RSN Fundraising Banner
FB Share
Email This Page
add comment
Politics
Why Trump's Travel Ban Hits Women the Hardest Print
Sunday, 16 July 2017 12:24

Chen writes: "The latest temporary reinstatement of the order's 120-day refugee ban - pending an anticipated October Supreme Court ruling - is already quietly undermining the most fundamental universal humanitarian rule: it puts women and children ... last."

'Women face a disproportionate share of the trauma because at every stage in the refugee journey.' (photo: Anadolu Agency/Getty Images)
'Women face a disproportionate share of the trauma because at every stage in the refugee journey.' (photo: Anadolu Agency/Getty Images)


Why Trump's Travel Ban Hits Women the Hardest

By Michelle Chen, Guardian UK

16 July 17


On top of alienating an entire religious community, Trump’s ban on future refugee admissions deepens the endemic gender injustice of warfare

rump’s “Muslim ban” is a frontal assault on many universal human rights principles. But the latest temporary reinstatement of the order’s 120-day refugee ban – pending an anticipated October Supreme Court ruling – is already quietly undermining the most fundamental universal humanitarian rule: it puts women and children … last.

The Executive Order is being challenged primarily for discriminating against citizens of six Muslim-majority countries – Iran, Libya, Somalia, Sudan, Syria and Yemen – with an arbitrary 90-day travel ban (with arbitrary, potentially illegal exceptions for those with “bona fide relationships” to US residents.)

But on top of alienating an entire religious community, Trump’s even longer ban on future refugee admissions deepens a hidden dimension of the crisis: the endemic gender injustice of warfare.

The ban exposes a brazenly hypocritical convergence between Trump’s War on Women and his War on Terror.

In contrast to the menacing stereotype of male Isis warriors invading US shores, which Trump has framed in his speeches seeking to justify the ban, the demographic realities of the crisis place women in an unheard majority: nearly three-quarters of Syrian refugees who have entered the US since the war began (about 13,000) were women and young children. Women and children under age 14 actually make up most admissions from the top countries of origin for refugees in the US, including Iraq, Somalia and Syria.

While Trump’s ban is supposed to be temporary, four months is long enough to inflict irreparable harm on those facing gender-based violence every passing hour. Women remain deeply vulnerable whether they are escaping military air raids or “safe” in an official refugee camp overseas.

According to US humanitarian organization Tahirh Justice Center, which focuses on gender-based human rights abuse, women face a disproportionate share of the trauma because at every stage in the refugee journey, even outside of the direct conflict zone, they “find themselves unable to get out of situations that might threaten their safety ... either because they are in domestic violence situation ... internally displaced, or ... vulnerable to trafficking or other forms of harm.”

Moreover they face ancillary gender-based human rights violations that tend to explode in conflict situations, including epidemics of sexual abuse and labor and sexual trafficking.

In any society at war, conflict unravels civil society, but the violent aftermath may strengthen institutionalized oppressions. In a 2015 survey of one of the largest Syrian refugee communities, in Jordan, UNHCR observed that since “traditional protection networks have broken down” for women and children, multiple forms of gender-based violence have intensified.

But while military violence had triggered displacement, the primary type of violence against women wasn’t a war crime but domestic abuse, usually within a household. The prevalence of child marriage, which typically targets young girls who have become economic “burdens” to the family, had more than doubled over the already high pre-war marriage rates.

Ironically, the further women “escape” from warzones, the deeper the threats they face on the refugee trail. Across Africa and the Middle East, women, often migrating alone with children, spiral into vast trafficking networks that profit from the overlap of gender and social barriers at the region’s militarized borders.

According to a UN survey of refugees who crossed through the Libyan militia-controlled detention camps, about half of women and children reported suffering sexual abuse, often repeatedly. The phalanx of sexual predation blurs lines between legal and criminal: about one in three reports of abuse involved a violator who was in uniform or associated with the military; incidents often occurring at border crossings and checkpoints. Though both boys and girls faced abuse, attacks on girls were more prevalent, often exacerbated by extreme deprivation.

Currently, advocates hope the Muslim ban’s 120-day timeline will have simply lapsed by the time the Supreme Court reviews the case. In the long run, they’re pushing for a definitive ruling, to send an international message that the president is not above the constitution.

But even if Trump’s ban is ultimately struck down, the administration and Republican Congress will continue to inflict disproportionate harm on refugee women. In May, amid his legal crusade to exclude even more refugees, Trump enacted the “Global Gag Rule,” which restricts humanitarian funding for groups that the administration deems to be in any way facilitating abortion – even if their services focus on basic family planning, or care for rape survivors.

According to the latest analysis of the Interagency Working Group on Reproductive Health in Crises, several “banned” countries are suffering disastrous gaps in reproductive healthcare.

Women across Somalia, Yemen, Syria and Sudan, including those displaced within borders and those who become refugees in other countries, are in dire need of contraceptives and other essential women’s services; aid groups warn that ongoing social upheaval and displacement is aggravating the gaps in social counseling, family planning and birth control resources.

Rape has become so prevalent on some smuggling routes, women report that traffickers are now in the business of reproductive health, injecting women with contraceptives to avoid pregnancy en route.

As Trump drives to harden the borders of Terror War, he’s quietly expanding his assault on refugee mothers, sisters and daughters – an invisible war on women that, tragically, knows no boundaries.


e-max.it: your social media marketing partner
 
FOCUS: Schumer and Democrats Must Stand Against McConnell's Dirty Energy Bill Print
Sunday, 16 July 2017 11:17

Excerpt: "What do you do when your plan to take away health insurance from 22 million Americans and give huge tax breaks to the wealthy starts to unravel? If you're Senate Majority Leader Mitch McConnell, you create a strategic plan to build legislative momentum by passing a bill that previously had bipartisan support."

Stand up to them. (photo: Nicholas Kamm/AFP/Getty Images)
Stand up to them. (photo: Nicholas Kamm/AFP/Getty Images)


Schumer and Democrats Must Stand Against McConnell's Dirty Energy Bill

By Mark Ruffalo and Fisher Stevens, New York Daily News

16 July 17

 

hat do you do when your plan to take away health insurance from 22 million Americans and give huge tax breaks to the wealthy starts to unravel? If you’re Senate Majority Leader Mitch McConnell, you create a strategic plan to build legislative momentum by passing a bill that previously had bipartisan support.

That’s the nefarious ploy McConnell has devised to kill three birds with one dirty energy bill: a legislative victory, a giveaway to the fossil fuel industry, and paving the way to pass Trumpcare after.

McConnell is rushing the Energy and Natural Resources Act of 2017 to the floor as early as next week, foregoing committees and hearings. The bill includes much of the fossil fuel industry’s wish list. It would waste billions of dollars on new coal projects, and expedite the process to mine and drill our public lands, approval of pipelines, and permitting of massive offshore Liquefied Natural Gas export terminals that would increase demand for fracking.

It’s a massive, more than 850-page energy bill, yet there’s essentially nothing good in support of truly clean renewable energy. These are among the many reasons why hundreds of environmental organizations oppose the bill.

The energy bill is a disaster for climate change. It would commit the United States to ongoing reliance on fossil fuels for decades to come. That’s exactly the wrong move at a time when it’s crucial that we reduce extraction and consumption of fossil fuels, and increase rapidly renewable energy, efficiency and clean transportation.

With Trump pulling the United States out of the Paris Agreement, members of the Senate Democrats should only be supporting legislation that gets us on track to meet those goals and quickly surpass them. This dirty energy bill would only move us further away.

To his usual sly self, McConnell no doubt chose this bill, in particular, to distract from health care and build momentum because a failed version of it attracted support from Senate Democrats last year. Now, if this bill passes, he figures he can get a bipartisan win and use that victory to pass Trumpcare under the guise of a functioning Congress.

The question unanswered is: Will Senate Minority Leader Chuck Schumer and the Senate Democrats will give McConnell and Trump this win? Even setting aside the many substantive, merit-based reasons to oppose this bill, unified Senate Democrat opposition should be a no-brainer.

Again, Trump and McConnell are doing everything they can to kick tens of millions of Americans off their healthcare. They’re doing so despite the fact that only 17% of Americans support their disaster of a plan. They want to derail Medicaid, and are unmoved by the fact that so many children and elderly in this country depend on it. Simply put, if they win on health care, many people will suffer and die as a result.

When that’s what you’re facing, you don’t do anything — anything at all — that could help them. You don’t come together and give the Trump administration and the McConnell-Ryan Congress a win that will give a boost their vote whipping on health care.

That’s exactly what this dirty energy bill would do. That’s why McConnell — the architect of a stolen Supreme Court seat and so many other ridiculous legislative maneuvers — chose it.

No one should be too comforted or complicit by the headlines about how the GOP’s health care bill is struggling, or even Sen. John McCain saying it’s likely dead. Much of the conservative opposition is likely theatrical pandering. Remember, the same thing happened in the House. And then they passed an equally horrendous bill.

Plus, McConnell just added two more weeks to session in August in a desperate attempt to pass this before letting members back to their districts to hear directly from constituents who are fearful for their health and their families if they get kicked off their health insurance.

The good news is that the resistance movement and what has so far been concerted Democratic opposition have denied Trump and the McConnell-Ryan Congress their most significant legislative priorities. The resistance movement, with countless actions and calls for steadfast opposition, has shown that standing steadfast in opposition to disastrous, harmful policies works.

Now, in the face of McConnell’s latest legislative gambit with the dirty energy bill, will Senate Democrats stand firm or will they play into McConnell’s hands?

It’s up to Schumer. He needs to loudly and forcefully lead the Senate Democrats to oppose the dirty energy bill and refuse to give McConnell a win and momentum that will quickly be used to make way for Trumpcare.


e-max.it: your social media marketing partner
 
FOCUS: FBI Nominee Christopher Wray Sure Looks Dirty Print
Written by <a href="index.php?option=com_comprofiler&task=userProfile&user=20877"><span class="small">William Boardman, Reader Supported News</span></a>   
Sunday, 16 July 2017 10:29

Boardman writes: "In his opening statement, Christopher Wray, nominated by President Trump to be the next director of the FBI, pretty much said all the right things to the Senate Judiciary Committee on July 12. It's even possible that Wray's testimony could turn out to be true. But doubt is hard to allay in the context of his career to date."

The questions directed at Christopher Wray, the nominee for FBI director, showed the continued reluctance of even the most Trump-averse GOP officials to publicly oppose the President. (photo: Andrew Harrer/Bloomberg/Getty Images)
The questions directed at Christopher Wray, the nominee for FBI director, showed the continued reluctance of even the most Trump-averse GOP officials to publicly oppose the President. (photo: Andrew Harrer/Bloomberg/Getty Images)


FBI Nominee Christopher Wray Sure Looks Dirty

By William Boardman, Reader Supported News

16 July 17


If I am given the honor of leading this agency, I will never allow the FBI’s work to be driven by anything other than the facts, the law, and the impartial pursuit of justice. Period. Full stop. My loyalty is to the Constitution and the rule of law. They have been my guideposts throughout my career, and I will adhere to them no matter the test.
Attorney Christopher Wray, Congressional testimony, July 12, 2017

t’s hard to get better lip service than that. In his opening statement, Christopher Wray, nominated by President Trump to be the next director of the FBI, pretty much said all the right things to the Senate Judiciary Committee on July 12. It’s even possible that Wray’s testimony could turn out to be true. But doubt is hard to allay in the context of his career to date.

President Trump announced his choice in a tweet on June 7: “I will be nominating Christopher A. Wray, a man of impeccable credentials, to be the new Director of the FBI. Details to follow.” The 8:44 a.m. tweet came without prior notice to Congress and served as something of a distraction to that day’s Senate testimony by James Comey, the FBI director Trump had fired on May 9.

The “impeccable credentials” are real enough in a very old line, establishment sort of way. Christopher Wray was born in New York City in 1966. His father was a partner in the well-connected law firm of Debevoise and Plimpton. His mother, Gilda Gates Wray, was a program officer at the Charles Hayden Foundation (American Red Cross, Museum of Natural History). Wray attended the Buckley School in Manhattan and Phillips Academy in Andover, Massachusetts. In 1989, Wray graduated from Yale College cum laude and married Helen Garrison Howell, also Yale ‘89. He graduated from Yale Law School in 1992, where he was executive editor of the Yale Law Journal. After a federal judge clerkship, Wray went into private practice in 1993 at the Atlanta office of the King & Spalding international law firm. In 1997 he joined the Justice Department as a U.S. attorney in the Northern District of Georgia. In 2003, President Bush (Yale ’68) appointed him the youngest-ever Assistant Attorney General in charge of the criminal division. In 2005, he returned to private practice at King & Spalding, where he was primarily a criminal defense lawyer who according to the website “helps clients navigate federal and state government investigations and litigation.” With King & Spalding, Wray had broad experience “spanning a wide variety of industries and more than 30 different countries.” As a partner at King & Spalding (where his partner pages are deleted), Wray is paid $9.2 million a year.

Wray’s political contributions of at least $35,000 over the years have gone exclusively to Republican candidates, including John McCain in 2008 ($2300) and Mitt Romney in 2012 ($7500). He appears to have made no political contributions during 2016. He also volunteered for Fred Thompson’s “Lawyers for Fred” committee in 2008.

What did Wray know about US torture programs, and when did he know it?

Wray was there when Justice Dept. attorney John Yoo and others were drafting torture memos that were subsequently acted on by the Bush administration. In Senate testimony, Wray said with exquisite lawyerly caution: “To my recollection, I never reviewed, much less provided comments on or input on, and much less approved, any memo from John Yoo on this topic.” He does not say he did not see or act on memos by others. He does not say he was not aware of his government’s sanction of torture in violation of US and international law. He does not say he registered any objection to torture then. He did not, as head of the criminal division, bring any charges against any of the Bush administration torturers in 2003-2005. On leaving the department, he did receive a distinguished public service award.

He told the Senate on July 12: “I can only tell this committee that I have no recollection whatsoever of that, and it’s the kind of thing I think I’d remember…. My view is that torture is wrong, it’s unacceptable, it’s illegal, and I think it’s ineffective.” Reports that Wray visited the Guantanamo prison are apparently untrue, but the senators did not ask about it. Nor did they inquire about Wray’s awareness of abuses including torture at the Abu Ghraib prison in Iraq, even though Wray appeared before the same committee in 2004 and was questioned by Vermont senator Patrick Leahy then. Wray’s letter of May 6, 2004, about “Iraqi detainees at Abu Ghraib prison” remains redacted by the Justice Department.

In 2004, Wray was involved in the prosecution of a CIA contractor, David Passaro, whose beating of a prisoner in 2003 led to that prisoner’s death within 48 hours. Passaro is the only US civilian prosecuted for prisoner abuse or torture. Wray is quoted in the indictment saying: “The criminal abuse of persons detained in the global war on terrorism will not be tolerated. The Department of Justice will move to punish those whose actions violate the rule of law. Such abuse violates the core principles of a free and just society.” result of this prosecution was to convict one person and allow the programs of torture and abuse to continued, perhaps more carefully, but fundamentally unhindered. In this sense, Wray clearly seems to be part of setting up Passaro as a scapegoat.

Wray is credited with taking a principled stand against the Bush administration’s illegal surveillance programs, albeit somewhat diaphanously. In 2004, Comey and then FBI director Robert Mueller (now special counsel) challenged the White House attempt to renew the National Security Agency (NSA) program of “terrorist surveillance,” a euphemism for massive spying on just about every American citizen. According to reports, Comey and Mueller were prepared to resign in protest over the issue and Wray, getting wind of it, apparently asked to go with them if they went. The Bush administration blinked and Wray never went public, except by legend.

The American Civil Liberties Union (ACLU) has questioned Wray’s record on civil liberties, much to the Senate’s indifference. The ACLU cites with concern the FBI’s past notorious abuse of civil liberties, up to and including burglaries and killings. In that context, Wray’s strong support for the USA Patriot Act of 2001 and its expanded police state powers is less than reassuring. In 2003 Wray insisted that safeguards were in place and testified that “the Patriot Act has helped preserve and protect liberty and freedom, not erode them.” In 2004 and 2005, two separate federal courts found parts of the Patriot Act unconstitutional. Subsequently, the inspector general of the Justice Department found widespread abuse by the FBI of Patriot Act powers.

What are Wray’s Russian connections, other than Rosneft or Gazprom?

At King and Spalding in 2009, Wray described one American citizen client as an “energy company president in a criminal investigation by Russian authorities.” On January 12, 2017, in the midst of the so-called Russia-gate hurly-burly, the private attorney removed this information from his law firm site where it was last reported on November 18.

Wray’s 68-page questionnaire submitted to the Senate Judiciary Committee lists no potential conflicts of interest. Nor does the questionnaire list Wray’s previous Russian-related client or any of his firm’s representation of Russian state-run companies, or the word “Russian” in any other form or context. King & Spalding has half a dozen attorneys practicing in its Moscow office.

In the Senate hearing July 12, Wray had a hard time saying Donald Trump Jr. should not have met with Trump campaigners and Russians to discuss acquiring Russian-generated dark info on Hillary Clinton. The best Wray was willing to do, on the fourth try, was to allow wanly that “any threat or effort to interfere with our elections from any nation state or any non-state actor is the kind of thing the FBI would want to know.” That’s still a far cry from the obvious: Trump Jr. should have called the FBI as soon as he was approached. Senator Lindsey Graham, Republican of South Carolina, begged Wray to tell “every politician” that if they get into a situation with a foreign government, “tell us all to call the FBI.” But the future head of the FBI just wouldn’t take that good, clean shot, and no one pressed him on why.

The Russian state-owned oil companies Rosneft and Gazprom are both clients of Wray’s law firm, along with Citibank, Goldman Sachs, and JP Morgan Chase. Each of them represents a potential conflict of interest for the FBI Director nominee.

Wray has at least an indirect connection to Rosneft, one of Russia’s state-controlled oil companies, whose murky relationship to Trump interests remained to be exposed to public view. Rosneft is a King & Spalding client (although the law firm deleted the page from its website). And Rosneft has a pending multi-billion-dollar oil deal with Exxon, whose former CEO Rex Tillerson is now Trump’s secretary of state. So here’s a pending deal from which Trump, Tillerson, Wray, and others stand to benefit directly. The Russian-Trump electoral collusion trail may well be littered with Russian oil money.

Wray has the same indirect connection to Gazprom, another Russian state-owned oil company and client of King & Spalding (page deleted from website). Gazprom was part of the case Wray handled for the American executive caught in a Russian investigation (that Wray later deleted from his bio). Gazprom’s relationship to Wray and Trump is murkier than Rosneft’s, but includes connections to Carter Page, Paul Manafort, Richard Burt, a Gazprom-owned pipeline bypassing Ukraine, and possible lifting of sanctions on Russia.

When New Jersey governor Chris Christie was accused of deliberately closing the George Washington Bridge as an act of political revenge, he was still a Republican presidential hopeful. To survive the scandal that came to be known as Bridgegate, Christie needed serious help, so he hired Christopher Wray as his personal defense attorney (at $340 an hour), costing New Jersey taxpayers more than $2 million. Although two of Christie’s aides were convicted, Christie was not even indicted and avoided having to testify at their trial. During Bridgegate, Christie’s cell phone disappeared, despite efforts of legislators and other investigators to examine it for evidence of Christie’s involvement. When the cell phone did turn up, Christopher Wray had it, for unexplained reasons. When Christie’s aides subpoenaed the cell phone for their defense, a federal judge ruled that Wray did not have to give it up. According to legal opinion, Wray’s apparent withholding of evidence is considered nothing more than zealous representation of his client.

Wray solemnly told the Senate on July 12: “My loyalty is to the Constitution, to the rule of law, and to the FBI. Nobody asked for any kind of loyalty oath and I sure didn’t offer one.”

Given Wray’s career pattern, there was no need for anyone to ask for or offer loyalty. Wherever Wray goes, it seems, bad guys get away unscathed while scapegoats suffer the consequences. What more could President Trump ask from his man at the FBI?



William M. Boardman has over 40 years experience in theatre, radio, TV, print journalism, and non-fiction, including 20 years in the Vermont judiciary. He has received honors from Writers Guild of America, Corporation for Public Broadcasting, Vermont Life magazine, and an Emmy Award nomination from the Academy of Television Arts and Sciences.

Reader Supported News is the Publication of Origin for this work. Permission to republish is freely granted with credit and a link back to Reader Supported News.

e-max.it: your social media marketing partner
 
No Country for Old Republicans Print
Written by <a href="index.php?option=com_comprofiler&task=userProfile&user=63"><span class="small">Marc Ash, Reader Supported News</span></a>   
Sunday, 16 July 2017 08:13

Ash writes: "Like a bag of money, Vladimir Putin has handed American Republican members of Congress more political currency than they or anyone else saw coming."

In this scene from the movie, No Country for Old Men Llewelyn (Josh Brolin) finds the drug money and makes the decision to keep it. (image: Miramax)
In this scene from the movie, No Country for Old Men Llewelyn (Josh Brolin) finds the drug money and makes the decision to keep it. (image: Miramax)


No Country for Old Republicans

By Marc Ash, Reader Supported News

16 July 17

 

than and Joel Coen’s 2007 cinematic masterpiece No Country for Old Men, like all classics, is considered a significant work of art because it paints a compelling portrait of the human condition.

The film’s two central protagonists are Llewelyn Moss (Josh Brolin) and Anton Chigurh (Javier Bardem). It is in Llewelyn, however, that perhaps we best see ourselves and are forced to ask deep questions about the decisions we make.

The plot revolves around a drug deal gone bad in the West Texas desert. Llewelyn, out hunting, stumbles upon a scene of human carnage, the aftermath of a gunfight that presumably erupted when the transporters, sellers of Mexican heroin, and their buyers jumped the gun, literally leaving almost no one alive.

As he stands amid the corpses, weapons, and drugs, Llewelyn’s alarm is palpable. He takes on the demeanor of a wild animal, senses alive, on high alert. He won’t touch the drugs, he takes one handgun from the grasp of a dead man, and then he sees the suitcase with the two million dollars in cash. Heroin he wants no part of, he doesn’t understand it. But the money has his attention. After all, money is money, right?

Off he goes, suitcase in hand, with more money than he has ever seen and more trouble than he will be able to stop. The cartels, armed with automatic weapons, come looking for the drugs or the money, and a brilliantly psychopathic Chigurh, played by Bardem, comes looking for the money on behalf of the American buyers.

The beleaguered and overmatched lawman, Sheriff Ed Tom Bell, played by Tommy Lee Jones, tasked with restoring law and order, at one point goes to his uncle Ellis, played by Barry Corbin, a retired Sheriff himself, and asks for advice. The warning he gets is ominous: “You cain’t stop what’s coming.” Indeed, what is coming is a trail of violence and bloodshed that the quiet desert communities in the area are totally unprepared for. In the end Llewelyn, his wife, and a number of others are murdered.

Currency is currency, right?

Like a bag of money, Vladimir Putin has handed American Republican members of Congress more political currency than they or anyone else saw coming. They’re not comfortable embracing Putin, but they’re okay with the newfound currency he has bestowed upon them. After all, political currency is political currency, right?

Mitch McConnell, Paul Ryan, and their supporters have a problem not unlike Llewelyn’s. They’re off down the road with a bag of ill-begotten political currency, and there’s a crime scene they’re running from.

Talking heads while talking often speak of Putin’s interference in 2016 U.S. presidential election in the past or future tense. “It happened at that time … and we don’t want it to happen next time.” Seemingly oblivious to the three-ring circus of foreign influence and national security degradation unfolding before their eyes.

Putin’s Godfatherly embrace of Trump, his family, and his wide circle of supporters constitutes a right-here, right-now, live, active national security threat to the United States. This is a smash and grab of our republic underway in full view.

When Donald Trump as president opens up the Oval Office to the Putin regime or snubs the NATO Alliance, he is recklessly ignoring the advice of every national security expert in the Western world. When Trump contemptuously refuses to reveal his business dealings or financial dealings with Putin’s circle of oligarchs, he is leaving the door wide open for massive corruption and betrayal of his oath as President.

Of equal cause for alarm is what the Republicans themselves are buying with Putin’s currency. A new “conservative Supreme Court Justice,” no problem. The destruction of the U.S. healthcare system for the benefit of the wealthiest one percent, of course. Putin’s currency spends well.

Evan McMullin, writing for the Washington Post, opined, Republicans are Risking Becoming the Party of Putin. Consider that done. There is still the matter of the bag of illicit currency and its consequences.

Like the Sheriff said, “You cain’t stop what’s coming.”


Marc Ash is the founder and former Executive Director of Truthout, and is now founder and Editor of Reader Supported News.

Reader Supported News is the Publication of Origin for this work. Permission to republish is freely granted with credit and a link back to Reader Supported News.

e-max.it: your social media marketing partner
 
Russiagate and the Magnitsky Affair, Linked Again Print
Saturday, 15 July 2017 13:27

Taibbi writes: "Natalia Veselnitskaya being at the center of this week's explosive revelations is the latest indication that Russiagate didn't begin last year - but almost a decade ago."

Donald Trump Jr.,
Donald Trump Jr., "Kremlin-linked lawyer" Natalia Veselnitskaya, and Jared Kushner. (photo: Getty)


Russiagate and the Magnitsky Affair, Linked Again

By Matt Taibbi, Rolling Stone

15 July 17


Natalia Veselnitskaya being at the center of this week's explosive revelations is the latest indication that Russiagate didn't begin last year – but almost a decade ago

hen I first read the explosive New York Times story about Donald Trump Jr.'s meeting with "Kremlin-linked lawyer" Natalia Veselnitskaya, I had multiple reactions.

The first was amazement at Junior's sheer stupidity (responding affirmatively to "If you would like to participate in our country's state-sponsored effort to help your father's campaign, please respond 'yes' in writing here" will go down as an unsurpassable moment in unsafe political sex). The second was confusion, and the third was déjà vu.

I never met Veselnitskaya, but just months ago I did cross paths with one of her colleagues. Like Veselnitskaya, this person had been lobbying on behalf of a Russian-directed company called Prevezon to overturn the Magnitsky Act, a 2012 law which sanctions Russia for human rights abuses.

The interview was off the record, so I can't say much about it, except to say that my experience was weirdly similar to the account Trump Jr. offered about his meeting with Veselnitskaya.

I went into the meeting expecting a scoop on another topic, and instead found myself essentially being lobbied about the Magnitsky Act. I came away scratching my head about the Prevezon crew, unsure of whether they represented high-ranking Russian interests, or were instead just a bunch of provincial amateurs trying to get a sanctions regime lifted in order to unfreeze their assets.

According to The Hill, others who ran into Veselnitskaya recently came away wondering the same thing:

"The sources also described their interactions with Veselnitskaya in the same way that Trump Jr. did. They claimed not to know who she worked for or what her motives were.

'Natalia didn't speak a word of English,' said one source. "Don't let anyone tell you this was a sophisticated lobbying effort. It was the least professional campaign I've ever seen. If she's the cream of the Moscow intelligence community then we have nothing to worry about.'"

Though Veselnitskaya seems like a small-timer – and Leonid Bershidsky's excellent background report on her for Bloomberg makes her seem like the equivalent of a third-rate lawyer for the Staten Island Borough president – one never knows with this story. After all, the Trumps themselves aren't exactly sophisticates, and they live in the White House.

Moreover, the Trump Justice Department, after dismissing former U.S. Attorney Preet Bharara, subsequently settled a case for Veselnitskaya's client very much in their favor. That settlement earlier this spring is now highly suspicious, given this week's revelations. In my personal opinion, it's the most suspicious act to date in the whole panoply of much-denounced Trump behaviors with regard to Russia, perhaps even moreso than the firing of James Comey.

On the other hand, Trump himself came out strongly in favor of the Magnitsky law earlier this year, a piece of news that was then and remains now a weird fit with the collusion narrative. Overturning the Magnitsky Act is probably at or near the top of the list of Russian foreign policy objectives vis a vis the United States.

In the fall of 2012, Barack Obama breezily declared "the Eighties are calling, they want their foreign policy back" in response to Mitt Romney's charge that Russia is our top global threat. The Magnitsky rule was passed not long after that, precipitating a steep collapse in Russian-American relations that has continued through this TrumpRussia scandal.

There's no way to understand the now-inevitable sequel to the cold war without understanding the Magnitsky affair. The fact that anti-Magnitsky lobbyist Veselnitskaya is at the center of the most explosive Russiagate story yet, and moreover that the "oppo" she planned to deliver to the Trumps reportedly concerned the Magnitsky case, underlines this idea even more.

Somehow, this all goes back to Magnitsky.

At about 4 p.m. on August 24th, 2009, a 37-year-old Russian named Sergei Magnitsky curled up in a ball in his bed at the infamous Butyrka jail, an imposing building that, since the days of Stalin's purges, has stood as a symbol of repression and political murder.

Magnitsky had been arrested nearly a year earlier, in November of 2008. He worked for Hermitage Capital, the investment firm of an American billionaire, William Browder. In most Western accounts, Magnitsky helped Browder uncover a complex corruption scheme involving an array of Russian officials that had resulted in the theft of about $230 million from Hermitage.

When Browder complained about the theft, the story goes, the Russian government not only didn't act to remedy it, but instead forced Browder out of the country. They also ultimately threw Browder's employee Magnitsky in jail, charging him with the very crime he'd helped uncover.

The ex-pat community in Moscow was initially unsure of what to think about the apparent attack on Browder and his companies. Browder at one time had been one of Putin's most enthusiastic Western supporters.

While many ex-pats who lived through the transition to Putin (myself included) immediately saw the new president as a dangerous autocrat who in the very best case would be a human rights downgrade from the awful-enough Yeltsin regime, Browder was one of the leading Western voices insisting that Putin was a man with whom we could do business. So it was odd to see his Hermitage company targeted.

In any case, after nearly a year behind bars, Browder's employee Magnitsky, who was married and had a young son, became ill. Before being transferred to Butyrka he had been diagnosed with gallstones, pancreatitis, and cholecystitis in another jail, and scheduled for surgery. But he never received treatment.

On November 16th, 2009, Magnitsky was finally transferred to another infamous Moscow jail, Matrosskaya Tishina, ostensibly to go to the medical ward. He never made it there and was instead handcuffed to a bedrail in an isolation cell. According to Browder's book, Red Notice, guards in riot gear entered the room and beat Magnitsky with rubber truncheons. He was discovered by a civilian doctor dead on the floor a little over an hour later.

Magnitsky's death would become a major scandal abroad, but that was mostly due to the accident of his having worked for an influential American, Browder. In fact, Magnitsky was killed as part of a commonplace scam in the gangland state that is Vladimir Putin's Russia: a reidersky zakhvat, or "raider attack."

The scam works as follows: a group of thugs with strong government and/or police ties targets a private company with assets. They then cook up an excuse to "raid" the company offices, at which point the thugs take the company's seals, certificates of ownership, registration files, etc. From there, the "raiders" simply sign over the company to new owners while the old ones are either pushed out, killed, or thrown in jail.

This grotesque new interpretation of the "hostile takeover" began in the Yeltsin years but ultimately became a major part of the gangland revenue model in Putin's Russia. One study delivered to the Duma by Russia's then "Business Ombudsman," Boris Titov, showed that 600,000 criminal cases had been brought against Russian "entrepreneurs" between 2010 and 2013, and that 110,924 of them had resulted in prison terms.

The case involving Browder and Hermitage wasn't even close to being the biggest. A firm called TogliattiAzot, which has 10,000 employees and controls upwards of 20-percent of the world's ammonia production, was successfully raided by the oligarch Dmitri Mazepin in a case that has rattled Western investors for years.

The Magnitsky case, at least as described in Browder's book, was typical of the reiderovsky methodology. The raiders first forced Hermitage to pay an exorbitant tax bill, then raided Hermitage's offices and stole documents they later used to reassign ownership of three of Hermitage's subsidiaries to themselves. They then claimed for themselves a $230 million tax "rebate." When Magnitsky uncovered this fraud/theft, he was tossed in jail.

The billionaire Browder at this point made getting payback for Magnitsky his life's mission. As detailed in Red Notice, he became a self-taught lobbyist and in 2012 managed to push through congress the law that came to be known as the Magnitsky Act. Among other things, it listed 18 individuals deemed responsible for Magnitsky's death and not only barred them from entering the U.S., but made provisions for the freezing of any assets they held abroad.

Despite his financial power and profile, Browder for all his furious complaints had until the passage of the Magnitsky Act barely elicited a yawn from the Putin government. But once the Magnitsky law was passed, beating back the rule almost immediately became a primary focus of the Russian government.

"They didn't care before. But now that we could freeze assets, that interfered with the whole business model of the Putin regime," Browder told me a few months ago. "That got their attention."

It should be noted that support of the Magnitsky law was not unanimous in the Western business community. There are some who disputed Browder's version of events, or were at least unsure enough about what had happened to hesitate.

A common concern was that in Russia, you never know whether things are being executed on orders from the very top, or merely by self-motivated crooks operating under the krysha, or protection (literally, "roof"), of higher-ranking officials. Those who lived there long enough knew the amounts of money taken in the Browder case weren't enough to raise the pulse rate of the king thieves who run the Russian state. In fact, sanctioning Russia's leaders for having committed these crimes was sure among other things to anger them on the level of being an insult to their professionalism.

Some American business interests also quietly grumbled that the Magnitsky rule would derail the fragile relations between the two countries – the commercial relations, particularly – and that Browder might have achieved a moral right at the expense of irreversibly angering the Russians and queering lucrative business interests.

Hillary Clinton herself went so far as to oppose the Magnitsky rule at one point in time. Her opposition, as reported by the Wall Street Journal and others, coincided with a trip to Moscow by Bill Clinton in which he was paid $500,000 to give a speech by Renaissance Capital, a firm that Sergei Magnitsky himself had claimed was part of the tax fraud perpetuated against Browder.

The Obama administration, too, originally opposed the Magnitsky rule in favor of a "reset" and a continuation of a nervous détente with Putin, one that among other things would include further nuclear arms reductions. Obama at the time was pushing the idea of "nuclear zero," a world without nuclear weapons. But there was considerable opposition to this concept in the Senate, and the Magnitsky act became a vehicle for consolidating legislative opposition to the "reset."

Eventually, Obama relented and the Magnitsky law passed. The predictions that it would drive the Russians ape proved immediately true. Russian government officials were infuriated and felt unfairly maligned by the law. The general tenor of the Russian complaints that I remember hearing went something like this: We're not the only vicious kleptocracy in the world, and naming your human rights abuse/extortion law after Magnitsky makes it seem like we are.

After the law passed, the Russians fought back, hard. The counterattacks against the Magnitsky Act and Browder were numerous and ranged from savage to absurd.

One of the first moves was to ban Western adoptions of Russian children, which was one of the few moves Russia could make that didn't involve imperiling their own financial interests. The move had life-threatening consequences for abandoned Russian children with diseases like Down Syndrome and spina bifida, who might otherwise have been adopted by foreigners with means. As one U.S. official told the Daily Beast last year, the Russian messaging was, "You repeal Magnitsky and we'll let go of the kids."

Browder put it another way. "Banning adoptions was especially cruel because what they were essentially saying is, 'We're going to hurt kids because we don't care, and you do,'" he says.

The Russians also passed a counter-law petulantly banning 18 Americans from entering Russia because of "human rights abuses." The list included noted federal Judge Jed Rakoff and none other than former U.S. Attorney Preet Bharara, recently dismissed by Trump.

When none of these moves were successful in beating back the Magnitsky rule, some Russians tried a public relations campaign in the West. This included the production of a documentary called The Magnitsky Act – Behind the Scenes, which denied that Magnitsky had been mistreated and more or less absolved the Russian regime of any guilt.

The movie's director, Andrei Nekrasov, has a record as a staunch Putin critic, having among other things made a damning film about the assassination/poisoning of former intelligence officer Alxander Litvinenko. He has told reporters he began his Magnitsky project intending to tell it from Browder's point of view, even envisioning Browder as narrator, but became convinced the facts didn't support that narrative.

What that means is hard to say. But add it to the long list of factors that make the Magnitsky/Browder case a very difficult one to unwind.

What's not in dispute is that the anti-Magnitsky lobbyists have in recent years used singularly revolting tactics. Veselnitskaya and her clients at Prevezon among other things created an organization called the Human Rights Accountability Global Initiative Foundation, whose long-winded title is a sarcastic echo of the formal name of the Magnitsky Act.

The organization's purpose was really to lobby against the Magnitsky rule, but was couched as having been formed to seek out "legal and legislative options to help overturn this adoption ban." The HRAGIF, in other words, was essentially a vehicle for negotiating the release of children held as political hostages.

If you click on the website, you'll see heart-rending black-and-white photos of children who ostensibly could be living in peace and comfort with nice American families, if only the United States would drop its wrong-headed human rights sanctions law. If you want to make yourself ill, take a tour through the whole site.

Veselnitskaya is the wife of one Andrei Mitusov, at one time the deputy transport minister of the Moscow Oblast, the equivalent of a borough or maybe a county. Mitusov worked under Pyotr Katsyv, who in turn is the father of Denis Katsyv, identified by the Organized Crime Corruption Reporting Project as one of the people who ended up with the monies originally stolen in the Magnitsky case. According to these reports, the money ended up in the accounts of their Prevezon Holdings, which is registered in Cyprus.

When Prevezon was charged in the aforementioned money-laundering case, the company engaged an American firm to help with "litigation support." That firm was Fusion-GPS, the same company that commissioned the dossier on Donald Trump written by ex-spy Christopher Steele.

By an amazing coincidence, Fusion was working on behalf of this strange group of Russians at exactly the same time its founder, Glenn Simpson, was deciding to hire Steele to produce the most famous anti-Russian dossier of all time.

I originally thought that coincidence was too odd to ignore. But after looking into it and talking to some of the people involved, I came away believing that Fusion had not been employed by "the Russians," but rather by "some Russians," and not very sophisticated ones at that.

There were lots of conspiracy theories floating around in Washington at that time (including a theory, pushed variously by people in both parties, that "the Russians" had used Fusion to plant disinformation in the Steele report), but to me it seemed more likely that Fusion had just done what oppo firms do, i.e. take business wherever they can get it. Even dingbats like the Prevezon people are entitled to buy research help.

Still, this ultimately is the question that hovers over the latest revelations involving Trump Jr. Is Natalia Veselnitskaya a cutout for the Kremlin? Or is she just the lawyer for a group of provincial yahoos inveigled in a relatively small-time (by Russian standards) ripoff, in the States to push a preposterous and off-putting kids-for-sanctions deal to get their money back?

If it's the former, the collusion narrative is suddenly red hot. If it's the latter, then what we've got is a case of failed or attempted collusion, by a Trump scion who is too dense to know what he's meeting about and with whom.

What's the truth? I have no clue. This will be for poor Robert Mueller to sort out. Veselnitskaya seems like a nobody, but then again she scored a key meeting with the Trumps and also received special permission from the Obama Justice Department to remain in country. And there is that oddly auspicious settlement in the Prevezon case to ponder.

The relatively localized and specific Magnitsky controversy ultimately became a vehicle for a much broader and weightier disagreement between camps of powerful Russians and Americans. It became the nexus of two different ways to envision the future of Russian-American relations.

Hardliners on both sides originally used the Magnitsky affair as a way to argue – successfully – against the kind of pragmatic rapprochement/disarmament campaign that Barack Obama once favored with his "reset" idea.

With Russiagate en fuego, Magnitsky is no longer needed as an excuse to hype up aggression between the two countries. But it's not surprising that characters from the old divisive controversy keep appearing in this new one. 

Everything we know about the members of Trump's campaign who had contact with the Russian government. Watch here.

e-max.it: your social media marketing partner
 
<< Start < Prev 1581 1582 1583 1584 1585 1586 1587 1588 1589 1590 Next > End >>

Page 1581 of 3432

THE NEW STREAMLINED RSN LOGIN PROCESS: Register once, then login and you are ready to comment. All you need is a Username and a Password of your choosing and you are free to comment whenever you like! Welcome to the Reader Supported News community.

RSNRSN