A recent interview on Fox News with Laura Ingraham and former CIA director James Woolsey
(1993 to 1995) provides us with an interesting glimpse into the mindset that
seems to be pervasive in Washington today.
Here is the interview for your perusal:
Here is the interview for your perusal:
Let's look in detail at some of the back and
forth of the interview:
Ingraham: It may not have
changed the outcome of the election but the Russians were able to pull off a
wide-ranging, aggressive and brazen attempt to interfere in the campaign.
So, can our intelligence agencies stop them from doing this again....This
indictment today was wild (the Mueller iIndictment). I mean they were
organizing all sorts of things. They were working for that Jill
Stein, trying to help her. They were anti-Trump and pro-Trump on one day
after the election. What's that all about?
Woolsey: They want to be a
force and they want to disrupt things. They call their big overall
program "Dezinformatsiya"/disinformation and they've been doing this
since the 1920s, 1930s. What's new is that they do it with cyber.
But they didn't have much luck disrupting American elections back in the
1930s or 1940s but they've been doing that to other countries all along.
Ion Mihai Pacepa, the head of Romanian intelligence who defected in '79, said there are more Russians involved in disinformation than there are in their
armed forces.
Now, let's look at how Ms. Ingraham
drags the other potential superpower into the mix since having just a single
target like Russia isn't enough:
Ingraham: How about the
Chinese, Jim? What do they do to try to disrupt things? They are
disrupting a lot of things around the world for us, I know that.
Woolsey: So far, not the same
way the Russians do. But the Russians photoshopped photographs of the
Pope to make him look like he's saluting to a German Nazi officer...they
just...
Ingraham: You don't think the
Chinese are involved in this type of activity? I mean they have an
economy that dwarfs Russia's, their standing army of 2.3 million people, they
are militarizing space, stealing our technology. I mean I think it's
important that we stop this Russian stuff but every time someone says
"Russia, Russia, Russia" I say "China, China, China".
Woolsey: Well, you should.
That's right. They are strategically a lot smarter. The
Russians basically are like the old fellow lived next the Lincolns and
their farm when he was a little boy, Lincoln said the old boy use to say "
I don't need much land, just what adjoins mine". That's Russia.
I mean I got some Georgia, let's take some Ukraine and that's pretty much
(unintelligible)...
Ingraham: They have an economy
that's smaller than the size of France. Come on, compared to China, like
China's eating our lunch on so many fronts.
Woolsey: (unintelligible)...it gives
us some leverage if we can work to get the price of oil down in the 30s well,
40s even, we will create a very, very unhappy Putin.
Ingraham: But we don't want to
push Russia to China though, that's the last thing you want is a Russo - Sino
alliance.
Woolsey: We just want to weaken
them because we can deal with them a lot better if they are weak. I mean
I was negotiating the conventional forces treaty in Europe in '89 when the
Berlin wall went down and you've never seen such nice Russians. Let me
tell you, all you've got to do is destroy their strategy and they are
sweethearts.
Let's move ahead to the 3 minute 45
second mark:
When asked by Ingraham how we can
prevent Russian interference in future elections, here's what Woolsey had to say:
"I think what we really want is
to get them to start pulling in their horns and coming back out of Georgia,
back out of Ukraine. We need to turn them around because they are taking
over even with their military and other inadequacies. They are taking
over a lot more of Eurasia than they should and it gives them heart as they
take more and more under their wing."
Here's the key part of the entire
exchange, found at the 4 minute and 35 second mark:
Ingraham: Have we ever tried to
meddle in other country's elections?
Woolsey: Oh, probably.
But, it was for the good of the system in order to avoid the Communists
from taking over. For example, in Europe, in '47, '48, '49 the Greeks and
the Italians we (unintelligible)....
Ingraham: We don't do that now
though, we don't mess around in other people's elections Jim?
Woolsey: Well, num, num,
num, num....only for a very good cause. Only for a very good cause in the
interest of democracy.
That's democracy, Washington-style. Exactly what every nation in the world should have and should want.
And it all ends with both interviewer
and interviewee laughing.
In closing, let's look at some data on
electoral interference by the two global superpowers from Dove Levin's excellent paper
entitled "Partisan electoral interventions by the great powers". Overall,
between January 1, 1946 and December 31, 2000, there were 117 partisan
electoral interventions made by the United States and the Soviet Union/Russia
with 81 or 69 percent being conducted by the United States and 36 or 31
percent being conducted by the Soviet Union/Russia. This means
that, between 1946 and 2000, the United States and the Soviet Union/Russia
politically interfered in one of every nine global national-level elections.
Num, num, num indeed.
By now most people seem to have made up their mind as to whether Russia meddled in the election or if collusion is an issue. People are either are outraged, simply concerned or take the attitude this is all "much ado about nothing".
ReplyDeleteTwo things for sure are that this contentious debate continues to stir the waters and polarize the nation while creating some rather strange alliances. Currently, a full-scale propaganda war rages with many Americans hellbent on convincing the rest of us what is really going on. The article below explores this subject.
http://brucewilds.blogspot.com/2018/03/russiangate-collusion-meddling-and.html