In retrospect, it worked out much better than planned.
Who’d have thought a pariah nation, run by an authoritarian who makes his
political opponents disappear, could so easily hijack a great democracy? It
didn’t take much. A talented nerd can bring down a minnow of a nation. But this
level of political crime requires more refined mechanics — you need everyone to
play their assigned roles.
You start with a stooge, a fugitive holed up in
London, releasing stolen emails on the eve of the Democratic National
Convention, in the name of “transparency.” Cyberburglars rely on a partner in
crime to pick up stolen goods. And WikiLeaks has always been there for Russia,
a nation with no transparency.
The emails show office gossip — catty, sometimes crude
back-and-forth by party operatives, and a bias for one candidate. Ho-hum. To
make the plot work, reporters have to take the bait. On cue, they decry the
fact thatpolitics is
going on inside a major political party. The horror — Democratic hacks saying
nasty things about Senator Bernie Sanders.
Next, lefty extremists have to act like lefty
extremists — that is, myopic to the greater good, guided by a Trumpian sense
that they alone know how to solve the world’s problems, and everyone else is a
sellout. Angered at the contents of the cybertheft, they boo any mention of
their party’s nominee. And told by Senator Sanders, the man who brought them
there, that booing is too easy, they boo his call to unite to save their
country from a monster.
But Russia still has to seal the deal. Some work
remains. If enough angered lefties won’t go for the Democratic nominee, a
longtime foe of Vladimir Putin, it will be just enough to put a Putin puppet in
the White House. And it would also usher in the term that drove the right wing
crazy when George H.W. Bush used it — a New World Order.
What’s in it for Russia? Well, everything. Territory.
Hegemony. Its takeover of the Crimean Peninsula has brought sanctions and
condemnation from the West. What stands between Putin and further aggression
in, say, the Baltic States, is a NATO pact that has kept Europe safe for nearly
70 years. And if you thought Trump stiffed the poor suckers who signed up for
his “university,” wait till you see how he treats some of our oldest allies.
Plus, Putin despises
Hillary Clinton. Like Trump, his skin is rice-paper-thin, albeit a paler shade
of orange; and, like Trump, he never forgets a slight. He still hasn’t gotten
over Clinton’s comment on George W. Bush’s infamous look into Putin’s soul. As
a former K.G.B agent, said Clinton, “he doesn’t have a soul.”
What’s in it for Trump? Help at winning the ultimate
throne of his gilded dreams. And maybe some investment money from Russian
oligarchs close to Putin, one of many things Trump may be hiding in his tax
returns. The two narcissists share a love of torture, authoritarian rule, and
women on runways in bathing suits.
But then, a wild card, something unplanned. Putin
didn’t expect Trump to be so all-in with his collusion. He knows Trump is a
fool, world class in only one thing — ignorance. He doesn’t need spies for
that. He knows Trump is a man who will say anything, and deny in the same
breath that he ever said it. The Talented Mr. Trump.
Last November, before a national television audience,
Trump said of Putin, “I got to know him very well.” And Wednesday, Trump said,
“I never met Putin.” That was a standard Trump lie, on one end or the other.
But even Putin couldn’t fathom that Trump really will say anything.
So there was the Republican Party nominee for
president inviting an American adversary to wage cyberwar against the country
he wants to lead. If that wasn’t Trump’s shoot-somebody-on-Fifth-Avenue moment,
nothing will be. What’s more, he was way too obvious about the role of the
other pawns in the scheme. “I think you will probably be rewarded mightily by
our press,” he said to Mother Russia.
Also, he’s getting carried away with his
dictator-philia. On Thursday, he said Putin was a better leader than President
Obama. D’oh! In
public, at least, you’re supposed to root for the home team.
Trump misses the old days, back when you could “knock
the crap out of” a demonstrator. Yeah, the old days. Back when it was
disqualifying for an American politician to flirt with treason.
This all seems too preposterous to be planned. Where
are the conspiracy nut jobs when you really need them? Even fiction, Philip
Roth’s “The Plot Against America,” about a fascist-lite president during World
War II, does not have this level of absurdity.
But it unfolds, still, if not according to Russia’s
design, then according to Russia’s will. Trump is now a national security risk,
actively rooting for a foreign adversary to tamper with an American election.
And very soon, he will start receiving classified briefings on that adversary. Ehhhhhcellent!
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