, the diplomat at the center of the House impeachment inquiry, kept Secretary of State Mike Pompeo apprised of key developments in the campaign to pressure Ukraine’s leader into public commitments that would satisfy President Trump, two people briefed on the matter said.

Mr. Sondland informed Mr. Pompeo in mid-August about a draft statement that Mr. Sondland and another American diplomat had worked on with the Ukrainians that they hoped would persuade Mr. Trump to grant Ukraine’s new president the Oval Office meeting he was seeking, the people said.

Later that month, Mr. Sondland discussed with Mr. Pompeo the possibility of pushing the Ukrainian president, Volodymyr Zelensky, to pledge during a planned meeting with Mr. Trump in Warsaw that he would take the steps being sought by Mr. Trump as a way to break the logjam in relations between the two countries, the people said.

Mr. Pompeo expressed his approval of the plan, they said, but Mr. Trump later canceled his trip to Poland.

It appears that all the president’s men are in the crosshairs now: Pompeo, Mulvaney, Bolton, Perry, Giuliani.

Pompeo has been telling people that wants to resign and run for the Senate:

Secretary of State Mike Pompeo has shared with three prominent Republicans that he wants to resign and run for Senate next year in Kansas, Time reports.

The Republicans told Time that Pompeo’s original plan was to stay at the State Department until next spring, but because of the House impeachment inquiry, he’s thinking about making an early — and hopefully smooth — exit. They do not know if Pompeo has discussed any of this with Trump.

Pompeo’s concern is that the longer he stays in the Trump administration, the more he will be criticized for not defending the current and former diplomats who have testified in the impeachment inquiry, Time reports. 

Good luck with that. The good ship Trump has sailed, I’m afraid, and Pompeo long ago lashed himself to the mast.

Thanks, Devin. Thanks Jim. It’s all going according to plan. Love, Vlad.

Thanks, Devin. Thanks Jim. It’s all going according to plan. Love, Vlad.

by digby

He’s quite the troll isn’t he?

Russian President Vladimir Putin says he’s pleased that the “political battles” in Washington have put on the back-burner accusations that Russia interfered in U.S. elections.

“Thank God,” he told an economic forum in the Russian capital on Wednesday, “no one is accusing us of interfering in the U.S. elections anymore; now they’re accusing Ukraine.”

Some Republicans have used the public hearings to tout a discredited conspiracy theory that blames Ukraine, not Russia, for interfering in the U.S.’s 2016 presidential election.

Once again, everything Trump does inexplicably accrues to the benefit of Vladimir Putin. This one’s a doozy. The conspiracy theory being pursued by the Republicans originated with Russin operative Konstatin Kilimnik:

In a 2018 interview with Rick Gates, the aide of former Trump campaign chairman Paul Manafort, Gates told investigators that Manafort speculated the Ukrainians were behind the 2016 hacks of Democrats’ emails.

“Gates recalled Manafort saying the hack was likely carried out by the Ukrainians, not the Russians, which parroted a narrative Kilimnik often supported,” the 302 reads.

A related conspiracy theory is now the subject of the House’s impeachment inquiry. In his call with Ukrainian President Volodymyr Zelensky, Trump pressed Zelensky on a conspiracy that the hacked DNC “server” — though in reality there’s more than one — was actually in Ukraine. Such theories assert that evidence collected from the Democratic servers pinning the hacks on Russia was actually manufactured.

Kilimnik is under indictment in the US for crimes related to his relationship with former Trump campaign chairman Paul Manafort. He fled to Russia, where he remains today.

The Republicans spewing this conspiracy theory, particularly Devin Nunes who blathers about it endlessly in an attempt to curry favor with Trump and Hannity, are basically giving the green light to Russia to do it all over again.

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Rudy not happy

Rudy not happy

by digby

Towards the end of Wednesday’s morning session, attorney Steve Castor pressed EU Ambassador Gordon Sondland on his communication with Giuliani.

Sondland confirmed that there was “not a lot” of it. Castor tried to push Sondland’s conclusion a step further by adding that former special envoy to Ukraine Kurt Volker testified that Giuliani “was doing his own communications,” implying a separation from the President. Castor seemed to be trying to isolate Giuliani as acting under his own volition after Sondland testified in his opening statement that Giuliani was the conduit for President Donald Trump’s Ukraine desires.

Castor then hammered the nail the rest of the way in.

“You know, granted, Mr. Giuliani had business interests in Ukraine, correct?” Castor asked, quickly adding that Giuliani was involved with “Messrs. Parnas and Fruman” in those business ventures. Giuliani associates Lev Parnas and Igor Fruman were arrested last month on campaign finance charges.

Rudy didn’t like that one bit:

He has good reason to be a little bit agitated about this:

Federal prosecutors are planning to interview an executive with Ukraine’s state-owned gas company as part of an ongoing probe into the business dealings of Rudy Giuliani and two of his Soviet-born business associates.

A lawyer for Andrew Favorov confirmed Tuesday that he is scheduled to meet voluntarily with the U.S. Justice Department. Favorov is the director of the integrated gas division at Naftogaz, the state-owned gas provider in Ukraine.

Federal prosecutors in New York are investigating the business dealings of Giuliani, President Donald Trump’s personal lawyer, including whether he failed to register as a foreign agent, according to people familiar with the probe. The people were not authorized to discuss the investigation publicly and spoke on the condition of anonymity.

Giuliani’s close associates, Lev Parnas and Igor Fruman, were arrested last month at an airport outside Washington while trying to board a flight to Europe with one-way tickets. They were later indicted by federal prosecutors on charges of conspiracy, making false statements and falsification of records.

Following an inquiry from The Associated Press, Favorov lawyer Lanny Breuer confirmed his client is set to meet with prosecutors.

“The Department of Justice has requested an interview,” Breuer said. “He has agreed and will voluntarily sit down with the government attorneys. At this time, it would not be appropriate to comment further.”

Breuer declined to say when or where Favorov, who has dual U.S.-Russian citizenship and lives in Ukraine, will be meeting with prosecutors.

Jim Margolin, a spokesman for the U.S. Attorney’s Office in the Southern District of New York, declined to comment.

According to a federal indictment filed last month, Parnas and Fruman are alleged to have been key players in Giuliani’s efforts earlier this year to spur the Ukrainian government to launch an investigation of Democratic presidential contender Joe Biden and his son Hunter.

The two men’s efforts included helping to arrange a January meeting in New York between Giuliani and Ukraine’s former top prosecutor, Yuri Lutsenko, as well as other meetings with top government officials.

While the House impeachment hearings have focused narrowly on Giuliani’s role in pursuing Ukrainian investigations into Democrats, the interest of federal prosecutors in interviewing Favorov suggests they are conducting a broader probe into the business dealings of Giuliani and his associates.

Rudy’s insane so who knows what he did and why. But it seems clear that people who were allegedly crusading against Ukraine corruption were actually in Ukraine to make corrupt deals on their own behalf.

Rudy will need a pardon and he’s not exactly being coy about it. But he has to look at old Paul Manafort moldering in federal prison as we speak and wondering if he going to get one. He knows things, of course. But who’s going to believe him now that his reputation is shredded? He says he has “insurance.” It had better be documented.

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