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British Investigator: Putin Lied About Suspects in Salisbury Poisoning – Voice of America – 11:10 AM 10/12/2018

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‘She VANISHED’ – Grandmother of second Salisbury suspect Alexander Mishkin DISAPPEARS – Express.co.uk
Putin allegedly gave Skripal poisoning suspect hero’s award – The Guardian
Putin ‘decorated’ second Salisbury poisoning suspect – Radio New Zealand
Skripal suspects believed to have followed him in Czechia long before attempted poisoning – Radio Prague
Accidents Review: Fort Meyers | Bell Tower Shops | Blue Pointe
Salisbury poisoning suspect was ‘awarded top military honour by Putin’ – euronews
British website identifies Skripal poisoning suspect as a Russian military doctor – CBC.ca
Skripal, suspects visited Czech Republic in 2014 – Guardian (blog)
My Hypothesis: “Boshirov-Chepiga – Petrov-Mishkin” were not the poisoners but contacts for Skripal. They picked up and delivered the digital microfilms from the previously arranged dead drops. – 9:06 AM 10/10/2018
Poisoning suspects `tracked Sergei Skripal in Czech Republic in 2014´ – Daily Mail
Russian Novichok Suspects Shadowed Skripal In Prague, Report Says – RadioFreeEurope/RadioLiberty
Russian spy chief ‘taken ill’ as Putin carpets him over novichok debacle – Express.co.uk
Russian website names third GRU officer involved in Salisbury poisoning: BBC journalist – Reuters
Russian website names third GRU officer involved in Salisbury poisoning – Reuters
Reuters: Russian website names third GRU officer involved in Salisbury poisoning – Kyiv Post
Russian website Fontanka identifies third Skripal suspect as Sergey … – The Times
Third suspect in Salisbury Novichok attack named by Russian news … – Evening Standard
The Prospect Podcast #54: Who was Sergei Skripal? A conversation with Mark Urban – Prospect
Russian Website Names Third GRU Officer Involved in Salisbury … – The Moscow Times
Novichok attack: Third man was involved in attempted Skripal assassination, website claims – Express.co.uk
The Postcards from Skripal: Ex-Russian spy Sergei Skripal and daughter Yulia pictured in Salisbury Zizzi restaurant… – 12:10 AM 10/12/2018
Police investigating third Russian suspect ‘who acted as lookout’ in Salisbury poisoning case – 3:19 AM 10/12/2018
Salisbury Poisoning Updates | The Crisis of the Russian (Military) Intelligence – 3:36 AM 10/12/2018
Salisbury Poisoning – LATEST – 3:47 AM 10/12/2018

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Saved Stories – None
‘She VANISHED’ – Grandmother of second Salisbury suspect Alexander Mishkin DISAPPEARS – Express.co.uk
 


Express.co.uk
‘She VANISHED’ – Grandmother of second Salisbury suspect Alexander Mishkin DISAPPEARS
Express.co.uk
The website revealed on Monday night that Alexander Mishkin, who entered the UK under the alias Alexander Petrov, is a trained military doctor employed by the GRU, Russia’s military intelligence agency. It was also reported he was made a Hero of the …
Researchers identify second suspect in nerve agent poisoning as Russian intel officerWTVD-TV
Full report: Skripal Poisoning Suspect Dr. Alexander Mishkin, Hero of Russiabellingcat
Skripal Suspect Boshirov Identified as GRU Colonel Anatoliy Chepigabellingcatall 92 news articles »
Putin allegedly gave Skripal poisoning suspect hero’s award – The Guardian
 


The Guardian
Putin allegedly gave Skripal poisoning suspect hero’s award
The Guardian
Bellingcat suggested he might have been picked to ensure the poison was applied to Skripal’s front door handle in a way that prevented self-poisoning. Traditionally, officers working in Russian intelligence’s secret “poisons factory” in Moscow have 
Suspect in poisoning of ex-Russian spy Sergei Skripal is military doctor, report saysUSA TODAY
Russian doctor behind Sergei Skripal nerve agent attack given Hero of Russia award by PutinTelegraph.co.uk 
Skripal attack: Second Russian Salisbury suspect namedBBC News
TIMEbellingcat
 
Second Suspect in Skripal Poisoning Identified as Russian Intelligence Doctor, Says ReportTIME
BBC NewsBusiness InsiderbellingcatTwitter

all 1,538 news articles »
Putin ‘decorated’ second Salisbury poisoning suspect – Radio New Zealand
 


Radio New Zealand
Putin ‘decorated’ second Salisbury poisoning suspect
Radio New Zealand
Outlining in detail how it identified the Salisbury suspect as Dr Mishkin, Bellingcat said it had pieced together his identity using various databases online, including telephone and car insurance records, and later obtained copies of his passport and 
British Investigator: Putin Lied About Suspects in Salisbury Poisoning – Voice of America
 


Voice of America
British Investigator: Putin Lied About Suspects in Salisbury Poisoning
Voice of America
The founder of the British investigative group Bellingcat says Russian President Vladimir Putin lied when he said he had never met either of the two suspects in the novichok poisoning attack in England. Two Russian agents are believed to have traveled  
Russian website names third GRU officer involved in Salisbury poisoningReuters

‘She VANISHED’ – Grandmother of second Salisbury suspect Alexander Mishkin DISAPPEARSExpress.co.uk 
Suspect in Salisbury poisoning receives hero’s honor in Russia, Bellingcat saysKXLH Helena News
bellingcatCNN International
all 223 
Putin ‘decorated’ second Salisbury poisoning suspectRadio New Zealand
Salisbury poisoning suspect was ‘awarded top military honour by Putin’euronews
WFMZ AllentownCNNbellingcat
all 103
 news articles »
Skripal suspects believed to have followed him in Czechia long before attempted poisoning – Radio Prague
 


Radio Prague
Skripal suspects believed to have followed him in Czechia long before attempted poisoning
Radio Prague
The suspected perpetrators of the Novichok attack on Russian double agent Sergei Skripal reportedly visited the Czech Republic in 2014, at the time when Skripal himself was in the country, allegedly helping the Czech counter-intelligence service 
Second Skripal Poisoning Suspect Identified as Dr. Alexander Mishkinbellingcat
Salisbury poisoning: Russian doctor identified by Bellingcat as second Skripal suspectCNN Internationalall 123 news articles »
Accidents Review: Fort Meyers | Bell Tower Shops | Blue Pointe

Spread the Knowledge1          1Share Spread the Knowledge            Novichok Signatures View image on Twitter | http://globalsecuritynews.org/ _________________________________________ bell tower – Google Search   mikenova shared this story . Mike Nova’s Shared NewsLinks  Mike Nova’s Shared NewsLinks bell tower shops for blue pointe – Google Search Mike Nova’s Shared NewsLinks  Mike Nova’s Shared NewsLinksbell tower shops for blue pointe – Google Search bell tower shops for blue pointe – Google Search bell tower shops for blue pointe – Google Search bell … Continue reading“Accidents Review: Fort Meyers | Bell Tower Shops | Blue Pointe”
Salisbury poisoning suspect was ‘awarded top military honour by Putin’ – euronews
 


euronews
Salisbury poisoning suspect was ‘awarded top military honour by Putin’
euronews
Investigative webste Bellingcat has claimed that the second suspect in the Salisbury poisoning of Sergei and Yulia Skripal is a Russian doctor who received a top military honour from President Vladimir Putin. Read full article … 
British website identifies Skripal poisoning suspect as a Russian military doctor – CBC.ca
 

British website identifies Skripal poisoning suspect as a Russian military doctor
CBC.ca
The second of two Russians who Britain blames for the poisoning of former Russian spy Sergei Skripal was named by investigative website Bellingcat as a military doctor for Russia’s GRU intelligence service. The website identified him as 39-year-old … 
Skripal, suspects visited Czech Republic in 2014 – Guardian (blog)
 


Guardian (blog)
Skripal, suspects visited Czech Republic in 2014
Guardian (blog)
Investigative group Bellingcat on October 9, 2018 identified the second suspect in the poisoning of former Russian spy Sergei Skripal as a doctor employed by Moscow’s GRU military intelligence service. “We have now identified ‘Alexander Petrov’ to be 
Czech Media Claim Salisbury Poisoning Suspects Spied On Skripal In Czech Republic In 2014UrduPoint Newsall 10 news articles »
My Hypothesis: “Boshirov-Chepiga – Petrov-Mishkin” were not the poisoners but contacts for Skripal. They picked up and delivered the digital microfilms from the previously arranged dead drops. – 9:06 AM 10/10/2018

Spread the Knowledge1          1Share My Hypothesis: “Boshirov-Chepiga – Petrov-Mishkin” were not the poisoners but the contacts for Skripal. They picked up and delivered the digital microfilms or “wirelessly” from the previously arranged dead drops (in cathedrals or public squares, for example).  This is further illustrated by their “near meeting” in Prague in 2014 reported by the … Continue reading“My Hypothesis: “Boshirov-Chepiga – Petrov-Mishkin” were not the poisoners but contacts for Skripal. They picked up and delivered the digital microfilms from the previously arranged dead drops. – 9:06 AM 10/10/2018”
Poisoning suspects `tracked Sergei Skripal in Czech Republic in 2014´ – Daily Mail
 


Daily Mail
Poisoning suspects `tracked Sergei Skripal in Czech Republic in 2014´
Daily Mail
British police say the two suspects were agents from Russian military intelligence unit GRU, and that they used a Soviet-made nerve agent Novichok to poison Mr Skripal and his daughter Yulia on March 4. Russia denies wrongdoing and the Czech … 
Russian Novichok Suspects Shadowed Skripal In Prague, Report Says – RadioFreeEurope/RadioLiberty
 


RadioFreeEurope/RadioLiberty
Russian Novichok Suspects Shadowed Skripal In Prague, Report Says
RadioFreeEurope/RadioLiberty
British authorities allege that the two Russians smeared a Soviet-designed nerve agent called Novichok on the front door of Skripal’s home in the English city of Salisbury on March 4, the day the former Russian intelligence officer spy and his daughter 
Poisoning suspects ‘tracked Sergei Skripal in Czech Republic in 2014’Irish Examinerall 93 news articles »
Russian spy chief ‘taken ill’ as Putin carpets him over novichok debacle – Express.co.uk
 


Express.co.uk
Russian spy chief ‘taken ill’ as Putin carpets him over novichok debacle
Express.co.uk
VLADIMIR Putin left the head of his GRU spy agency in “ill health” after a carpeting over the bungled Salisbury novichokpoisoning, it emerged yesterday. The furious Russian president tore into Colonel General Igor Korobov, 62, for the “deep 
New Report Claims To Identify 2nd Suspect In Novichok PoisoningNewsChannel5.com
Second Suspect Accused of Novichok Poisoning in Salisbury Outed To Be Medical Officer with Russia’s GRULatestLY
We should be asking for answers about the Skripals and Bellingcat – and not just from RussiaThe Independentall 125 news articles »
Russian website names third GRU officer involved in Salisbury poisoning: BBC journalist – Reuters
 


Reuters
Russian website names third GRU officer involved in Salisbury poisoning: BBC journalist
Reuters
LONDON (Reuters) – The Russian website @fontankanews has named a third GRU military intelligence operative, Sergey Fedotov, as having been involved in trying to kill ex-spy Sergei Skripal in Salisbury, the BBC’s Mark Urban reported. A general view … 
Russian website names third GRU officer involved in Salisbury poisoning – Reuters
 


Voice of America
Russian website names third GRU officer involved in Salisbury poisoning
Reuters
LONDON (Reuters) – The Russian news website Fontanka named on Wednesday a third GRU military intelligence operative, Sergey Fedotov, as having been involved in trying to kill ex-spy Sergei Skripal in the English city of Salisbury. The website said …
British Investigator: Putin Lied About Suspects in Salisbury PoisoningVoice of America
‘She VANISHED’ – Grandmother of second Salisbury suspect Alexander Mishkin DISAPPEARSExpress.co.uk 
Putin ‘decorated’ second Salisbury poisoning suspectRadio New Zealand
 
Suspect in Salisbury poisoning receives hero’s honor in Russia, Bellingcat says

KXLH Helena News 
bellingcat
 –bellingcatCNN International

all 223 193 news articles »
Reuters: Russian website names third GRU officer involved in Salisbury poisoning – Kyiv Post
 


Kyiv Post
Reuters: Russian website names third GRU officer involved in Salisbury poisoning
Kyiv Post
Reuters: Russian website names third GRU officer involved in Salisbury poisoning. By Reuters. Published Oct. 10 at 10:25 pm. Eliot Higgins, founder of online investigation group Bellingcat, speaks to the media on College Green in London on Oct. 9 
Russian website Fontanka identifies third Skripal suspect as Sergey … – The Times
 


The Times
Third suspect in Salisbury Novichok attack named by Russian news … – Evening Standard
 


Evening Standard
Third suspect in Salisbury Novichok attack named by Russian news  website 
Evening Standard
A third suspected member of the hit squad behind the Salisbury nerve agent attack has been named, according to a respected Russian news website. Sergey  
Novichok attack: Third man was involved in attempted Skripal …Express.co.uk
Skripal Novichok assassins may have had an accomplice who flew …The Sun
Russian Website Names Third GRU Officer Involved in Salisbury …The Moscow Times
The Australian
all 9 news articles »
 Fedotov, 45, reportedly travelled to the UK on the same day as the two suspects already charged … 
The Prospect Podcast #54: Who was Sergei Skripal? A conversation with Mark Urban – Prospect
 


Prospect
The Prospect Podcast #54: Who was Sergei Skripal? A conversation with Mark Urban
Prospect
The historian, author and BBC commentator Mark Urban discusses his new book on the former Russian spy, Sergei Skripal, who was poisoned in Salisbury, along with his daughter. Who was Skripal, who tried to kill him and why? Plus, Alex Dean on politics … 
Russian Website Names Third GRU Officer Involved in Salisbury … – The Moscow Times
 


The Moscow Times
Russian Website Names Third GRU Officer Involved in Salisbury …
The Moscow Times
The Fontanka news website named on Wednesday a third GRU military intelligence operative, Sergey Fedotov, as having been involved in trying to kill ex-spy …
Third suspect in Salisbury Novichok attack named by Russian news …Evening Standard
Skripal Novichok assassins may have had an accomplice who flew …The Sun 
Russian media claims another suspect in Skripal case112 International (blog)
all 9 news articles »
Novichok attack: Third man was involved in attempted Skripal assassination, website claims – Express.co.uk
 


Express.co.uk
Novichok attack: Third man was involved in attempted Skripal assassination, website claims
Express.co.uk
A THIRD man was involved in the Novichok attack on Russian double agent Sergei Skripal in Salisbury, a Russian investigative website has claimed – but police probing the assassination attempt have declined to comment on what a spokesman said …
Russian website Fontanka identifies third Skripal suspect as Sergey FedotovThe Times
Skripal Novichok assassins may have had an accomplice who flew in and out of UK on the same dates as two GRU …The Sun
Scotland Yard finds third suspect in Skripal casehttps://en.crimerussia.com/
Evening StandardThe Moscow Times
all 9 news articles »
The Postcards from Skripal: Ex-Russian spy Sergei Skripal and daughter Yulia pictured in Salisbury Zizzi restaurant… – 12:10 AM 10/12/2018

We do need some hard facts and cooperation in this matter – 2:27 PM 10/2/2018 – October 2, 2018 Skripal, Yanukovych, Deripaska, Firtash, Mogilevich, Vekselberg, Akhmetov – (Sounds Like a Law Firm … Tue, 09 Oct 2018 14:07:33 +0200 Skripal, Yanukovych, Deripaska, Firtash, Mogilevich, Vekselberg, Akhmetov – (Sounds Like a Law Firm but it ain’t. – M.N.) … Continue reading”The Postcards from Skripal: Ex-Russian spy Sergei Skripal and daughter Yulia pictured in Salisbury Zizzi restaurant… – 12:10 AM 10/12/2018″restaurant at heart of poison plot https://t.co/gG1XE12wn1 — Michael Novakhov (@mikenov) October 11, 2018 –    
Police investigating third Russian suspect ‘who acted as lookout’ in Salisbury poisoning case – 3:19 AM 10/12/2018

Spread the Knowledge            Mike Nova’s Shared NewsLinks Police investigating third Russian suspect ‘who acted as lookout’ in Salisbury poisoning case   mikenova shared this story . Counter-terrorism police are investigating a third suspect in the Salisbury nerve agent attack amid suggestions he acted as look out for two Russian military intelligence assassins. Investigators have identified a “third man” in … Continue reading“Police investigating third Russian suspect ‘who acted as lookout’ in Salisbury poisoning case – 3:19 AM 10/12/2018”
Salisbury Poisoning Updates | The Crisis of the Russian (Military) Intelligence – 3:36 AM 10/12/2018

Spread the News            4 из 5 На совещании с членами Правительства. Слева направо: Первый заместитель Председателя Правительства – Министр финансов Антон Силуанов, заместитель Председателя Правительства – руководитель Аппарата Правительства Константин Чуйченко, заместители Председателя Правительства Юрий Борисов, Ольга Голодец и Дмитрий Козак, заместитель Председателя Правительства – полномочный представитель Президента в Дальневосточном федеральном округе Юрий Трутнев. Из альбома к материалу Совещание с членами Правительства 11 октября … Continue reading“Salisbury Poisoning Updates | The Crisis of the Russian (Military) Intelligence – 3:36 AM 10/12/2018”
Salisbury Poisoning – LATEST – 3:47 AM 10/12/2018

Spread the Knowledge            FBI News Review » Salisbury Poisoning News Updates Category Feed 1 Police investigating third Russian suspect ‘who acted as lookout’ in Salisbury poisoning case – 3:19 AM 10/12/2018 Counter-terrorism police are investigating a third suspect in the Salisbury nerve agent attack amid suggestions he acted as look out for two Russian military … Continue reading“Salisbury Poisoning – LATEST – 3:47 AM 10/12/2018”

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Home Page –  The Case of Francisco Reyes Caparrós 

Try COINTELPRO on them! Pepper-spray them from the motorcycles! 

Disclaimer and Clarification for our most studious and brightest FBI investigators: this title is the literary device of irony, not a call to violence. So give your new “carpetas” the correct tags and labels, dance ethically and esthetically, keep your guns securely holstered, and do not drink too much. Are they able or willing to understand the difference? Hopefully, they kapish. They are not that dumb. Hopefully. Most importantly, address the issues.

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Skripal, Yanukovych, Deripaska, Firtash, Mogilevich, Vekselberg, Akhmetov – Sounds Like a Law Firm but it ain’t. – M.N. – 10.11.18
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Tres científicos ganan Nobel de Física | Nobels 2018
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Falangism and Fascism in Puerto Rico – Wikipedia: “Falangist groups have been active in Puerto Rico, especially during World War II, when an 8000 strong branch came under FBI scrutiny.”
6:03 PM 8/14/2018 – Any Analysis, Understanding, and the Interpretations (“readings” of persons, situations, etc.), in “practical matters” (“non-practical matters” have a very different value systems, truth and knowledge have the independent intrinsic values) is only as good as the prognosis and the recommendations that are based on them.  It is not a science, and it definitely is not the exact science. Just like in Medicine, it is an “educated guess and opinion” about what might happen in the future.  M.N.
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Maryse Condé, a chronicler of the colonial experience, won the New Academy Prize in Literature. The award was created to honor a writer this year after the Swedish Academy postponed the Nobel Prize in literature.
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Salisbury Poisoning Updates | The Crisis of the Russian (Military) Intelligence | CIA is working to prioritizing closing the “strategic intelligence gaps” … – 3:36 AM 10/12/2018 | Russia News
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Salisbury Poisoning Updates | The Crisis of the Russian (Military) Intelligence | CIA is working to prioritizing closing the “strategic intelligence gaps” … – 3:36 AM 10/12/2018 | Russia News
 

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На совещании с членами Правительства. Слева направо: Первый заместитель Председателя Правительства – Министр финансов Антон Силуанов, заместитель Председателя Правительства – руководитель Аппарата Правительства Константин Чуйченко, заместители Председателя Правительства Юрий Борисов, Ольга Голодец и Дмитрий Козак, заместитель Председателя Правительства – полномочный представитель Президента в Дальневосточном федеральном округе Юрий Трутнев.

4 из 5
На совещании с членами Правительства. Слева направо: Первый заместитель Председателя Правительства – Министр финансов Антон Силуанов, заместитель Председателя Правительства – руководитель Аппарата Правительства Константин Чуйченко, заместители Председателя Правительства Юрий Борисов, Ольга Голодец и Дмитрий Козак, заместитель Председателя Правительства – полномочный представитель Президента в Дальневосточном федеральном округе Юрий Трутнев.
Из альбома к материалу

11 октября 2018 года Москва, Кремль

_________________________________

“Off The Rails?”

Of course not. The problems have to be formulated, analyzed, understood, comprehended, and addressed. 

But first of all and most of all, this is the overarching strategic condition: 
Restore the  Great WW2 Alliance. This might be the most suitable and viable design for the modern security architecture. 
The Alliance had its own difficulties at that time, it should work better now, and there are very powerful forces which do not want it to be restored and functioning. And lately, Skripal and his shenanigans might have been the very significant part of these forces. 
Driving the multiple wedges between the Allies was the logical Abwehr’s strategy which they pursued with the fanatical and dogged persistence, and this simple but effective strategy continues to be the same to this day. 
Consider the revision of the military doctrine in which “the West” is painted as the main “enemy”, reject this doctrine in both the spirit and the letter. Russia is the inseparable part of the Western Civilization, History, and Culture.
The most recent (last 20-25 years) phenomenon of the open, cynical, self-destructive, Mafioso Oligarchic Robbery of Russia is an Abomination. Address these issues, work together on eradicating the Global Organized Crime which came to play a certain role in the modern Intelligence Operations. These “by necessity” ties corrupt the Intelligence Organisations visibly and invisibly, it seems to me. Ziz iz not the Leftist position, this is the common sense position. 
The important, screaming “gaps in strategic intelligence” have been acknowledged and they are been addressed in order of importance. 
Michael Novakhov 
10.12.18 
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Haspel delivers first public remarks as Trump’s CIA chief

The HillSep 24, 2018

In a speech at the University of Louisville, her alma mater, Haspel said the CIA is working to prioritizing closing the “strategic intelligence gaps” …

UK Security Services Braces For Terrorist Chemical and Biological Weapon Attacks
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Ben Wallace, the Minister of State for Security, made the remarks on the potential threat from terrorist groups during a national security summit, when he discussed the potential threat of terrorist groups using deadly toxins to kill.
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Anytime a clandestine agency is in the global headlines on a daily basis, something strange is going on. That has certainly been the case with Russia’s military intelligence agency, known by its former abbreviation, the GRU.
British intelligence identified two suspected GRU agents as the culprits in the March nerve-agent poisoning of former Russian spy Sergei Skripal and his daughter in Salisbury, setting off a chain reaction of revelations about one of the men, identified as GRU Colonel Anatoly Chepiga, and his likely involvement in the conflict in eastern Ukraine and the 2015 assassination in Ankara of Chechen rebel commander Abdulvakhid Edelgiriyev.
On October 4, authorities in the Netherlands released a trove of information on an alleged GRU operation in that country aimed at hacking and disrupting international organizations including the Organization for the Prevention of Chemical Weapons (OPCW) and the Dutch investigation into the 2014 downing of a Malaysia Airlines passenger jet over the conflict zone in eastern Ukraine.
The most emblematically risible piece of evidence was a taxi receipt showing that one of the men had traveled to a Moscow airport directly from GRU headquarters.
In addition, suspected Russian agents have been busted in Norway, Estonia, Greece, and Montenegro in recent months.
Off The Rails?
Writing in The Guardian on October 5, Moscow correspondent Andrew Roth called the developments “embarrassing.”
“The exposure of several consecutive European operations should raise questions about whether Russian military intelligence is being intentionally provocative or has simply gone off the rails,” Roth wrote.
Russian state-controlled and state-friendly media have widely reported official denials of any government involvement in the alleged incidents and have denounced them collectively as a new wave of “spymania.”
The Vesti nightly news report for October 5 was typical, arguing that the new accusations were both a “pretext” for imposing new, already planned sanctions against Russia and a bid to unify a fractured West on the cusp of the United Kingdom’s expected withdrawal from the European Union.
But, in other searches for explanations to the onslaught of revelations, some observers have speculated that the GRU was being undermined by another Russian security agency such as the Foreign Intelligence Service (SVR) or the Federal Security Service (FSB).
The GRU has benefited financially and in terms of prestige from the Kremlin’s conviction that Russia is engaged in a hybrid confrontation with the West, the argument goes, and other security agencies want a bigger piece of the action.

“I have heard many conspiracy theories along the lines that this is a struggle between the FSB and the GRU, but this is impossible,” Roman Dobrokhotov, editor of The Insider, a Russian publication that partnered with the open-source investigations group Bellingcat to publish many of the recent revelations, told Current Time TV. “It is just that people are trying to rationalize all this — they think it can’t really be so absurd. But for one thing, there is a famous maxim that you should never use a conspiracy to explain something that can be explained by incompetence. And this maxim applies to Russia even more strongly than in any other country.”
Dobrokhotov noted, for example, that his investigations had revealed recently that a GRUagent had sent money to a group in Serbia that was being used to carry out a coup in neighboring Montenegro using Western Union. And he used the address of GRUheadquarters on the delivery order.
Vladimir Frolov, a political analyst who is believed to have been a Russian intelligence agent involved in the handling of notorious FBI double agent Robert Hanssen, made a similar point for the website Republic.ru.
“Of course there have been no attempts by the Russian special services to somehow ‘undermine the GRU‘ by planting information in the media about military spies,” he wrote. “This is a popular myth. The Russian special services are in stiff competition with one another, but no one is going to settle matters by committing high treason or exposing state secrets.”
‘Military Mind-Set’
Part of the explanation for the GRU‘s lapses might lie in the nature of the organization itself. It is a large military operation that is ultimately controlled by Defense Minister Sergei Shoigu, one of President Vladimir Putin’s closest and reportedly politically ambitious friends, and Chief of the General Staff Valery Gerasimov, who has become the public face of Russia’s doctrine of “hybrid war.”
“Because Shoigu is ambitious, he’s increasing GRU operations abroad to make the Defense Ministry a bigger player in Russian foreign policy,” Russian security analyst Andrei Soldatov told The Telegraph in September.

Mark Galeotti, a nonresident fellow at the Institute of International Relations in Prague and an expert on Russian organized crime and the security forces, wrote in July that the GRU is emerging from a long funk that it endured under former Defense Minister Anatoly Serdyukov.
“The GRU is back,” Galeotti wrote. “Its budgets are buoyant, its confidence high and its role in international operations reflect its relatively aggressive, military mind-set, where accomplishing the mission is more important than avoiding risks.”
Journalist Dobrokhotov says the GRU‘s rapidly expanding agenda may partially explain its current embarrassing lapses.
“I think it has to do with personnel issues and that there isn’t money to properly train people,” he told Current Time, which is run by RFE/RL in cooperation with VOA. “They don’t have the proper resources. They send the same agents, who have already let the country down, out on new assignments a second time. It would seem to be pure chaos, just a mess. The whole world has learned the word ‘Novichok.’ Now it is time for foreigners to learn the word ‘bardak’ [mess]. It is the best description of what is going on.”
The agency, like the Defense Ministry as a whole, clearly seems to be having trouble coming to grips with the sheer amount of information publicly available on the Internet. In 2014, when the Kremlin was denying all involvement in the conflict in eastern Ukraine, researchers at Bellingcat and elsewhere had no difficulty finding photographs on social media posted by Russian soldiers and boasting of their activities in Ukraine.
Using open sources, Bellingcat has been able to put together a narrative about the shooting down of the MH17 passenger jet in July 2014 that runs circles around the various, often contradictory theories put forward by the Russian Defense Ministry itself.
Tip Of The Iceberg?
Other observers, though, are not so sure the incompetence theory explains the situation entirely. In recent years, the Kremlin has seemingly perfected the tactic of throwing out masses of theories and purported evidence and salacious stories as a way of confusing the information space and diverting attention.
As late as October 1, for instance, the mass daily tabloid Komsomolskaya Pravda, probably Russia’s most broadly influential newspaper, published an interview with an anonymous “university instructor” who supposedly knows the alleged GRU agent in the Skripal case who is known as “Aleksandr Petrov.”

Petrov, the unidentified source said, is a Kremlin-connected businessman who provides high-ranking officials with “miracle supplements” that are not available in Russia.
Still other commentators have been reminded of the common practice of the Soviet-era KGB of sending intimidating signals to targets. Russian rights activist and former Soviet dissident Viktor Davidoff posted on Facebook that he left Moscow four years ago after returning home one day and finding bits of wire and melted solder on the floor of his apartment.
“Someone was installing eavesdropping equipment and was doing it dirty [intentionally],” he wrote.
In this context, the Kremlin could see the exposure of its overseas efforts not as weakness, but as evidence of its multipronged activity. The tip of the iceberg, so to speak.
New York Times London correspondent Ellen Barry touched on this idea in an October 5 post on Twitter.
“Lots of talk today about GRU incompetence, but it’s equally true that they’ve been getting away with an indefinite number of similar operations for an indefinite period *without* getting caught,” Barry wrote.

Current Time TV correspondent Yegor Maksimov contributed to this report

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News Analysis: Infighting? Incompetence? Distraction? What’s Happening With Russia’s Spies?

That has certainly been the case with Russia’s military intelligence agency, known by its former abbreviation, the GRU…. British intelligence identified two suspected GRU agents as the culprits in the March nerve-agent poisoning of former Russian spy Sergei Skripal and his daughter in Salisbury, setting off a chain reaction of revelations about one of the men, identified as GRU Colonel Anatoly Chepiga, and his likely involvement in the conflict in eastern Ukraine and the 2015 assassination in Ankara of Chechen rebel commander Abdulvakhid Edelgiriyev.

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Russia blames western states for terrorists obtaining chemical weapons

BEIRUT, LEBANON (2:40 P.M) – The Russian Reconciliation Center issued a statement on Wednesday blaming western states for terrorist groups obtaining chemical weapons in Syria.

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Сергей Скрипаль

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В Великобритании ведут расследование в отношении третьего подозреваемого по делу Скрипаля, – СМИ

пятница, 12 октября, 2018, 15:13 Мир В Великобритании ведут расследование в отношении третьего подозреваемого по делу Скрипаля, – СМИ Контртеррористическое подразделение полиции Лондона проводит расследование в отношении третьего подозреваемого по инциденту в Солсбери, и рассматривает, можно ли выдвинуть против него обвинения. Об этом сообщает Интерфакс-Украина , ссылаясь на газету «Дейли телегра

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Russian cyber attacks are actions of a pariah state – Defence Secretary

Russia has been accused of acting like a “pariah state” by the Defence Secretary after allegations intelligence officers from the Kremlin tried to hack the Foreign Office and the international body investigating the Salisbury nerve agent attack. Dutch authorities disclosed on Thursday how – with the help of UK intelligence – they thwarted an attempted cyber attack on the headquarters of the Organ
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Haspel delivers first public remarks as Trump’s CIA chief

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In a speech at the University of Louisville, her alma mater, Haspel said the CIA is working to prioritizing closing the “strategic intelligence gaps” …
UK Security Services Braces For Terrorist Chemical and Biological Weapon Attacks
 

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Ben Wallace, the Minister of State for Security, made the remarks on the potential threat from terrorist groups during a national security summit, when he discussed the potential threat of terrorist groups using deadly toxins to kill. He told the meeting:
“As I speak, terrorists continue to explore new ways to kill us on our streets. Chemical and biological weapons are marching in closer. They have developed and worked on a better arsenal, and we have to be prepared that might come to our streets here.

“Be under no doubt the threat is real. Our open, liberal and free societies are easy prey to those that fear little and care even less.”
Wallace said the security services were undergoing a “gargantuan” struggle to prevent such attacks taking place, reports The Times.
His comments come months after the chaotic government response to a state-sponsored chemical weapons attack in Salisbury, England, in March. Men believed to be officers of the Russian GRU military intelligence bureau used the Cold War-era nerve agent Novichok in an assassination attempt against a Russian defector and his daughter.
Although the agents were not successful in killing the pair, the Novichok agent they used hospitalised a police officer and contaminated several sites in the city.
The response by the British government, police, and public health bodies to the failed attack saw a number of shortcomings, including residents in Salisbury being advised by Public Health England (PHE) that there was no risk to the public despite photographs circulating in the national media of soldiers wearing full hazardous material suits and breathing masks decontaminating the area.

Security Minister Ben Wallace told BBC radio: "I don&squot;t think anyone can ever say that Mr Putin isn&squot;t in control of his state.... And the GRU is without doubt not rogue."UK Security Minister Ben Wallace / AFP Images

Other areas in Salisbury were only quarantined days later, and it took over a week for government advice for locals who may have been exposed to the deadly agent to wash their clothes and shoes to be issued. Regardless, PHE maintained the risk to the public was minimal.
Despite the reassurances from the government, the decontamination effort was discovered to have been a failure when one man was subsequently killed by Novichok, four months after the initial attack. Charlie Rowley found a discarded bottle of the nerve agent, disguised as a perfume bottle, which the police investigation and army decontamination mission had failed to remove.
Rowley gave the bottle as a gift to his girlfriend Dawn Sturgess, who was killed by the chemical. Rowley was also hospitalised but survived.
The failure to properly contain the Salisbury attack, despite it being a targeted assassination attempt against two individuals, may raise questions over the ability of Britain’s security services to protect the public against a mass-casualty attack using chemical or biological weapons.
A risk matrix maintained by security agencies and the Cabinet Office suggests the chances of a terrorist group being able to weaponise Chemical, Biological, Radiological, or Nuclear (CBRN) materials remains low, and less sophisticated attacks which are easier to plan but harder for police to intercept remain more likely.
Nevertheless, there have been a number of high-profile attempts, both successful and foiled, and Wallace’s comments signal a change in attitude towards the capabilities of terror groups by the British government. Among those attacks most present in the minds of counter-terror operatives is the successful chemical nerve agent attack on the Tokyo subway in March 1995.
A religious cult released liquid sarin onto trains on three lines, which was able to evaporate and come into contact with over 1,000 passengers. Ultimately, there were 12 fatalities. Agence France Press reportedthe terror-inducing scene of the attack, which it said left a “psychological scar” on the nation of Japan, and described as:

Images from the time show soldiers sprinting up escalators and stairs, carrying unconscious victims slumped on their backs.
Hundreds of ambulances screamed through the streets and helicopters landed on busy roads to evacuate the injured to some 90 hospitals.
Passers-by and medics administered life-saving heart massages on pavements as others stood by, their eyes streaming with tears, either from grief or the effects of the toxin.
Others lay on the ground shaking violently but there were not enough people to attend to them immediately.

Responding to Ben Wallace’s comments on potential chemical weapon attacks, Britain’s most senior counter-terrorism officer Neil Basu said:
“These things have been used on the battlefield, and what’s used on the battlefield will eventually be adapted to be used on domestic soil… I think he [Mr Wallace] is as concerned as I am that these are the kind of threats that we’ve got to take seriously and we’ve got to make sure that we have the right preparations to counter that threat, should it appear.”
Oliver JJ Lane is the editor of Breitbart London — Follow him on Twitter and Facebook

Police investigating third Russian suspect ‘who acted as lookout’ in Salisbury poisoning case 
 

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What is Russia’s GRU military intelligence? – 4:35 PM 10/11/2018 – Trump Investigations Report
 

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  1. Michael Novakhov@mikenov

    Salisbury Novichok suspect ‘unmasked’ as military doctor https://www.somersetlive.co.uk/news/local-news/salisbury-novichok-suspect-unmasked-military-2088076  #salisburypoisoning #feedly

    Salisbury Novichok suspect ‘unmasked’ as military doctor

    A military doctor employed by Russia’s GRU intelligence agency was one of two people allegedly involved

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UK Security Services Braces for Terrorist Chemical and Biological …

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Ben Wallace, the Minister of State for Security, made the remarks on the potential threat from terrorist groups during a national security summit, …
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UK minister warns of chemical, biological terrorism

Middle East MonitorOct 9, 2018
UK minister warns of chemical, biological terrorism … and biological weapons on British soil, Britain’s Minister of State for Security Ben Wallace …
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Terrorist Chemical Weapons Attack Risk in UK Rising, Security …

Sputnik InternationalOct 9, 2018
The threat of a terrorist attack involving chemical or biological weapons in the UK is rising, Minister of State for Security Ben Wallace has …
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Ben Wallace was appointed Minister of State for Security at the Home Office on 17 July 2016. He was elected the Conservative MP for Wyre and Preston North in May 2010.

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Mueller wins longest sentence so far in Trump-Russia case
 

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Special counsel Robert Mueller achieved a major victory for his Trump-Russia investigation on Wednesday when a California man investigated by his office pleaded guilty to a felony identity fraud charge and was sentenced to six months in prison and six months of home confinement.
28-year-old Richard Pinedo admitted in February that he unknowingly sold stolen bank accounts to Russian internet trolls, who in turn used that information to purchase internet advertisements with the plan of disrupting America’s political discourse during the 2016 presidential election, according to Politico. In his statement to the court, Pinedo accepted “full responsibility” for what he did and asked for leniency on the basis of his cooperation with Mueller’s investigation and the fact that he has received threats since his involvement in the Russian meddling became public.
“Never did it cross my mind that the services I was providing would be used in crimes at the highest level,” Pinedo told U. S. District Judge Dabney Friedrich in a statement. He claimed that his life had been turned “upside down” and argued that he was worried about his physical well-being because “every knock on the door comes with anxiety about who it may be.”

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Pinedo may have actually received the leniency that he sought from the court, as Politico reported:

While Friedrich’s sentence was the longest Mueller has obtained, it was on the low end of the sentencing guideline recommendations. Still, Pinedo’s attorney had asked that his client get no prison time. Mueller’s prosecutors let the judge factor in other cases of similar caliber and didn’t recommend any specific sentence.

“This is a very difficult case,” Friedrich said as she ticked through how Pinedo had “opened the door” for Russian actors to upend an American presidential election and made between $40,000 to $95,000 on the transactions from 2014 to 2017.
She also considered Pinedo’s immediate admission of guilt when FBI agents came to his home and the grand jury testimony delivered to help Mueller’s investigation in Washington, D.C.
“I can tell you are genuinely remorseful for your actions,” Friedrich said.

This was the second major win for Mueller since the start of the month. Last week, convicted former Trump campaign chairman Paul Manafort met with Mueller’s team as part of his cooperation agreement. Although a source close to Manafort said after the initial plea hearing that “the cooperation agreement does not involve the Trump campaign. … there was no collusion with Russia,” the agreement itself required Manafort to “cooperate fully, truthfully, completely and forthrightly with the Government and other law enforcement authorities identified by the Government in any and all matters to which the Government deems the cooperation relevant.”
President Donald Trump has denounced the Manafort investigation from its inception, characterizing it as a “witch hunt” against his administration that had no factual merit. He has persisted in making this claim despite the convictions and guilty pleas of many people connected to his campaign including George Papadopoulos, Michael Cohen, Michael Flynn, Rick Gates and Manafort himself.

Internet research is the practice of using Internet information – 12:52 PM 10/11/2018 | Russia News
 

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Internet research is the practice of using Internet information, especially free information on the World Wide Web, or Internet-based resources (like Internet discussion forum) in researchInternet researchhas had a profound impact on the way ideas are formed and knowledge is created.

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A public warning to Putin: Knock it off – 12:25 PM 10/11/2018 – The News & Times
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A man identified as Alexander Petrov at Gatwick airport in England on March 2. Investigative group Bellingcat reported Monday that he is actually Alexander Mishkin, a doctor working for the Russian military intelligence unit known as GRU. (Metropolitan Police/AP) One of the most satisfying moments in any spy thriller is when the bad guy — the black-hat operative who has been killing and tormenting his adversaries — does something dumb and gets caught.

Source: A public warning to Putin: Knock it off

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A man identified as Alexander Petrov at Gatwick airport in England on March 2. Investigative group Bellingcat reported Monday that he is actually Alexander Mishkin, a doctor working for the Russian military intelligence unit known as GRU. (Metropolitan Police/AP)

One of the most satisfying moments in any spy thriller is when the bad guy — the black-hat operative who has been killing and tormenting his adversaries — does something dumb and gets caught. That’s essentially what’s been happening recently with Russian President Vladimir Putin’s pet spy agency, the GRU.

A public warning to Putin: Knock it off – 12:25 PM 10/11/2018 – The News & Times
 

mikenova shared this story from The News & Times.

A man identified as Alexander Petrov at Gatwick airport in England on March 2. Investigative group Bellingcat reported Monday that he is actually Alexander Mishkin, a doctor working for the Russian military intelligence unit known as GRU. (Metropolitan Police/AP) One of the most satisfying moments in any spy thriller is when the bad guy — the black-hat operative who has been killing and tormenting his adversaries — does something dumb and gets caught.

Source: A public warning to Putin: Knock it off

A public warning to Putin: Knock it off

INSIGHTS

Add note
A man identified as Alexander Petrov at Gatwick airport in England on March 2. Investigative group Bellingcat reported Monday that he is actually Alexander Mishkin, a doctor working for the Russian military intelligence unit known as GRU. (Metropolitan Police/AP)

One of the most satisfying moments in any spy thriller is when the bad guy — the black-hat operative who has been killing and tormenting his adversaries — does something dumb and gets caught. That’s essentially what’s been happening recently with Russian President Vladimir Putin’s pet spy agency, the GRU.
What’s fascinating about the GRU revelations is that they seem to reflect an aggressive pushback after several years in which Putin (chiefly through the GRU) launched recklessly aggressive covert actions against the West. The West is retaliating (at least in part) with public information that blows GRU covers and operating methods and, frankly, makes them look clumsy and incompetent.
These disclosures are the latest in a string of disasters for the GRU, a military spy service known for its panache and daring. Now, we should add sloppiness to that list of operational trademarks. The GRU’s spycraft occasionally looks closer to TV’s Maxwell Smart than John le Carre’s vaunted fictional spymaster, Karla.
The latest exposé of the GRU’s not-so-secret tradecraft came Tuesday, when a British investigative group shredded a layer of the lies surrounding Russia’s attempt to poisonformer agent Sergei Skripal in March. It was the equivalent of the tough guy in the trench coat getting caught with his undershorts around his ankles.
Bellingcat, as the group calls itself, presented photographic evidence showing that a suspect in the Skripal attack, who the Russians had claimed was a tourist named Petrov who worked in the sports nutrition business, is really a GRU doctor named Alexander Mishkin. Last month, Bellingcat had exposed another suspect, whose cover identity was Ruslan Boshirov, as GRU Col. Anatoliy Chepiga.
The most detailed exposures of GRU tradecraft came in a Justice Department indictmentthat was unsealed Oct. 4, in tandem with supporting statements from Britain and the Netherlands. The indictment, which named seven GRU officers, included details about Russian spy operations that could have been collected only by the CIA and National Security Agency and its foreign partners. (Three of the Russians had also been named in July’s indictment of 12 GRU officers for meddling in the 2016 U.S. presidential election.)
Last week’s indictment is a treasure trove for spy mavens. One GRU hacking operation sought to sabotage the World Anti-Doping Agency’s effort to punish Russia for systematically drugging its Olympic athletes; a second, chilling GRU hack stole information from Westinghouse about advanced U.S. nuclear-reactor technology. A third targeted two investigations of the Novichok nerve agent used in the Skripal hit, one by an international chemical weapons group in The Hague and another by a chemical laboratory in Switzerland. These were brazen operations, but they were also messy.
The dry pages of the indictment reveal tradecraft secrets that could animate a half-dozen spy novels. The GRU operatives used spoof websites to “spearphish” victims into revealing login information (creating a “westinqhousenuclear.com” site, with the misspelled “q,” for example). They made payments in bitcoin and other cryptocurrencies. (Weren’t those supposed to be untraceable?) They used malware tools with names such as “Gamefish,” “Chopstick” and “X-tunnel.” They dumped their hacked information by sending direct messages on Twitter to 116 reporters and exchanging emails with 70 journalists.
For the past few years, the CIA, NSA and FBI have watched as hackers and whistleblowers (perhaps with a helping hand from Moscow) revealed the agencies’ hacking techniques. For U.S. intelligence officials, revenge is a dish best eaten cold.
The most astonishing disclosure came from the Dutch, who caught four GRU officers red-handed in The Hague as they were hacking the headquarters of the Organization for the Prohibition of Chemical Weapons. As Dutch intelligence officers intervened, “the conspirators abandoned their equipment,” including a backpack and other gear that revealed techniques and a string of other operations, according to the indictment. The Dutch even found a taxi receipt showing that a member of the team had left the rear entrance of the GRU headquarters in Moscow and headed to the airport.
The implicit message in all of this: If you hit us, one of the ways we will retaliate is by exposing your operatives, sources and methods. There are other reprisals underway, but these public disclosures undermine the GRU’s operational capabilities. And they must make the Russian spy service wonder: What else do the Americans and their allies know? If agent A is blown, then what about his colleagues B, C and D?
The CIA and its foreign allies don’t normally like to divulge secrets like these, because they reveal how much they know about their adversary. The revelations are a public warning to Putin: Knock it off; you’re more vulnerable than you think.
Read more from David Ignatius’s archivefollow him on Twitter or subscribe to his updates on Facebook.

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Germany AND Novichok

STRATFOR

How Russia Makes Power Plays in European Politics

The organization was investigating the poisoning of former Russian spy Sergei Skripal and his daughter — believed to have been carried out by GRU operatives — in the United Kingdom using the chemical agent Novichok.

56min

Salisbury news: Historic handmade quilt on display

RALPH NOYES AND Bonnie Adkins stand in front of the 1933 friendship quilt recently given to the Salisbury Church and hanging in the church’s narthex….  Photo courtesy Salisbury Church SALISBURY — The Salisbury Church is holding a rummage sale on Friday and Saturday, Oct.

50min

boshirov AND petrov

The Sun

Skripal Novichok assassins may have had an accomplice who flew in and out of UK on the same dates as two GRU …

A mystery third man, using the alias Sergey Fedotov, reportedly landed in London on March 2 – the same day as  ‘Alexander Petrov’ and ‘Ruslan Boshirov ‘…. These men are wanted over the attempted hit on the Skripals in Salisbury Timeline of movements of Russian nationals Alexander Petrov and Ruslan Boshirov who are suspected of conspiracy to murder Sergei Skripal in Salisbury, Wiltshire The 45-year-old was on a different inbound flight, but left on on the same plane as the GRU agents on March 4, according to an analysis of passenger lists by Fontanka news agency.
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Chemical Weapons Counterintelligence FBI News Review German Intelligence Services Hermeneutics Hypotheses Interpretations Money Laundering My Opinion - Michael Novakhov News Review Salisbury Poisoning News Updates Sergey Skripal Weiner-Abedin emails affair

Saved Stories – The News and Times – 11:02 AM 10/12/2018 – The Postcards from Skripal

Saved Stories – The News and Times
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The Postcards from Skripal: Ex-Russian spy Sergei Skripal and daughter Yulia pictured in Salisbury Zizzi restaurant… – 12:10 AM 10/12/2018
Anthony Weiner scheduled for early release next spring – NBCNews.com
FBI director defends ‘limited’ Kavanaugh background probe – Washington Post
Roberts refers judicial misconduct complaints against Kavanaugh to federal appeals court in Colorado – Washington Post
New York man wanted to blow himself up on the National Mall on Election Day – NBCNews.com
Armed man arrested near California park where camper was shot dead in front of daughters: cops – Fox News
US, Russia astronauts making emergency landing – Phys.Org
Rocket Fails, and American and Russian Astronauts Make Emergency Return – New York Times
F-35 jets: US military grounds entire fleet – BBC News
Virginia judge: Paul Manafort plea deal in Washington ‘highly unusual’ – Washington Examiner
Wall Street dips again, inflation data calms nerves – Reuters
Stock market, after worst rout since February, shifts between small gains and losses – USA TODAY
“Будёновцы”: «Ещё бы буденовки надели»!!! – 10.9.18 – They should have put on their “budenovka” hats…
Skripal, Yanukovych, Deripaska, Firtash, Mogilevich, Vekselberg, Akhmetov – (Sounds Like a Law Firm …
Skripal, Yanukovych, Deripaska, Firtash, Mogilevich, Vekselberg, Akhmetov – (Sounds Like a Law Firm …
Skripal, Yanukovych, Deripaska, Firtash, Mogilevich, Vekselberg, Akhmetov – (Sounds Like a Law Firm …
Skripal, Yanukovych, Deripaska, Firtash, Mogilevich, Vekselberg, Akhmetov – (Sounds Like a Law Firm …
Сотрудники ГРУ Чепига и Мишкин участвовали в захвате госучреждений на востоке Украины – Recent Tweets…
Russian Lessons: Федот, да не тот! – Salisbury Poisoning 2018 News Review – UPDATE – 4:52 AM 10/11/2018…
Ex-Russian spy Sergei Skripal and daughter Yulia pictured in Salisbury Zizzi restaurant at heart of poison plot thesun.co.uk/news/5756370/e…
Russian military reportedly unhappy with a series of embarrassing blunders by its spies abroad businessinsider.com/russia-reporte… #salisburypoisoning #feedly
Internet research is the practice of using Internet information – 12:52 PM 10/11/2018 russia-news.org/2018/10/11/int…
Russia News: Internet research is the practice of using Internet information – 1:05 PM 10/11/2018 trumpinvestigations.org/blog/2018/10/1…
10:07 AM 9/25/2018 – Declassify the Russia investigation documents
Operation Novichok – The Postcard from Salisbury | Sergei Skripal – 7:59 AM 10/7/2018
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The Postcards from Skripal: Ex-Russian spy Sergei Skripal and daughter Yulia pictured in Salisbury Zizzi restaurant… – 12:10 AM 10/12/2018

We do need some hard facts and cooperation in this matter – 2:27 PM 10/2/2018 – October 2, 2018 Skripal, Yanukovych, Deripaska, Firtash, Mogilevich, Vekselberg, Akhmetov – (Sounds Like a Law Firm … Tue, 09 Oct 2018 14:07:33 +0200 Skripal, Yanukovych, Deripaska, Firtash, Mogilevich, Vekselberg, Akhmetov – (Sounds Like a Law Firm but it ain’t. – M.N.) … Continue reading”The Postcards from Skripal: Ex-Russian spy Sergei Skripal and daughter Yulia pictured in Salisbury Zizzi restaurant… – 12:10 AM 10/12/2018″restaurant at heart of poison plot https://t.co/gG1XE12wn1 — Michael Novakhov (@mikenov) October 11, 2018 –    
Anthony Weiner scheduled for early release next spring – NBCNews.com
 


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Anthony Weiner scheduled for early release next spring
NBCNews.com
Anthony Weiner, the Democratic former U.S. representative from New York who typed away his career one sext at a time, is scheduled to be released three months early next year from a special medical prison, according to prison records. Weiner, 54, began …
Anthony Weiner, Who Admitted Sexting with Teen, Has Prison Sentence Shortened for Good BehaviorPEOPLE.com Weiner to be released from prison earlyCNN
Anthony Weiner to be released early from federal prisonPolitico
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FBI director defends ‘limited’ Kavanaugh background probe – Washington Post
 


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FBI director defends ‘limited’ Kavanaugh background probe
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FBI Director Christopher A. Wray defended his agents’ handling of a background investigation into then-Supreme Court nominee Supreme Court Justice Brett M. Kavanaugh, saying that it was “limited in scope” and followed standard procedures. Wray was pressed at a Senate  
FBI Director Defends Kavanaugh Investigation as ‘Standard’New York Times
 hearing by …
FBI’s Wray confirms White House limited limits on Kavanaugh probePolitico
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Roberts refers judicial misconduct complaints against Kavanaugh to federal appeals court in Colorado – Washington Post
 


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Roberts refers judicial misconduct complaints against Kavanaugh to federal appeals court in Colorado
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Chief Justice John G. Roberts Jr. on Wednesday referred more than a dozen judicial misconduct complaints filed recently against Brett M. Kavanaugh to a federal appeals court in Colorado. The 15 complaints, related to statements Kavanaugh made during … 
Complaints filed against Brett Kavanaugh are transferred to Colorado court for handlingUSA TODAY

Ethics complaints against Brett Kavanaugh have not been resolved yetCNBC 
exceptional circumstances – DC CircuitDC Circuit
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New York man wanted to blow himself up on the National Mall on Election Day – NBCNews.com
 


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New York man wanted to blow himself up on the National Mall on Election Day
NBCNews.com
The FBI has arrested an upstate New York man accused of building a bomb that he intended to use to blow himself up on the National Mall in Washington, D.C. on Election Day, authorities said Wednesday. Court documents say Paul Rosenfeld, 56, of Tappan …
NY Man Planned Election Day Bombing In DC: US AttorneyPatch.com
Feds charge man charged with constructing bomb he intended to detonate on National MallNewsdayall 57 news articles »
Armed man arrested near California park where camper was shot dead in front of daughters: cops – Fox News
 


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Armed man arrested near California park where camper was shot dead in front of daughters: cops
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California man shot and killed while on camping trip with his two young girls, 2 and 4, at Malibu Creek State Park campsite. Southern California authorities on Wednesday arrested an armed man near the area where a father was gunned down during the …
Sheriff’s investigators arrest man who may be linked to string of burglaries in Malibu and CalabasasLos Angeles Timesall 33 news articles »
US, Russia astronauts making emergency landing – Phys.Org
 


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US, Russia astronauts making emergency landing
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U.S. astronaut Nick Hague, right and Russian cosmonaut Alexey Ovchinin, member of the main crew of the expedition to the International Space Station (ISS), speak prior to the launch of Soyuz MS-10 space ship at the Russian leased Baikonur …more.
Astronauts escape malfunctioning Soyuz rocketBBC News
US and Russian Astronauts Blast Off to the International Space StationTIME
Russians ready two-man Soyuz for space station launchCBS News
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Rocket Fails, and American and Russian Astronauts Make Emergency Return – New York Times
 


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Rocket Fails, and American and Russian Astronauts Make Emergency Return
New York Times
A rocket carrying an American and a Russian astronaut failed minutes after liftoff Thursday morning, but the two crew members safely made an emergency return to Earth, the space agencies of both countries said. The capsule had parachuted to Earth about …
American, Russian alive after Soyuz rocket headed to space station fails on launchWashington Post
Soyuz rocket failure forces NASA astronaut, Russian cosmonaut to make emergency landingCBS News
US, Russian astronauts safe after emergency landingYahoo News
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F-35 jets: US military grounds entire fleet – BBC News
 


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F-35 jets: US military grounds entire fleet
BBC News
The US military has temporarily grounded its entire fleet of F-35 fighter jets in the wake of a crash in South Carolina last month. Inspections are to be carried out on faulty fuel tubes. An official report questioned earlier this year whether the F-35 
All US F-35s grounded worldwideMilitary Times
Military grounds all F-35s worldwide for inspections after September crashWashington Examiner
Pentagon grounds global fleet of F-35 fighter jets after first ever crashSky Newsall 34 news articles »
Virginia judge: Paul Manafort plea deal in Washington ‘highly unusual’ – Washington Examiner
 


Washington Examiner
Virginia judge: Paul Manafort plea deal in Washington ‘highly unusual’
Washington Examiner
The federal judge who oversaw the federal trial against former Trump campaign chairman Paul Manafort in Virginia called the plea deal in the District to dismiss the deadlocked charges only after he has finished cooperating with special counsel Robert …and more »
Wall Street dips again, inflation data calms nerves – Reuters
 


Reuters
Wall Street dips again, inflation data calms nerves
Reuters
(Reuters) – U.S. stocks steadied slightly after their worst day in eight months on Thursday as a smaller-than-expected rise in consumer prices suggested inflationary pressures were easing, weakening the case for an aggressive campaign of further and more »
Stock market, after worst rout since February, shifts between small gains and losses – USA TODAY
 


USA TODAY
Stock market, after worst rout since February, shifts between small gains and losses
USA TODAY
U.S. stocks appear to be taking a breather in early trading Thursday, vacillating between positive and negative territory after the market’s biggest rout since February the previous day. That drop in U.S. stocks was followed by sizable losses in Asian 
What is behind the global stock market sell-off?Financial Timesall 20 news articles »
“Будёновцы”: «Ещё бы буденовки надели»!!! – 10.9.18 – They should have put on their “budenovka” hats…
 

“Будёновцы”: «Ещё бы буденовки надели»!!! – 10.9.18 – They should have put on their “budenovka” hats, too!!! – В ГРУ нашли виновного в провалах — Блоги — Эхо Москвы, 09.10.2018
Skripal, Yanukovych, Deripaska, Firtash, Mogilevich, Vekselberg, Akhmetov – (Sounds Like a Law Firm …
 

Skripal, Yanukovych, Deripaska, Firtash, Mogilevich, Vekselberg, Akhmetov – (Sounds Like a Law Firm but it ain’t. – M.N.) – Google Search – 8:04 AM 10/9/2018
Skripal, Yanukovych, Deripaska, Firtash, Mogilevich, Vekselberg, Akhmetov – (Sounds Like a Law Firm …
 

Skripal, Yanukovych, Deripaska, Firtash, Mogilevich, Vekselberg, Akhmetov – (Sounds Like a Law Firm but it ain’t. – M.N.) – Google Search – 8:04 AM 10/9/2018
Skripal, Yanukovych, Deripaska, Firtash, Mogilevich, Vekselberg, Akhmetov – (Sounds Like a Law Firm …
 

Skripal, Yanukovych, Deripaska, Firtash, Mogilevich, Vekselberg, Akhmetov – (Sounds Like a Law Firm but it ain’t. – M.N.) – Google Search – 8:04 AM 10/9/2018
Skripal, Yanukovych, Deripaska, Firtash, Mogilevich, Vekselberg, Akhmetov – (Sounds Like a Law Firm …
 

Skripal, Yanukovych, Deripaska, Firtash, Mogilevich, Vekselberg, Akhmetov – (Sounds Like a Law Firm but it ain’t. – M.N.) – Google Search – 8:04 AM 10/9/2018
Сотрудники ГРУ Чепига и Мишкин участвовали в захвате госучреждений на востоке Украины – Recent Tweets…
 

Сотрудники ГРУ Чепига и Мишкин участвовали в захвате госучреждений на востоке Украины – Recent Tweets Review – 4:15 AM 10/11/2018
Russian Lessons: Федот, да не тот! – Salisbury Poisoning 2018 News Review – UPDATE – 4:52 AM 10/11/2018…
 

Russian Lessons: Федот, да не тот! – Salisbury Poisoning 2018 News Review – UPDATE – 4:52 AM 10/11/2018
Ex-Russian spy Sergei Skripal and daughter Yulia pictured in Salisbury Zizzi restaurant at heart of poison plot thesun.co.uk/news/5756370/e…
 

Ex-Russian spy Sergei Skripal and daughter Yulia pictured in Salisbury Zizzi restaurant at heart of poison plot thesun.co.uk/news/5756370/e…

Posted by mikenov on Thursday, October 11th, 2018 3:36pm
Russian military reportedly unhappy with a series of embarrassing blunders by its spies abroad businessinsider.com/russia-reporte… #salisburypoisoning #feedly
 

Russian military reportedly unhappy with a series of embarrassing blunders by its spies abroad businessinsider.com/russia-reporte… #salisburypoisoning #feedly

Posted by mikenov on Thursday, October 11th, 2018 4:20pm
Internet research is the practice of using Internet information – 12:52 PM 10/11/2018 russia-news.org/2018/10/11/int…
 

Internet research is the practice of using Internet information – 12:52 PM 10/11/2018 russia-news.org/2018/10/11/int…

Posted by mikenov on Thursday, October 11th, 2018 4:53pm
Russia News: Internet research is the practice of using Internet information – 1:05 PM 10/11/2018 trumpinvestigations.org/blog/2018/10/1…
 

Russia News: Internet research is the practice of using Internet information – 1:05 PM 10/11/2018 trumpinvestigations.org/blog/2018/10/1…

Posted by mikenov on Thursday, October 11th, 2018 5:07pm
10:07 AM 9/25/2018 – Declassify the Russia investigation documents

Mike Nova’s Shared NewsLinks Declassify the Russia investigation documents Anta-nan-arivo Mad-aga-scar Mal-a-gasy – Google Search Anta-nan-arivo Mad-aga-scar Mal-a-gasy – Google Search anta-nan-arivo mad-aga-scar – Google Search anta-nan-arivo mad-aga-scar – Google Search antananarivo madagascar – Google Search Madagascar probing US diplomat death in Antananarivo with State Department security, 1 person detained US diplomat found dead in … Continue reading“10:07 AM 9/25/2018 – Declassify the Russia investigation documents”
Operation Novichok – The Postcard from Salisbury | Sergei Skripal – 7:59 AM 10/7/2018

Operation Novichok – The Postcard from Salisbury News and Times from mikenova News and Times from mikenova (14 sites) mikenov on Twitter: Operation Novichok – The Postcard from Salisbury – 7:15 AM 10/7/2018 russia-news.org/2018/10/07/ope… Russia News: Operation Novichok – The Postcard from Salisbury – 7:15 AM 10/7/2018 mikenov on Twitter: Operation Novichok – The Postcard … Continue reading
Categories
Counterintelligence Elections 2016 German Intelligence Services My Opinion - Michael Novakhov Weiner-Abedin emails affair

The "Sandworm Hacking Group" is the hypothetical connnection between the "PETRONAS" (Petrov Boshirov PERSONAS)  – the Salisbury Poisoning, and the Blackberry – Abedin's device – Clinton's emails – Anthony Weiner sexting affair – Democratic Party hack – US Elections 2016 Interference

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M.N.: This is indeed the hypothetical connection between the “PETRONAS” (Petrov Boshirov PERSONAS)  – the Salisbury Poisoning, and the Blackberry – Abedin’s device – Clinton’s emails – Anthony Weiner sexting affair – Democratic Party hack – US Elections 2016 Interference: 

The Boshirov Petrov hacking attempt (GNews)

The “Sandworm Hacking Group” – (GNews). 

This means that the Salisbury Poisoning and the US Elections 2016 Interference might be the parts of the same large operation designed by the Demiurge, the New Abwehr, which uses the ostensibly GRU related groups as its covers. It might be the mixed or the purely the GRU groups but I strongly doubt it: the overall benefits of the Operation Dusseldorf Karnival are in the German and certainly not in Russian interests. 

___________________________

“Two suspects in the poison Poisoninging of an ex-Russian spy were briefly detained in the Netherlands earlier this year, according to research by Bellingcat, an investigative group.
Bellingcat quoted an unnamed security official saying that Alexander Petrov and Ruslan Boshirov were detained in the Netherlands earlier this year and released without being charged.”
“Dutch expelled Russians over alleged novichok lab hacking plot
Two men were arrested over alleged plan to infiltrate lab where Salisbury nerve agent was analysed…
The Swiss Federal Office for Civil Protection said in June that the Spiez laboratory had been targeted by hackers said to be from the Russian government-affiliated group Sandworm. It is not clear whether the expulsion of the two spies from the Netherlands was linked.”
M.N.: It is the same hacking group, “Sandform – APT28 – Fancy Bear, etc., etc.”. “It was involved in the operation to hack and release damaging information on the Democratic Party during the 2016 US presidential election, and has engineered a number of computer  disruptions in Ukraine”.
Is it also resposible for hacking Clinton’s emails, and for downloading emails to Abedin’s computer?
“The Justice Department said the “VPNFilter” botnet was set up by a hacking group variously called APT28, Pawn Storm, Sandworm, Fancy Bear and the Sofacy Group.”

__________________________

US disrupts Russian botnet of 500,000 hacked routers

May 24, 2018 by Paul Handley
US Justice Department seizes &quot;VPNFilter&quot; botnet set up by a hacking group variously called APT28, Pawn Storm, Sandworm
US Justice Department seizes “VPNFilter” botnet set up by a hacking group variously called APT28, Pawn Storm, Sandworm, Fancy Bear and the Sofacy Group

The US Justice Department said Wednesday that it had seized an internet domain that directed a dangerous botnet of a half-million infected home and office network routers, controlled by hackers believed tied to Russian intelligence.

The move was aimed at breaking up an operation deeply embedded in small and medium-sized computer networks that could allow the hackers to take control of computers as well as easily steal data.
The Justice Department said the “VPNFilter” botnet was set up by a hacking group variously called APT28, Pawn Storm, Sandworm, Fancy Bear and the Sofacy Group.
The group is blamed for cyber attacks on numerous governments, key infrastructure industries like power grids, the Organization for Security and Co-operation in Europe, the World Anti-Doping Agency, and other bodies.
US intelligence agencies also say it was involved in the operation to hack and release damaging information on the Democratic Party during the 2016 US presidential election, and has engineered a number of computer  disruptions in Ukraine.
“According to cybersecurity researchers, the Sofacy Group is a cyber-espionage group believed to have originated from Russia,” the Department of Justice said in a court filing.
“Likely operating since 2007, the group is known to typically target government, military, security organizations, and other targets of intelligence value, through a variety of means,” it said.
The Justice filing did not say who was behind Sofacy Group, but US intelligence has in the past linked it to Russia’s GRU military intelligence agency, and numerous private computer security groups have made the same connection.

Read more at: https://phys.org/news/2018-05-disrupts-russian-botnet-hacked-routers.html#jCp

Categories
Elections 2016 My Opinion - Michael Novakhov Weiner-Abedin emails affair

12:02 PM 8/28/2018 – Who dumped those 700,000 emails (or 650,000 in previous reports) to Abedin-Weiner's laptop from Abedin's Blackberry, and how was it done?

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News Reviews and Opinions: The Autumn Of Our Discontent

The key issue and questions remain: 
Who dumped those  700,000 emails (or 650,000 in previous reports) to this laptop from Abedin’s Blackberry, and how was it done: by remote reprogramming of the device, similarly to DNC hack and Hillary Clinton’s emails hack? If the culprits were traced down in DNC hack, why can’t they be traced down in Abedin-Weiner hypothetical hack? 
These are the key issues, it seems to me, because those who dumped these emails and/or reprogrammed the Abedin’s Blackberry device, are the same actors who tried to interfere in elections 2016, and the same actors who, very likely, helped to arrange the sexting, and the set-up, and the frame-up of Anthony Weiner.
In my humble opinion, the Abedin-Weiner emails affair and directly related to it Weiner’s “sexting” incident have to be reopened and re-investigated. 
Weiner signed a non-disclosure agreement with the FBI. It has to be rescinded. It is very easy way for the FBI to silence him and to cover up the truth.
Michael Novakhov
12:02 PM 8/28/2018
See the previous posts on this subject: 

______________________________________

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FBI failed to review hundreds of thousands of emails on Anthony Weiner’s laptop: Report
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FBI failed to review hundreds of thousands of emails on Anthony Weiner’s laptop: Report
 

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Despite claims from former FBI director James Comey to the opposite, hundreds of thousands of former-Rep. Anthony Weiner’s correspondences were reportedly not examined for potentially classified information as part of the agency’s investigation into Hillary Clinton’s use of a private email server.
Only 3,077 of the nearly 700,000 emails discovered on a laptop Weiner shared with wife and top Clinton staffer Huma Abedin were reviewed, according to a report from RealClearInvestigations. The examination was done during a marathon 12-hour session the day before Comey said Clinton, the 2016 Democratic presidential nominee, should not be recommended for criminal charges.
The search that was completed uncovered additional instances of Clinton transmitting and receiving classified information via her private, unauthorized email account, according to one U.S. law enforcement official.
President Trump tweeted about the findings on Saturday, threatening to interject himself into an investigation into corruption at the FBI.
“Big story out that the FBI ignored tens of thousands of Crooked Hillary Emails, many of which are REALLY BAD. Also gave false election info. I feel sure that we will soon be getting to the bottom of all of this corruption. At some point I may have to get involved!,” he posted.
Top Clinton allies say Comey’s controversial decision to reopen the email investigation weeks before the election following the discovery of Weiner’s laptop was a key reason why Trump won in a surprise victory.
Weiner, who last year was sentenced to 21 months in federal prison for sending lewd messages to a minor, did not have security clearance but reportedly received classified information on his personal email account on two occasions.
As Turkey Teeters, Germany Considers Offering a Financial Lifeline
 

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The German government is considering providing emergency financial assistance to Turkey as concerns grow in Berlin that a full-blown economic crisis could destabilize the region, German and European officials said.

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As Turkey Teeters, Germany Considers Offering a Financial Lifeline

Wall Street Journal2 hours ago
On the contrary, President Trump, locked in a dispute with Mr. Erdogan over the detention of a U.S.pastor in Turkey, has piled sanctions and …
Categories
9/11 Counterintelligence Elections 2016 My Opinion - Michael Novakhov Weiner-Abedin emails affair

4:28 PM 8/19/2018 – M.N.: Strzok, it looks like, might have been helped in his FBI career by some "Invisible Hand".  His 9/11 "good luck": "He located the rental car abandoned by three of the 9/11 hijackers", is especially interesting to me. How did he do it? Who gave him the tip and how? 

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M.N.: Strzok, it looks like, might have been helped in his FBI career by some “Invisible Hand”.  His 9/11 “good luck”: “He located the rental car abandoned by three of the 9/11 hijackers”, is especially interesting to me. How did he do it? Who gave him the tip and how? 
4:28 PM 8/19/2018

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How anti-Trump texts ruined the career of the FBI’s go-to agent

Bowling Green Daily NewsAug 16, 2018
… investigators had resumed their work after discovering emails potentially relevant to the case on the laptop of disgraced former congressman Anthony Weiner, …

“Strzok joined the FBI in 1996, working first as an analyst on terrorism cases and later as a special agent in Boston and Washington. He came to specialize in espionage and counterintelligence work.
“He was beloved by the agents on his squad, and you could tell he was going places,” said Ryan Fayhee, a former Justice Department prosecutor who worked with Strzok. “As someone who has seen him operate for more than a decade, he was by far the best leader that I’d met in the FBI, and he had the most success of any counterintelligence agent.”
No matter where Strzok was assigned, he found himself at the center of the biggest cases. He located the rental car abandoned by three of the 9/11 hijackers, helped arrest Russian spies living a secret life in the United States and supervised sensitive probes of CIA officers thought to have abused their positions.
Strzok’s colleagues in federal law enforcement said Strzok had a special talent for following leads and marshaling the bureaucratic machinery of the FBI into action.
In 2011, for example, a guard at a U.S. consulate was indicted for allegedly trying to sell secrets to China. The guard, Bryan Underwood, skipped a court appearance, leaving behind what appeared to be a suicide note.”

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How anti-Trump texts ruined the career of the FBI’s go-to agent |

mikenova shared this story from www.bgdailynews.com – RSS Results of type article.

WASHINGTON – When the FBI tapped him to investigate whether the Trump campaign conspired with Russia to shape the presidential election, agent Peter Strzok was thrilled.
“And damn this feels momentous,” Strzok wrote to an FBI lawyer in July 2016. “Because this matters.”
At that point, the task ahead did not seem too daunting for the celebrated counterintelligence investigator who had spent decades busting terrorists and spies. Donald Trump, a former reality-TV star and the Republican nominee for president, seemed unlikely to win the election. The FBI’s examination of his campaign was a secret. And the public pressure that Strzok faced in his last politically charged case – the investigation of Trump’s opponent, Hillary Clinton – was not quite so intense.

But by the following spring, everything had changed. Trump upset Clinton in the November election, and the FBI director said publicly that the president’s campaign was being examined. A special counsel was appointed to lead the high-stakes case.
Strzok confided in friends that his early enthusiasm had abated.
“The impression I got was that he didn’t want to go and get involved in some political thing that was going to drag out forever and have nothing come of it,” said a former FBI official who discussed the case with Strzok.
The case would come to upend Strzok’s life – airing to the world his marital infidelity and bringing his distinguished, 22-year FBI career to an ignominious end.
Last week, Strzok was fired from the bureau over text messages he sent expressing his disdain for Trump and suggesting he would “stop” the Republican candidate from winning the election.
The termination – ordered personally by the bureau’s deputy director – comes as the FBI is struggling to improve morale and regain its once venerated reputation amid constant criticism from the president and his conservative allies.
But Strzok’s firing, rather than easing tensions, might serve to fuel the partisan inferno surrounding the bureau’s work.
Strzok has been one of President Donald Trump’s favorite targets as he has sought to undercut the ongoing investigation into his campaign. That seems to have influenced the bureau’s treatment of the once beloved agent, defenders of Strzok say.
“It is a decision that produces only one winner – those who seek to harm our country and weaken our democracy,” Aitan Goelman, Strzok’s attorney, said in a statement about his client’s firing.
FBI Director Christopher Wray has said Strzok’s discipline would be handled “by the book.” But the termination was more severe than the demotion and 60-day suspension that the bureau’s employee discipline office decided Strzok should face. The FBI declined to comment.
Many people who worked with Strzok over the years said they did not know what his partisan leanings were until the messages emerged.
But even supporters acknowledge his reputation might have sustained a fatal wound from his texts about people he was investigating, on a work phone, to a woman with whom he was having an affair.
“I never saw the political side that’s in his texts, and I mean that,” said Robert Anderson, a former FBI executive who worked with Strzok. “However, I also told him to his face since this happened, ‘Look, I love you, brother, but you stepped in it here.’ ”
Strzok has always seemed to live a life fit for a G-man movie. The son of an Army officer turned international development worker, Strzok traveled the world as a child – witnessing the violent overthrows of governments in Iran, West Africa and Haiti by the time he was 16.
Strzok served briefly in the Army himself, spending four years in the early 1990s as an active-duty field artillery officer. Fred Dews, who trained with him in the Army and ROTC, remembered him as a young man of “quiet intensity.” At field artillery school in Oklahoma, Strzok finished at the top of his class, Dews said.
Strzok joined the FBI in 1996, working first as an analyst on terrorism cases and later as a special agent in Boston and Washington. He came to specialize in espionage and counterintelligence work.
“He was beloved by the agents on his squad, and you could tell he was going places,” said Ryan Fayhee, a former Justice Department prosecutor who worked with Strzok. “As someone who has seen him operate for more than a decade, he was by far the best leader that I’d met in the FBI, and he had the most success of any counterintelligence agent.”
No matter where Strzok was assigned, he found himself at the center of the biggest cases. He located the rental car abandoned by three of the 9/11 hijackers, helped arrest Russian spies living a secret life in the United States and supervised sensitive probes of CIA officers thought to have abused their positions.
Strzok’s colleagues in federal law enforcement said Strzok had a special talent for following leads and marshaling the bureaucratic machinery of the FBI into action.
In 2011, for example, a guard at a U.S. consulate was indicted for allegedly trying to sell secrets to China. The guard, Bryan Underwood, skipped a court appearance, leaving behind what appeared to be a suicide note.
Strzok learned that Underwood had possibly been spotted riding a bicycle along a Virginia highway, according to people familiar with the case. Strzok worked through the night, gathering bus travel records, internet browser histories and other details that made him think the suspect had used a fake name to travel to a Los Angeles hotel previously linked to Chinese intelligence agents, these people said.
As the sun came up in Washington and Strzok was still at his desk, he sent FBI agents to the hotel room where he thought Underwood was staying.
Strzok was right. When Underwood was arrested, he was traveling with more than $10,000 in cash and 80,000 Japanese yen, authorities said.
Following that, Strzok tackled one of the most controversial counterintelligence cases the FBI had handled in years – the probe into John Kiriakou, a former CIA officer who ultimately pleaded guilty to disclosing to a reporter information about an undercover CIA officer.
Some in the bureau say the investigation – which was complicated because it related to the defense lawyers involved in military commission trials of al-Qaida terrorist suspects at Guantanamo Bay, Cuba – helped cement Strzok’s reputation. Kiriakou was charged within days of an interview that Strzok supervised, and he ended up serving nearly two years in prison.
For Kiriakou, though, Strzok’s woes are a long-overdue comeuppance.
“There are so many people in the federal intelligence community who are cowboys, and they think because they are the good guys they can do anything they want,” Kiriakou said. “Sometimes karma comes back to bite them.”
In 2015, Strzok was tapped for a supervisory role on the small team at FBI headquarters assigned to investigate Clinton. The work would put him in close contact with a lawyer in the deputy director’s office, Lisa Page, with whom he would soon begin sharing views that he kept secret even from those closest to him in the bureau. Unbeknown to their colleagues, they were having an affair.
As the FBI’s investigation of Clinton trudged forward and cast a significant shadow over the Democrat’s campaign, then-FBI Director James Comey addressed the matter in a briefing with reporters. “If you know my folks,” he said, “ you know they don’t give a rip about politics.”
For Strzok and Page, that did not seem to be true.
Over thousands of text messages, the two ripped politicians of all stripes. Strzok derided Martin O’Malley, the Democratic former governor of Maryland and a primary opponent of Clinton’s, as a “freakshow.” He described Sen. Bernie Sanders, I-Vt., another Clinton primary opponent, as an “idiot like Trump.” Page said she hoped House Speaker Paul Ryan, R-Wis., “fails and crashes in a blaze of glory.” Strzok responded: “Yes. And, me too. At some point the Rep party needs to pull their head out of their ss.”
In March 2016, Strzok wrote to Page, “God Hillary should win 100,000,000 – 0.”
If the pair’s political leanings crept into their work, though, that was not obvious to those involved with the Clinton case. One person on the team said he “had no idea what Pete’s political leanings were, at all, and in fact, I would have assumed that they would have been more conservative, given that 95 percent of the bureau is more conservative.”
The person, who like others spoke on the condition of anonymity to discuss ongoing cases and sensitive personnel issues, said Strzok seemed “somewhat offended” by Clinton’s cavalier attitude toward her emails and advocated for aggressive steps to advance the case.
In July 2016, Comey announced at a news conference at FBI headquarters that the bureau was recommending Clinton not face any charges. His statement – which Strzok helped craft – stunned even his Justice Department bosses.
When the FBI recommends cases be closed, officials typically make no statement at all. The decision to charge someone is up to prosecutors, and the FBI is supposed to make its view known only to them. Comey’s announcement was also unusual in that it lambasted Clinton for being “extremely careless” – words that Strzok advised using – in her use of a private email server.
Strzok would move on to the Russia investigation, but the Clinton case was not yet done. In October, Comey revealed that investigators had resumed their work after discovering emails potentially relevant to the case on the laptop of disgraced former congressman Anthony Weiner, D-N.Y., the husband of one of Clinton’s top aides. Though the bureau only days later said investigators had found nothing to make them change their minds, its actions upended the presidential election.

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A few weeks later, Clinton lost.
In January 2017, Inspector General Michael Horowitz initiated a broad review of the Clinton case – the handling of which was by then drawing criticism from all quarters. Democrats accused Comey of costing Clinton the presidency. Republicans complained that Clinton should have been charged.
The bureau was thrown into upheaval. Trump fired Comey as the FBI director in May 2017 – citing his handling of the Clinton case but acknowledging in a television interview he had the Russia investigation on his mind when he did so. Deputy Attorney General Rod Rosenstein appointed former FBI director Robert Mueller as special counsel to explore Russian interference in the election and possible Trump connections.
Strzok had been leading that work for the FBI and was an obvious pick for Mueller’s team.
Text messages show that Strzok and Page, who both for a time served on Mueller’s team, wrestled with whether they should again work together on such a high-profile case. Two people familiar with their relationship said that, by then, their affair had ended. One of the people said Page discouraged Strzok from joining the team, thinking that would be best for his career.
“Lisa, I’m PULLED to the mission and the team, for the right reasons,” Strzok wrote in June 2017. “You saw it! You know what it is in me and that it’s pure and I’m good and you admire it!”
“It doesn’t NEED you,” Page responded. “And I don’t care if it does. Every conversation I’ve had with you about this still stands, and now I’ve asked you, begged you, not to. You do what you want.”
In conversations with others, Strzok said he might feel “relieved” to be taken off the case.
By that time, Horowitz was well into his investigation of the Clinton email case. As his investigators sifted through thousands of text messages, they would soon zero in on Strzok and Page.
Horowitz did not find the most worrisome exchange until later – when Page, in August 2016, told Strzok that Trump was “not ever going to become president, right? Right?!”
“No. No he’s not. We’ll stop it,” Strzok responded.
But what Horowitz had found by the summer of 2017 was damaging enough. Strzok had called Trump an idiot and forwarded a story about Clinton possibly losing the election with a note that used an expletive and said the prospect was “TERRIFYING.”
On July 27, 2017, Horowitz briefed Rosenstein and Mueller on the messages. The next day, Strzok was summoned to the special counsel’s office, where Mueller told him he could no longer participate in the case. He was reassigned to a position in human resources.
Horowitz would ultimately say that he could not connect texts with specific investigative decisions in the Clinton case and that he could find “no evidence” that bias affected the decision not to prosecute Clinton. But in June of this year – after the inspector general alleged Strzok had implied “a willingness to take official action” to hurt Trump’s chances of being president – Strzok was made to turn in his gun and badge while the bureau moved to fire him.
Strzok contests that he would have used his position to stop Trump from being elected. He has said the comment about his stopping Trump came after the candidate had attacked the father of a slain U.S. soldier. Strzok said he assumed “the American population would not elect somebody demonstrating that behavior to be president of the United States.”
Strzok’s defenders agree that he could not stay on the Russia case when the texts surfaced.
“It was painful and it was too bad, but everybody understands that he had to be removed from Mueller’s team,” said Fayhee, the former prosecutor.
One former FBI official who remains close with Strzok said Strzok told him Mueller “did the right thing” in removing him from the team, because even the appearance that he was biased might shake public confidence in the work. But Strzok, those who know him say, hoped to finish his career and retire from the FBI and now feels he is being unfairly vilified by those with political agendas.
Strzok, who declined to comment through his attorney for this report, still hopes to restore his reputation, friends say. His team started a GoFundMe page, which raised tens of thousands of dollars after his firing became public Monday. But even supporters say he faces an uphill battle to be welcomed into the community of former FBI agents.
“He’s being judged on the last two years of all this stuff,” said one friend and former FBI official. “I’m not saying that’s fair, but I’m not saying it’s going to change.”

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How anti-Trump texts ruined the career of the FBI’s go-to agent

Bowling Green Daily NewsAug 16, 2018
… investigators had resumed their work after discovering emails potentially relevant to the case on the laptop of disgraced former congressman Anthony Weiner, …
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Categories
Counterintelligence Elections 2016 My Opinion - Michael Novakhov Weiner-Abedin emails affair

6:26 AM 5/21/2018 – My hypothesis of the Weiner-Abedin emails affair: The set-up and the frame-up by the pro-Trump faction of the FBI | Plot Thickens: Search Warrant for Anthony Weiner's Laptop Unsealed – The Epoch Times

My hypothesis of the Weiner-Abedin emails affair: The set-up and the frame-up by the pro-Trump faction of the FBI

The details, incongruencies, and many questions raised in this article seem to lend the additional credence and support, in my humble opinion, to my hypothesis of the Weiner-Abedin emails affair, namely that it was skillfully arranged and executed by the pro-Trump faction of the FBI centered in NY field office (which apparently suffers from its own mysterious maladies for quite a long time, as reported) and closely allied with Trump’s campaign through the Giuliani and Kallstrom circles. 
How can you “arrange” the exhibitionistic behavior, you might ask? I think that exhibitionism, at least in some cases, can have a strong compulsive (similar to the “irresistible impulse“, component), and the pro-Trump FBI performers might have been well aware of this in their preparations to set Anthony Weiner up and to frame him up
Girl in Weiner sexting case lied to damage Clinton, reports The Hill. “The website suggests [in a letter published by BuzzFeed], this could mean that Weiner was the target of a politically motivated plot… “Seeing that Weiner is both a repeat offender — his sexting addiction cost him his job in Congress as well as a shot at becoming mayor of New York — and associated with one of the most important people in Clinton’s inner circle, it is conceivable that this was a set-up from the beginning, with the objective of embarrassing the Clinton campaign,” the WhoWhatWhy report reads.” A. Weiner reportedly had the same impression himself. 
See more details in my previous posts on this subject. 
The October 28, 2016, Letter to Congress changed the course of the Elections, as many people think, and this line of thought is based on the good, including the statistical aspects, reasons. This letter was the product of the very strange and suspicious, in terms of illegal FBI activity (“permitted” to them by Law?! and unreported for the Election year!!!, see the previous posts on this subject also), Weiner’s “sexting” case, and subsequent “discovery”  of the official emails on the laptop used by him and Abedin.
Of course, this interpretation (Weiner’s set-up and frame-up hypothesis) of the events remains just the (journalistic) investigative hypothesis at this point, but the grave importance this issue has for the correct understanding of the events, necessitates, again in my humble opinion, their vigorous, independent, objective, and scrupulous investigation. 
Do not assume that we know the whole truth at this point yet. The most troubling aspect is that this described above “sex cum politics” scenario might have been conceived within the Kremlin (or other, related) walls: they have great experiences and a knack for these types of the shows (see Skuratov affair) and they use them as their favorite, efficient, and well-tested tools from their infamous Cookbook
Abedin herself said that she does not know how these “hundreds of thousands, (about 650,000) emails, ended up on her computer, and the likelihood of these emails been dumped into her laptop, possibly by the hostile, and/or foreign players, is very high. I do not think that the origin of these emails was explained sufficiently and satisfactorily at this point yet. 
“In another twist to the investigative saga over Hillary Clinton’s private emails, CBS News has learned that Huma Abedin, a top Clinton aide and longtime confidant, says she has no knowledge of any of her emails being on the electronic device belonging to her estranged husband, disgraced ex-congressman Anthony Weiner.” 

Investigate the investigators! Save America! Reform the FBI now!

Michael Novakhov
5.21.18 

_________________________________

Links

Weiner-Abedin Emails Affair is the FBI Plot – 5.21.18

Wiener-Abedin emails affair – Google Search
pro-Trump faction of the FBI – Google Search
ny field office fbi – Google Search
ny field office fbi has problems – Google Search
The Problems With the FBI’s Email Investigation Went… — ProPublica
irresistible impulse – Google Search
exhibitionistic behavior compulsion – Google Search
Giuliani – Google Search
Anthony Weiner set-up frame-up – Google Search
Anthony Weiner set-up and frame-up – Google Search
Mikenova on Anthony Wener – Google Search
Michael Novakhov on Anthony Weiner – Google Search
FBI Severely Underreported How Many Times It Authorized Informants to Break the Law [Updated]
investigative hypothesis – Google Search
Skuratov affair – Google Search
illegal FBI activity – Google Search
ny fbi field office has problems – Google Search
emails were dumped into Abedin’s computer – Google Search
origin of emails Weiner-Abedin laptop – Google Search
kallstrom fbi – Google Search
Source: Huma Abedin “surprised” about emails on Anthony Weiner’s computer – CBS News

Trump campaign, FBI informants, and their outing

Outing fbi informants: is it legal or illegal? – Google Search
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5.18.18 – Why is the FBI Outing Stefan Halper As Their Informant In the Trump Campaign?
F.B.I. Used Informant to Investigate Russia Ties to Campaign, Not to Spy, as Trump Claims – The New York Times
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The FBI Informant Who Monitored the Trump Campaign, Stefan Halper, Oversaw a CIA Spying Operation in the 1980 Presidential Election
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5.16.18 – Code Name Crossfire Hurricane: The Secret Origins of the Trump Investigation – The New York Times
Here’s Your Unclassified Briefing on Secret Government Code Names – The New York Times

Counterintelligence Reform

FBI Counterintelligence Activities Should Be Separate | Observer
It’s Time to Get the FBI Out of the Spy Business – Observer – Google Search
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Counterintelligence needs reboot for 21st century | TheHill
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FBI — FBI Reforms to Meet Current Threats
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FBI Trump-Russia investigation codename: Crossfire Hurricane – Business Insider
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Yes, the FBI is America’s secret police | TheHill
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fbi as secret police contradicts american spirit – Google Search
Jumpin’ Jack Flash – Wikipedia
skyfall – YouTube
FBI Trump-Russia investigation codename: Crossfire Hurricane – Business Insider
James Bond 007 Skyfall by Adele [OFFICIAL FULL MUSIC VIDEO] – YouTube
James Bond 007 Skyfall by Adele [OFFICIAL FULL MUSIC VIDEO] – YouTube
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5.21.18

Otras dos demandas contra la fiscalía federal – Primera Hora – Google Search

5.20.18

6:34 AM 5/20/2018 – Outing FBI informants: when is it legal and when is it illegal, and why? | Why is the FBI Outing Stefan Halper As Their Informant In the Trump Campaign? | FBI News Review
Virginia Senator Mark Warner warns against outing FBI sources
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Watch: Trump addresses criminal justice at Prison Reform Summit
Trump promises to sign prison reform bill that could free thousands | US news | The Guardian
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Plot Thickens: Search Warrant for Anthony Weiner’s Laptop Unsealed – Google Search
Search Warrant for Anthony Weiner’s Laptop Unsealed | The Epoch Times

5.19.18

Demandante caso Rosa Emilia Rodríguez siguió los canales para pedir permiso viaje a Rusia | Ley y orden | elvocero.com
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Virginia Senator Mark Warner warns against outing FBI sources
Why is the FBI Outing Stefan Halper As Their Informant In the Trump Campaign?
007 : James Bond : Theme – YouTube
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12:01 PM 5/19/2018 – Operation “Crossfire Hurricane”: The Need For Counterintelligence Reform – Selected Articles Review | Global Security News
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Search Warrant for Anthony Weiner’s Laptop Unsealed

May 19, 2018 14:40, Last Updated: May 20, 2018 11:04
District Judge Denise Cote unsealed the search warrant for the laptop and other devices of former Congressman Anthony Weiner on Wednesday, May 16.
Weiner was sentenced by Cote in September to 21 months in prison for sending obscene material—including sexually explicit images and directions to engage in sexual conduct—to a 15-year-old girl through messaging and video chat apps.
New York City Police obtained a search warrant on his laptop, iPad, and iPhone on Sept. 26, 2016, approved by Magistrate Judge Ronald Ellis.
The laptop soon became the center of a major controversy. However, the search warrant suggests the controversy may run deeper still.

On Nov. 4, 2016, former Navy SEAL and CIA contractor Erik Prince said “a very well-placed source” at the NYPD told him the NYPD found “damning criminal information” about then-presidential candidate Hillary Clinton on Weiner’s laptop and threatened to release it if the FBI tried to sweep it under the rug.
The FBI later obtained its own search warrant and looked at the laptop in connection with its investigation into Clinton’s mishandling of classified information as State Secretary.
But there was a notable difference between the FBI warrant and the NYPD one.
The one obtained by NYPD read, in part: “Depending on circumstances, a complete review of the seized [electronically stored information] may require examination of all of the seized data to evaluate its contents and determine whether the data is responsive to the warrant.”
The FBI one read, in part: “Law enforcement personnel will make reasonable efforts to restrict their search to data falling within the categories of evidence specified in the warrant.”
That would suggest the NYPD could look at everything, while the FBI investigators worded its warrant in a way that restricted them to look only at data regarding the mishandling of classified information.
Here’s what we know about how Clinton’s emails ended up on Weiner’s laptop and what repercussions their discovery meant:

Weiner shared the laptop with his estranged wife, Huma Abedin, a close aide to Hillary Clinton since 2000.
Hundreds of thousands of emails were stored on the laptop, including thousands from Clinton.
“Huma Abedin appears to have had a regular practice of forwarding emails to [Weiner] for him,” then-FBI Director James Comey testified at a Senate Judiciary Committee hearing on May 3, 2017. “I think, to print out for her, so she could then deliver them to [Clinton].”

[M.N.: Abedin herself said that she does not know how these “hundreds of thousands, about 600,000, if I remember correctly, emails ended up on her computer, and the likelihood of these emails been dumped into her laptop, possibly by the hostile, and/or foreign players, is very high. I do not think that the origin of these emails was explained sufficiently and satisfactorily at this point.]

The existence of the emails was also confirmed in texts between senior FBI attorney Lisa Page and former head of counterintelligence at the FBI, Peter Strzok.
Peter Strzok. (FBI)“Got called up to Andy’s earlier … hundreds of thousands of emails turned over by Weiner’s atty to sdny, indudes a ton of material from spouse,” Strzok texted (pdf) Page on Sept. 28, 2016, only two days after the search warrant: “Sending team up tomorrow to review … this will never end ….”
The text suggests that then-FBI Deputy Director Andrew McCabe, referred to as Andy, knew of the emails. Strzok noted that a team would go to “review” the next day, Sept. 29, 2016.
But this timeline seems to conflict with a Chicago Tribune story, which said that law enforcement officers first seized the laptop on Oct. 3, according to “federal officials familiar with the investigation.”

The text suggests McCabe knew about the emails on Sept. 28 because Weiner’s attorney himself delivered the emails to the U.S. Attorney’s Office for the Southern District of New York. It is not clear why.

Then acting FBI Director Andrew McCabe testifies before the Senate Intelligence Committee on May 11, 2017. (Alex Wong/Getty Images)

It was McCabe who led a small group at FBI headquarters on the Clinton investigation. Both Strzok and Page were in that group. Comey announced the conclusion of the investigation on July 5, 2016.
The Hill reported on Nov. 6 that Strzok changed key language in that conclusion from “grossly negligent,” which would have been a crime, to “extremely careless.” Changing the phrase may have exonerated Clinton.
The Weiner laptop turned out to have a trove of Clinton’s emails containing classified information and emails from the first three months of her term as State Secretary—emails that the FBI had not obtained before, Comey said.
But, Comey said it took until Oct. 27, 2016, for their small team to come to him and tell him about the significance of the emails. The group was only looking at the emails’ metadata—such as subject, sent date, and addressee—according to Comey, and asked him whether they should get a search warrant to look at the emails themselves, which Comey approved.

Comey told Fox News’ Bret Baier he didn’t know why it took a month for McCabe to come to him, especially given the significance of the discovery only a few weeks before the presidential election.

Former FBI Director James Comey testifies before the Senate Intelligence Committee in the Hart Senate Office Building on Capitol Hill in Washington, D.C., on June 8, 2017. (Chip Somodevilla/Getty Images)“I think what actually drove it was the prosecutors in New York who were working the criminal case against Weiner called down to headquarters and said, ‘Are we getting a search warrant or not for this?’ That caused, I’m sorry, Justice Department Headquarters, to then call across the street to the FBI and poke the organization; and they start to move much more quickly. I don’t know why there was, if there was slow activity, why it was slow for those first couple of weeks,” Comey said on April 26.
Indeed, at least one high-ranking Justice Department official prodded the team about the Weiner trove.
On Oct. 21, 2016, Strzok texted, “[redacted] called [because] Toscas [is] now aware NY has [Clinton-Abedin] emails via [W]einer invest[igation]. Told him we knew. Wanted to know our thoughts on getting it.”
Strzok was referring to George Toscas, deputy assistant attorney general at the Justice Department’s National Security Division.
“George wanted to ensure info got to Andy,” Strzok wrote.
It was also Toscas, who, according to The New York Times, criticised Comey for caving to Attorney General Loretta Lynch in calling the Clinton probe a “matter” instead of an investigation back in 2015.
“I guess you’re the Federal Bureau of Matters now,” Toscas said.
But it’s not clear why the New York prosecutors would call Justice Headquarters about a search warrant. They’d had a search warrant for their investigation since Sept. 26. There’s no sign they had anything to do with the Clinton investigation because that was run by the team at the FBI headquarters.
It is also not clear whether Toscas’ call was motivated by the NYPD threat of disclosure Prince talked about. Prince said the NYPD received strong pushback from Obama’s Justice Department—a threat to push charges against the NYPD in an unrelated civil rights case.
Meanwhile, the Strzok texts reveal the team had another contingency on its hands. On Oct. 24, 2016, The Wall Street Journal reported that after the Clinton probe started in July 2015, McCabe’s wife, Jill, received some $675,000 for her Virginia State Senate campaign from Clinton associate Gov. Terry McCauliffe’s political entities.
On Jan. 29, 2016, Comey appointed McCabe deputy director, putting him in charge of the Clinton investigation.
On the day Comey was briefed by the team on Oct. 27, 2016, his chief of staff, Jim Rybicki, wanted McCabe to recuse himself, the Strzok texts suggest, apparently because the public learned McCabe’s wife was getting money from the Clinton camp.
The texts also suggest Page, who was McCabe’s legal counsel, was to recuse herself too, which she apparently wasn’t thrilled about.
“I obviously don’t have to tell you how completely INFURIATED I am with Jim [Rybicki] right now,” she texted.
Later that day she added, “I Just walked in on Jim to force the issue. Me: ‘I’m not recused, but I’m not sitting in on this meeting.’” It’s not clear which meeting she was referring to.
On Oct. 28, 2016, Comey sent a letter to Congress members sitting on oversight committees informing them the Clinton investigation had resumed. The information quickly reached the media, infuriating Democrats.
The team obtained a search warrant for the laptop on Oct. 30, 2016, allowing them to retrieve it from the FBI New York Field Office.
A day later, McCabe recused himself from the investigation, codenamed “Mid Year.”
“Thanks to the wizardry of our technology, we’ve only had to personally read 6,000 [of the emails],” the team told Comey on the night of Nov. 4, he later testified before Congress. “They said, ‘we found a lot on new stuff. We did not find anything that changes our view of [Clinton’s] intent.’”
The lack of intent in being “extremely careless” with classified information was Comey’s justification for not charging Clinton back in July, 2016.
On Nov. 5, 2016, Comey sent another letter to Congress saying all the newly discovered Clinton emails had been reviewed and the previous decision stood—no charges.

Plot Thickens: Search Warrant for Anthony Weiner’s Laptop Unsealed – The Epoch Times
 

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Code Name Crossfire Hurricane: The Secret Origins of the Trump Investigation – The New York Times
 

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WASHINGTON — Within hours of opening an investigation into the Trump campaign’s ties to Russia in the summer of 2016, the F.B.I. dispatched a pair of agents to London on a mission so secretive that all but a handful of officials were kept in the dark.

Their assignment, which has not been previously reported, was to meet the Australian ambassador, who had evidence that one of Donald J. Trump’s advisers knew in advance about Russian election meddling. After tense deliberations between Washington and Canberra, top Australian officials broke with diplomatic protocol and allowed the ambassador, Alexander Downer, to sit for an F.B.I. interview to describe his meeting with the campaign adviser, George Papadopoulos.

The agents summarized their highly unusual interview and sent word to Washington on Aug. 2, 2016, two days after the investigation was opened. Their report helped provide the foundation for a case that, a year ago Thursday, became the special counsel investigation. But at the time, a small group of F.B.I. officials knew it by its code name: Crossfire Hurricane.

The name, a reference to the Rolling Stones lyric “I was born in a crossfire hurricane,” was an apt prediction of a political storm that continues to tear shingles off the bureau. Days after they closed their investigation into Hillary Clinton’s use of a private email server, agents began scrutinizing the campaign of her Republican rival. The two cases have become inextricably linked in one of the most consequential periods in the history of the F.B.I.

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[Read our briefing on secret government code names]

This month, the Justice Department inspector general is expected to release the findings of its lengthy review of the F.B.I.’s conduct in the Clinton case. The results are certain to renew debate over decisions by the F.B.I. director at the time, James B. Comey, to publicly chastise Mrs. Clinton in a news conference, and then announce the reopening of the investigation days before Election Day. Mrs. Clinton has said those actions buried her presidential hopes.

Those decisions stand in contrast to the F.B.I.’s handling of Crossfire Hurricane. Not only did agents in that case fall back to their typical policy of silence, but interviews with a dozen current and former government officials and a review of documents show that the F.B.I. was even more circumspect in that case than has been previously known. Many of the officials spoke on condition of anonymity because they were not authorized to discuss the investigation publicly.

Agents considered, then rejected, interviewing key Trump associates, which might have sped up the investigation but risked revealing the existence of the case. Top officials quickly became convinced that they would not solve the case before Election Day, which made them only more hesitant to act. When agents did take bold investigative steps, like interviewing the ambassador, they were shrouded in secrecy.

Fearful of leaks, they kept details from political appointees across the street at the Justice Department. Peter Strzok, a senior F.B.I. agent, explained in a text that Justice Department officials would find it too “tasty” to resist sharing. “I’m not worried about our side,” he wrote.

Only about five Justice Department officials knew the full scope of the case, officials said, not the dozen or more who might normally be briefed on a major national security case.

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The facts, had they surfaced, might have devastated the Trump campaign: Mr. Trump’s future national security adviser was under investigation, as was his campaign chairman. One adviser appeared to have Russian intelligence contacts. Another was suspected of being a Russian agent himself.

In the Clinton case, Mr. Comey has said he erred on the side of transparency. But in the face of questions from Congress about the Trump campaign, the F.B.I. declined to tip its hand. And when The New York Times tried to assess the state of the investigation in October 2016, law enforcement officials cautioned against drawing any conclusions, resulting in a story that significantly played down the case.

Mr. Comey has said it is unfair to compare the Clinton case, which was winding down in the summer of 2016, with the Russia case, which was in its earliest stages. He said he did not make political considerations about who would benefit from each decision.

But underpinning both cases was one political calculation: that Mrs. Clinton would win and Mr. Trump would lose. Agents feared being seen as withholding information or going too easy on her. And they worried that any overt actions against Mr. Trump’s campaign would only reinforce his claims that the election was being rigged against him.

The F.B.I. now faces those very criticisms and more. Mr. Trump says he is the victim of a politicized F.B.I. He says senior agents tried to rig the election by declining to prosecute Mrs. Clinton, then drummed up the Russia investigation to undermine his presidency. He has declared that a deeply rooted cabal — including his own appointees — is working against him.

That argument is the heart of Mr. Trump’s grievances with the federal investigation. In the face of bipartisan support for the special counsel, Robert S. Mueller III, Mr. Trump and his allies have made a priority of questioning how the investigation was conducted in late 2016 and trying to discredit it.

“It’s a witch hunt,” Mr. Trump said last month on Fox News. “And they know that, and I’ve been able to message it.”

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Congressional Republicans, led by Representative Devin Nunes of California, have begun to dig into F.B.I. files, looking for evidence that could undermine the investigation. Much remains unknown and classified. But those who saw the investigation up close, and many of those who have reviewed case files in the past year, say that far from gunning for Mr. Trump, the F.B.I. could actually have done more in the final months of 2016 to scrutinize his campaign’s Russia ties.

“I never saw anything that resembled a witch hunt or suggested that the bureau’s approach to the investigation was politically driven,” said Mary McCord, a 20-year Justice Department veteran and the top national security prosecutor during much of the investigation’s first nine months.

Crossfire Hurricane spawned a case that has brought charges against former Trump campaign officials and more than a dozen Russians. But in the final months of 2016, agents faced great uncertainty — about the facts, and how to respond.

Anxiety at the Bureau

Crossfire Hurricane began exactly 100 days before the presidential election, but if agents were eager to investigate Mr. Trump’s campaign, as the president has suggested, the messages do not reveal it. “I cannot believe we are seriously looking at these allegations and the pervasive connections,” Mr. Strzok wrote soon after returning from London.

The mood in early meetings was anxious, former officials recalled. Agents had just closed the Clinton investigation, and they braced for months of Republican-led hearings over why she was not charged. Crossfire Hurricane was built around the same core of agents and analysts who had investigated Mrs. Clinton. None was eager to re-enter presidential politics, former officials said, especially when agents did not know what would come of the Australian information.

The question they confronted still persists: Was anyone in the Trump campaign tied to Russian efforts to undermine the election?

The F.B.I. investigated four unidentified Trump campaign aides in those early months, congressional investigators revealed in February. The four men were Michael T. Flynn, Paul Manafort, Carter Page and Mr. Papadopoulos, current and former officials said. Each was scrutinized because of his obvious or suspected Russian ties.

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[Here are the key themes, dates and characters in the Russia investigation]

Mr. Flynn, a top adviser, was paid $45,000 by the Russian government’s media arm for a 2015 speech and dined at the arm of the Russian president, Vladimir V. Putin. Mr. Manafort, the campaign chairman, had lobbied for pro-Russia interests in Ukraine and worked with an associate who has been identified as having connections to Russian intelligence.

Mr. Page, a foreign policy adviser, was well known to the F.B.I. He had previously been recruited by Russian spies and was suspected of meeting one in Moscow during the campaign.

Lastly, there was Mr. Papadopoulos, the young and inexperienced campaign aide whose wine-fueled conversation with the Australian ambassador set off the investigation. Before hacked Democratic emails appeared online, he had seemed to know that Russia had political dirt on Mrs. Clinton. But even if the F.B.I. had wanted to read his emails or intercept his calls, that evidence was not enough to allow it. Many months passed, former officials said, before the F.B.I. uncovered emails linking Mr. Papadopoulos to a Russian intelligence operation.

Mr. Trump was not under investigation, but his actions perplexed the agents. Days after the stolen Democratic emails became public, he called on Russia to uncover more. Then news broke that Mr. Trump’s campaign had pushed to change the Republican platform’s stance on Ukraine in ways favorable to Russia.

The F.B.I.’s thinking crystallized by mid-August, after the C.I.A. director at the time, John O. Brennan, shared intelligence with Mr. Comey showing that the Russian government was behind an attack on the 2016 presidential election. Intelligence agencies began collaborating to investigate that operation. The Crossfire Hurricane team was part of that group but largely operated independently, three officials said.

Senator Marco Rubio, Republican of Florida, said that after studying the investigation as a member of the Senate Intelligence Committee, he saw no evidence of political motivation in the opening of the investigation.

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“There was a growing body of evidence that a foreign government was attempting to interfere in both the process and the debate surrounding our elections, and their job is to investigate counterintelligence,” he said in an interview. “That’s what they did.”

Abounding Criticism

Looking back, some inside the F.B.I. and the Justice Department say that Mr. Comey should have seen the political storm coming and better sheltered the bureau. They question why he consolidated the Clinton and Trump investigations at headquarters, rather than in a field office. And they say he should not have relied on the same team for both cases. That put a bull’s-eye on the heart of the F.B.I. Any misstep in either investigation made both cases, and the entire bureau, vulnerable to criticism.

And there were missteps. Andrew G. McCabe, the former deputy F.B.I. director, was cited by internal investigators for dishonesty about his conversations with reporters about Mrs. Clinton. That gave ammunition for Mr. Trump’s claims that the F.B.I. cannot be trusted. And Mr. Strzok and Lisa Page, an F.B.I. lawyer, exchanged texts criticizing Mr. Trump, allowing the president to point to evidence of bias when they became public.

The messages were unsparing. They questioned Mr. Trump’s intelligence, believed he promoted intolerance and feared he would damage the bureau.

The inspector general’s upcoming report is expected to criticize those messages for giving the appearance of bias. It is not clear, however, whether inspectors found evidence supporting Mr. Trump’s assertion that agents tried to protect Mrs. Clinton, a claim the F.B.I. has adamantly denied.

Mr. Rubio, who has reviewed many of the texts and case files, said he saw no signs that the F.B.I. wanted to undermine Mr. Trump. “There might have been individual agents that had views that, in hindsight, have been problematic for those agents,” Mr. Rubio said. “But whether that was a systemic effort, I’ve seen no evidence of it.”

Mr. Trump’s daily Twitter posts, though, offer sound-bite-sized accusations — witch hunt, hoax, deep state, rigged system — that fan the flames of conspiracy. Capitol Hill allies reliably echo those comments.

“It’s like the deep state all got together to try to orchestrate a palace coup,” Representative Matt Gaetz, Republican of Florida, said in January on Fox Business Network.

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Cautious Intelligence Gathering

Counterintelligence investigations can take years, but if the Russian government had influence over the Trump campaign, the F.B.I. wanted to know quickly. One option was the most direct: interview the campaign officials about their Russian contacts.

That was discussed but not acted on, two former officials said, because interviewing witnesses or subpoenaing documents might thrust the investigation into public view, exactly what F.B.I. officials were trying to avoid during the heat of the presidential race.

“You do not take actions that will unnecessarily impact an election,” Sally Q. Yates, the former deputy attorney general, said in an interview. She would not discuss details, but added, “Folks were very careful to make sure that actions that were being taken in connection with that investigation did not become public.”

Mr. Comey was briefed regularly on the Russia investigation, but one official said those briefings focused mostly on hacking and election interference. The Crossfire Hurricane team did not present many crucial decisions for Mr. Comey to make.

Top officials became convinced that there was almost no chance they would answer the question of collusion before Election Day. And that made agents even more cautious.

The F.B.I. obtained phone records and other documents using national security letters — a secret type of subpoena — officials said. And at least one government informant met several times with Mr. Page and Mr. Papadopoulos, current and former officials said. That has become a politically contentious point, with Mr. Trump’s allies questioning whether the F.B.I. was spying on the Trump campaign or trying to entrap campaign officials.

Looking back, some at the Justice Department and the F.B.I. now believe that agents could have been more aggressive. They ultimately interviewed Mr. Papadopoulos in January 2017 and managed to keep it a secret, suggesting they could have done so much earlier.

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“There is always a high degree of caution before taking overt steps in a counterintelligence investigation,” said Ms. McCord, who would not discuss details of the case. “And that could have worked to the president’s benefit here.”

Such tactical discussions are reflected in one of Mr. Strzok’s most controversial texts, sent on Aug. 15, 2016, after a meeting in Mr. McCabe’s office.

“I want to believe the path you threw out for consideration in Andy’s office — that there’s no way he gets elected,” Mr. Strzok wrote, “but I’m afraid we can’t take that risk. It’s like an insurance policy in the unlikely event you die before you’re 40.”

Mr. Trump says that message revealed a secret F.B.I. plan to respond to his election. “‘We’ll go to Phase 2 and we’ll get this guy out of office,’” he told The Wall Street Journal. “This is the F.B.I. we’re talking about — that is treason.”

But officials have told the inspector general something quite different. They said Ms. Page and others advocated a slower, circumspect pace, especially because polls predicted Mr. Trump’s defeat. They said that anything the F.B.I. did publicly would only give fodder to Mr. Trump’s claims on the campaign trail that the election was rigged.

Mr. Strzok countered that even if Mr. Trump’s chances of victory were low — like dying before 40 — the stakes were too high to justify inaction.

Mr. Strzok had similarly argued for a more aggressive path during the Clinton investigation, according to four current and former officials. He opposed the Justice Department’s decision to offer Mrs. Clinton’s lawyers immunity and negotiate access to her hard drives, the officials said. Mr. Strzok favored using search warrants or subpoenas instead.

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In both cases, his argument lost.

Policy and Tradition

The F.B.I. bureaucracy did agents no favors. In July, a retired British spy named Christopher Steele approached a friend in the F.B.I. overseas and provided reports linking Trump campaign officials to Russia. But the documents meandered around the F.B.I. organizational chart, former officials said. Only in mid-September, congressional investigators say, did the records reach the Crossfire Hurricane team.

Mr. Steele was gathering information about Mr. Trump as a private investigator for Fusion GPS, a firm paid by Democrats. But he was also considered highly credible, having helped agents unravel complicated cases.

In October, agents flew to Europe to interview him. But Mr. Steele had become frustrated by the F.B.I.’s slow response. He began sharing his findings in September and October with journalists at The New York Times, The Washington Post, The New Yorker and elsewhere, according to congressional testimony.

So as agents tried to corroborate Mr. Steele’s information, reporters began calling the bureau, asking about his findings. If the F.B.I. was working against Mr. Trump, as he asserts, this was an opportunity to push embarrassing information into the news media shortly before the election.

That did not happen. Most news organizations did not publish Mr. Steele’s reports or reveal the F.B.I.’s interest in them until after Election Day.

Congress was also increasingly asking questions. Mr. Brennan, the C.I.A. director, had briefed top lawmakers that summer about Russian election interference and intelligence that Moscow supported the Trump campaign — a finding that would not become public for months. Lawmakers clamored for information from Mr. Comey, who refused to answer public questions.

Many Democrats see rueful irony in this moment. Mr. Comey, after all, broke with policy and twice publicly discussed the Clinton investigation. Yet he refused repeated requests to discuss the Trump investigation.

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Mr. Comey has said he regrets his decision to chastise Mrs. Clinton as “extremely careless,” even as he announced that she should not be charged. But he stands by his decision to alert Congress, days before the election, that the F.B.I. was reopening the Clinton inquiry.

The result, though, is that Mr. Comey broke with both policy and tradition in Mrs. Clinton’s case, but hewed closely to the rules for Mr. Trump. Representative Adam B. Schiff of California, the top Democrat on the House Intelligence Committee, said that alone proves Mr. Trump’s claims of unfairness to be “both deeply at odds with the facts, and damaging to our democracy.”

Spying in Question

Crossfire Hurricane began with a focus on four campaign officials. But by mid-fall 2016, Mr. Page’s inquiry had progressed the furthest. Agents had known Mr. Page for years. Russian spies tried to recruit him in 2013, and he was dismissive when agents warned him about it, a half-dozen current and former officials said. That warning even made its way back to Russian intelligence, leaving agents suspecting that Mr. Page had reported their efforts to Moscow.

Relying on F.B.I. information and Mr. Steele’s, prosecutors obtained court approval to eavesdrop on Mr. Page, who was no longer with the Trump campaign.

That warrant has become deeply contentious and is crucial to Republican arguments that intelligence agencies improperly used Democratic research to help justify spying on the Trump campaign. The inspector general is reviewing that claim.

Ms. Yates, the deputy attorney general under President Barack Obama, signed the first warrant application. But subsequent filings were approved by members of Mr. Trump’s own administration: the acting attorney general, Dana J. Boente, and then Rod J. Rosenstein, the deputy attorney general.

“Folks are very, very careful and serious about that process,” Ms. Yates said. “I don’t know of anything that gives me any concerns.”

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After months of investigation, Mr. Papadopoulos remained largely a puzzle. And agents were nearly ready to close their investigation of Mr. Flynn, according to three current and former officials. (Mr. Flynn rekindled the F.B.I.’s interest in November 2016 by signing an op-ed article that appeared to be written on behalf of the Turkish government, and then making phone calls to the Russian ambassador that December.)

In late October, in response to questions from The Times, law enforcement officials acknowledged the investigation but urged restraint. They said they had scrutinized some of Mr. Trump’s advisers but had found no proof of any involvement with Russian hacking. The resulting article, on Oct. 31, reflected that caution and said that agents had uncovered no “conclusive or direct link between Mr. Trump and the Russian government.”

The key fact of the article — that the F.B.I. had opened a broad investigation into possible links between the Russian government and the Trump campaign — was published in the 10th paragraph.

A year and a half later, no public evidence has surfaced connecting Mr. Trump’s advisers to the hacking or linking Mr. Trump himself to the Russian government’s disruptive efforts. But the article’s tone and headline — “Investigating Donald Trump, F.B.I. Sees No Clear Link to Russia” — gave an air of finality to an investigation that was just beginning.

Democrats say that article pre-emptively exonerated Mr. Trump, dousing chances to raise questions about the campaign’s Russian ties before Election Day.

Just as the F.B.I. has been criticized for its handling of the Trump investigation, so too has The Times.

For Mr. Steele, it dashed his confidence in American law enforcement. “He didn’t know what was happening inside the F.B.I.,” Glenn R. Simpson, the founder of Fusion GPS, testified this year. “And there was a concern that the F.B.I. was being manipulated for political ends by the Trump people.”

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Assurances Amid Doubt

Two weeks before Mr. Trump’s inauguration, senior American intelligence officials briefed him at Trump Tower in Manhattan on Russian hacking and deception. They reported that Mr. Putin had tried to sow chaos in the election, undermine Mrs. Clinton and ultimately help Mr. Trump win.

Then Mr. Comey met with Mr. Trump privately, revealing the Steele reports and warning that journalists had obtained them. Mr. Comey has said he feared making this conversation a “J. Edgar Hoover-type situation,” with the F.B.I. presenting embarrassing information to lord over a president-elect.

In a contemporaneous memo, Mr. Comey wrote that he assured Mr. Trump that the F.B.I. intended to protect him on this point. “I said media like CNN had them and were looking for a news hook,” Mr. Comey wrote of Mr. Steele’s documents. “I said it was important that we not give them the excuse to write that the F.B.I. had the material.”

Mr. Trump was not convinced — either by the Russia briefing or by Mr. Comey’s assurances. He made up his mind before Mr. Comey even walked in the door. Hours earlier, Mr. Trump told The Times that stories about Russian election interference were being pushed by his adversaries to distract from his victory.

And he debuted what would quickly become a favorite phrase: “This is a political witch hunt.”

Correction:

An earlier version of this article misstated that news organizations did not report on the findings of the retired British spy Christopher Steele about links between Trump campaign officials and Russia. While most news organizations whose reporters met with Mr. Steele did not publish such reports before the 2016 election, Mother Jones magazine did.
Reporting was contributed by Michael S. Schmidt, Sharon LaFraniere, Mark Mazzetti and Matthew Rosenberg.
Follow Adam Goldman and Nicholas Fandos on Twitter: @adamgoldmanNYT and @npfandos.
A version of this article appears in print on , on Page A1 of the New York edition with the headline: How F.B.I. Embarked, With Strictest Secrecy, On Trump Team’s Trail. Order Reprints | Today’s Paper | Subscribe
The FBI Informant Who Monitored the Trump Campaign, Stefan Halper, Oversaw a CIA Spying Operation in the 1980 Presidential Election
 

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An extremely strange episode that has engulfed official Washington over the last two weeks came to a truly bizarre conclusion on Friday night. And it revolves around a long-time, highly sketchy CIA operative, Stefan Halper.
Four decades ago, Halper was responsible for a long-forgotten spying scandal involving the 1980 election, in which the Reagan campaign – using CIA officials managed by Halper, reportedly under the direction of former CIA Director and then-Vice-Presidential candidate George H.W. Bush – got caught running a spying operation from inside the Carter administration. The plot involved CIA operatives passing classified information about Carter’s foreign policy to Reagan campaign officials in order to ensure the Reagan campaign knew of any foreign policy decisions that Carter was considering.
Over the past several weeks, House Republicans have been claiming that the FBI during the 2016 election used an operative to spy on the Trump campaign, and they triggered outrage within the FBI by trying to learn his identity. The controversy escalated when President Trump joined the fray on Friday morning. “Reports are there was indeed at least one FBI representative implanted, for political purposes, into my campaign for president,” Trump tweeted, adding: “It took place very early on, and long before the phony Russia Hoax became a “hot” Fake News story. If true – all time biggest political scandal!”
In response, the DOJ and the FBI’s various media spokespeople did not deny the core accusation, but quibbled with the language (the FBI used an “informant,” not a “spy”), and then began using increasingly strident language to warn that exposing his name would jeopardize his life and those of others, and also put American national security at grave risk. On May 8, the Washington Post described the informant as “a top-secret intelligence source” and cited DOJ officials as arguing that disclosure of his name “could risk lives by potentially exposing the source, a U.S. citizen who has provided intelligence to the CIA and FBI.”
The top Democrat on the Senate Intelligence Committee, Mark Warner, who spent much of last week working to ensure confirmation of Trump’s choice to lead the CIA, Gina Haspel, actually threatened his own colleagues in Congress with criminal prosecution if they tried to obtain the identity of the informant. “Anyone who is entrusted with our nation’s highest secrets should act with the gravity and seriousness of purpose that knowledge deserves,” Warner said.

But now, as a result of some very odd choices by the nation’s largest media outlets, everyone knows the name of the FBI’s informant: Stefan Halper. And Halper’s history is quite troubling, particularly his central role in the scandal in the 1980 election. Equally troubling are the DOJ and FBI’s highly inflammatory and, at best, misleading claims that they made to try to prevent Halper’s identity from being reported.
To begin with, it’s obviously notable that the person the FBI used to monitor the Trump campaign is the same person who worked as a CIA operative running that 1980 Presidential election spying campaign.
It was not until several years after Reagan’s victory over Carter did this scandal emerge. It was leaked by right-wing officials inside the Reagan administration who wanted to undermine officials they regarded as too moderate, including then White House Chief of Staff James Baker, who was a Bush loyalist.
The NYT in 1983 said the Reagan campaign spying operation “involved a number of retired Central Intelligence Agency officials and was highly secretive.” The article, by then-NYT reporter Leslie Gelb, added that its “sources identified Stefan A. Halper, a campaign aide involved in providing 24-hour news updates and policy ideas to the traveling Reagan party, as the person in charge.” Halper, now 73, had also worked with Donald Rumsfeld, Dick Cheney, and Alexander Haig as part of the Nixon administration.
When the scandal first broke in 1983, the UPI suggested that Halper’s handler for this operation was Reagan’s Vice Presidential candidate, George H.W. Bush, who had been the CIA Director and worked there with Halper’s father-in-law, former CIA Deputy Director Ray Cline, who worked on Bush’s 1980 presidential campaign before Bush ultimately became Reagan’s Vice President. It quoted a former Reagan campaign official as blaming the leak on “conservatives [who] are trying to manipulate the Jimmy Carter papers controversy to force the ouster of White House Chief of Staff James Baker.”

Halper, through his CIA work, has extensive ties to the Bush family. Few remember that the CIA’s perceived meddling in the 1980 election – its open support for its former Director, George H.W. Bush to become President – was a somewhat serious political controversy. And Halper was in that middle of that, too.
In 1980, the Washington Post published an article reporting on the extremely unusual and quite aggressive involvement of the CIA in the 1980 presidential campaign. “Simply put, no presidential campaign in recent memory — perhaps ever — has attracted as much support from the intelligence community as the campaign of former CIA director Bush,” the article said.

Though there was nothing illegal about ex-CIA officials uniting to put a former CIA Director in the Oval Office, the paper said “there are some rumblings of uneasiness in the intelligence network.” It specifically identified Cline as one of the most prominent CIA official working openly for Bush, noting that he “recommended his son-in-law, Stefan A. Halper, a former Nixon White House aide, be hired as Bush’s director of policy development and research.”
In 2016, top officials from the intelligence community similarly rallied around Hillary Clinton. As The Intercept has previously documented:

Former acting CIA Director Michael Morell not only endorsed Clinton in the New York Times but claimed that “Mr. Putin had recruited Mr. Trump as an unwitting agent of the Russian Federation.” George W. Bush’s CIA and NSA director, Gen. Michael Hayden, pronounced Trump a “clear and present danger” to U.S. national security and then, less than a week before the election, went to the Washington Post to warn that “Donald Trump really does sound a lot like Vladimir Putin” and said Trump is “the useful fool, some naif, manipulated by Moscow, secretly held in contempt, but whose blind support is happily accepted and exploited.”

So as it turns out, the informant used by the FBI in 2016 to gather information on the Trump campaign was not some previously unknown, top-secret asset whose exposure as an operative could jeopardize lives. Quite the contrary: his decades of work for the CIA – including his role in an obviously unethical if not criminal spying operation during the 1980 presidential campaign – is quite publicly known.
And now, as a result of some baffling choices by the nation’s largest news organizations as well as their anonymous sources inside the U.S. Government, Stefan Halper’s work for the FBI during the 2016 is also publicly known
Last night, both the Washington Post and New York Times – whose reporters, like pretty much everyone in Washington, knew exactly who the FBI informant is – published articles that, while deferring to the FBI’s demands by not naming him, provided so many details about him that it made it extremely easy to know exactly who it is. The NYT described the FBI informant as “an American academic who teaches in Britain” and who “made contact late that summer with” George Papadopoulos and “also met repeatedly in the ensuing months with the other aide, Carter Page.” The Post similarly called him “a retired American professor” who met with Page “at a symposium about the White House race held at a British university.”
In contrast to the picture purposely painted by the DOJ and its allies that this informant was some of sort super-secret, high-level, covert intelligence asset, the NYT described him as what he actually is: “the informant is well known in Washington circles, having served in previous Republican administrations and as a source of information for the C.I.A. in past years.”
Despite how “well known” he is in Washington, and despite publishing so many details about him that anyone with Google would be able to instantly know his name, the Post and the NYT nonetheless bizarrely refused to identity him, with the Post justifying its decision that it “is not reporting his name following warnings from U.S. intelligence officials that exposing him could endanger him or his contacts.” The NYT was less melodramatic about it, citing a general policy: the NYT “has learned the source’s identity but typically does not name informants to preserve their safety,” it said.
In other words, both the NYT and the Post chose to provide so many details about the FBI informant that everyone would know exactly who it was, while coyly pretending that they were obeying FBI demands not to name him. How does that make sense? Either these newspapers believe the FBI’s grave warnings that national security and lives would be endangered if it were known who they used as their informant (in which case those papers should not publish any details that would make his exposure likely), or they believe that the FBI (as usual) was just invoking false national security justifications to hide information it unjustly wants to keep from the public (in which case the newspapers should name him).
In any event, publication of those articles by the NYT and Post last night made it completely obvious who the FBI informant was, because the Daily Caller’s investigative reporter Chuck Ross on Thursday had published an article reporting that a long-time CIA operative who is now a professor at Cambridge repeatedly met with Papadopoulos and Page. The article, in its opening paragraph, named the professor, Stefan Halper, and described him as “a University of Cambridge professor with CIA and MI6 contacts.”

Ross’ article, using public information, recounted at length Halper’s long-standing ties to the CIA, including the fact that his father-in-law, Ray Cline, was a top CIA official during the Cold War, and that Halper himself had long worked with both the CIA and its British counterpart, the MI6. As Ross wrote: “at Cambridge, Halper has worked closely with Dearlove, the former chief of MI6. In recent years they have directed the Cambridge Security Initiative, a non-profit intelligence consulting group that lists ‘UK and US government agencies’ among its clients.”
Both the NYT and Washington Post reporters boasted, with seeming pride, about the fact that they did not name the informant even as they published all the details which made it simple to identify him. But NBC News – citing Ross’ report and other public information – decided to name him, while stressing that it has not confirmed that he actually worked as an FBI informant:

The professor who met with both Page and Papadopoulos is Stefan Halper, a former official in the Nixon, Ford and Reagan administrations who has been a paid consultant to an internal Pentagon think tank known as the Office of Net Assessment, consulting on Russia and China issues, according to public records.

There is nothing inherently untoward, or even unusual, about the FBI using informants in an investigation. One would expect them to do so. But the use of Halper in this case, and the bizarre claims made to conceal his identity, do raise some questions that merit further inquiry.
To begin with, the New York Times reported in December of last year that the FBI investigation into possible ties between the Trump campaign and Russia began when George Papadopoulos drunkenly boasted to an Australian diplomat about Russian dirt on Hillary Clinton. It was the disclosure of this episode by the Australians that “led the F.B.I. to open an investigation in July 2016 into Russia’s attempts to disrupt the election and whether any of President Trump’s associates conspired,” the NYT claimed.
But it now seems clear that Halper’s attempts to gather information for the FBI began before that. “The professor’s interactions with Trump advisers began a few weeks before the opening of the investigation, when Page met the professor at the British symposium,” the Post reported. While it’s not rare for the FBI to gather information before formally opening an investigation, Halper’s earlier snooping does call into question the accuracy of the NYT’s claim that it was the drunken Papadopoulos ramblings that first prompted the FBI’s interest in these possible connections. And it suggests that CIA operatives, apparently working with at least some factions within the FBI, were trying to gather information about the Trump campaign earlier than had been previously reported.
Then there are questions about what appear to be some fairly substantial government payments to Halper throughout 2016. Halper continues to be listed as a “vendor” by websites that track payments by the federal government to private contractors.

Earlier this week, records of payments were found that were made during 2016 to Halper by the Department of Defense’s Office of Net Assessment, though it not possible from these records to know the exact work for which these payments were made. The Pentagon office that paid Halper in 2016, according to a 2015 Washington Post story on its new duties, “reports directly to Secretary of Defense and focuses heavily on future threats, has a $10 million budget.”

It is difficult to understand how identifying someone whose connections to the CIA is a matter of such public record, and who has a long and well-known history of working on spying programs involving presidential elections on behalf of the intelligence community, could possibly endanger lives or lead to grave national security harm. It isn’t as though Halper has been some sort of covert, stealth undercover asset for the CIA who just got exposed. Quite the contrary: that he’s a spy embedded in the U.S. intelligence community would be known to anyone with internet access.
Equally strange are the semantic games which journalists are playing in order to claim that this revelation disproves, rather than proves, Trump’s allegation that the FBI “spied” on his campaign. This bizarre exchange between CNN’s Andrew Kaczynski and the New York Times’ Trip Gabriel vividly illustrates the strange machinations used by journalists to justify how all of this is being characterized:

Despite what Halper actually is, the FBI and its dutiful mouthpieces have spent weeks using the most desperate language to try to hide Halper’s identity and the work he performed as part of the 2016 election. Here was the deeply emotional reaction to last night’s story from Brookings’ Benjamin Wittes, who has become a social media star by parlaying his status as Jim Comey’s best friend and long-time loyalist to security state agencies into a leading role in pushing the Trump/Russia story:

Wittes’ claim that all of this resulted in the “outing” of some sort of sensitive “intelligence source” is preposterous given how publicly known Halper’s role as a CIA operative has been for decades. But this is the scam that the FBI and people like Mark Warner have been running for two weeks: deceiving people into believing that exposing Halper’s identity would create grave national security harm by revealing some previously unknown intelligence asset.
Wittes also implies that it was Trump and Devin Nunes who are responsible for Halper’s exposure but he almost certainly has no idea of who the sources are for the NYT or the Washington Post. And note that Wittes is too cowardly to blame the institutions that actually made it easy to identify Halper – the New York Times and Washington Post – preferring instead to exploit the opportunity to depict the enemies of his friend Jim Comey as traitors.
Whatever else is true, the CIA operative and FBI informant used to gather information on the Trump campaign in the 2016 campaign has, for weeks, been falsely depicted as a sensitive intelligence asset rather than what he actually is: a long-time CIA operative with extensive links to the Bush family who was responsible for a dirty and likely illegal spying operation in the 1980 presidential election. For that reason, it’s easy to understand why many people in Washington were so desperate to conceal his identity, but that desperation had nothing to do with the lofty and noble concerns for national security they claimed were motivating them.

Stefan Halper – Google Search
 

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Stefan Halper has been identified by multiple media outlets as the source tasked by the FBI with collecting information about the Russian …
F.B.I. Used Informant to Investigate Russia Ties to Campaign, Not to Spy, as Trump Claims – The New York Times
 

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WASHINGTON — President Trump accused the F.B.I. on Friday, without evidence, of sending a spy to secretly infiltrate his 2016 campaign “for political purposes” even before the bureau had any inkling of the “phony Russia hoax.”

In fact, F.B.I. agents sent an informant to talk to two campaign advisers only after they received evidence that the pair had suspicious contacts linked to Russia during the campaign. The informant, an American academic who teaches in Britain, made contact late that summer with one campaign adviser, George Papadopoulos, according to people familiar with the matter. He also met repeatedly in the ensuing months with the other aide, Carter Page, who was also under F.B.I. scrutiny for his ties to Russia.

The role of the informant is at the heart of the newest battle between top law enforcement officials and Mr. Trump’s congressional allies over the F.B.I.’s most politically charged investigations in decades. The lawmakers, who say they are concerned that federal investigators are abusing their authority, have demanded documents from the Justice Department about the informant.

Law enforcement officials have refused, saying that handing over the documents would imperil both the source’s anonymity and safety. The New York Times has learned the source’s identity but typically does not name informants to preserve their safety.

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Democrats say the Republicans’ real aim is to undermine the special counsel investigation. Senior law enforcement officials have also privately expressed concern that the Republicans are digging into F.B.I. files for information they can weaponize against the Russia inquiry.

Over the past two days, Mr. Trump has used speculative news reports about the informant, mostly from conservative media, to repeatedly assail the Russia investigation.

“Reports are there was indeed at least one FBI representative implanted, for political purposes, into my campaign for president,” he wrote on Twitter on Friday. “It took place very early on, and long before the phony Russia Hoax became a ‘hot’ Fake News story. If true — all time biggest political scandal!”

No evidence has emerged that the informant acted improperly when the F.B.I. asked for help in gathering information on the former campaign advisers, or that agents veered from the F.B.I.’s investigative guidelines and began a politically motivated inquiry, which would be illegal.

But agents were leery of disrupting the presidential campaign again after the F.B.I. had announced in a high-profile news conference that it had closed the case involving Hillary Clinton’s use of a private email server, according to current and former law enforcement officials.

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After opening the Russia inquiry about a month later, they took steps, those officials said, to ensure that details of the inquiry were more closely held than even in a typical national security investigation, including the use of the informant to suss out information from the unsuspecting targets. Sending F.B.I. agents to interview them could have created additional risk that the investigation’s existence would seep into view in the final weeks of a heated presidential race.

F.B.I. officials concluded they had the legal authority to open the investigation after receiving information that Mr. Papadopoulos was told that Moscow had compromising information on Mrs. Clinton in the form of “thousands of emails,” months before WikiLeaks released stolen messages from Democratic officials. As part of the operation, code-named Crossfire Hurricane, the F.B.I. also began investigating Mr. Trump’s campaign chairman, Paul Manafort, and his future national security adviser, Michael T. Flynn.

Details about the informant’s relationship with the F.B.I. remain scant. It is not clear how long the relationship existed and whether the F.B.I. paid the source or assigned the person to other cases.

Informants take great risks when working for intelligence services, Christopher A. Wray, the F.B.I. director, testified before Congress on Wednesday. Their identities must not be exposed, he said, hinting at congressional efforts to obtain the name of the source. “The day that we can’t protect human sources is the day the American people start becoming less safe.”

One of Mr. Trump’s lawyers, Rudolph W. Giuliani, acknowledged on Friday that neither the president nor his legal team knew with certainty that the F.B.I. had implanted a spy in the Trump campaign, as he and the president had alleged.

“I don’t know for sure, nor does the president, if there really was one,” Mr. Giuliani said on CNN. “For a long time, we’ve been told there was some kind of infiltration.”

The informant is well known in Washington circles, having served in previous Republican administrations and as a source of information for the C.I.A. in past years, according to one person familiar with the source’s work.

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F.B.I. agents were seeking more details about what Mr. Papadopoulos knew about the hacked Democratic emails, and one month after their Russia investigation began, Mr. Papadopoulos received a curious message. The academic inquired about his interest in writing a research paper on a disputed gas field in the eastern Mediterranean Sea, a subject of Mr. Papadopoulos’s expertise.

The informant offered a $3,000 honorarium for the paper and a paid trip to London, where the two could meet and discuss the research project.

“I understand that this is rather sudden but thought that given your expertise it might be of interest to you,” the informant wrote in a message to Mr. Papadopoulos, sent on Sept. 2, 2016.

Mr. Papadopoulos accepted the offer and arrived in London two weeks later, where he met for several days with the academic and one of his assistants, a young woman.

Over drinks and dinner one evening at a high-end London hotel, the F.B.I. informant raised the subject of the hacked Democratic National Committee emails that had spilled into public view earlier that summer, according to a person familiar with the conversation. The source noted how helpful they had been to the Trump campaign, and asked Mr. Papadopoulos whether he knew anything about Russian attempts to influence the 2016 presidential election.

Mr. Papadopoulos replied that he had no insight into the Russian campaign — despite being told months earlier that the Russians had dirt on Mrs. Clinton in the form of thousands of her emails. His response clearly annoyed the informant, who tried to press Mr. Papadopoulos about what he might know about the Russian effort, according to the person.

The assistant also raised the subject of Russia and the Clinton emails during a separate conversation over drinks with Mr. Papadopoulos, and again he denied he knew anything about Russian attempts to disrupt the election.

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After the trip to London, Mr. Papadopoulos wrote the 1,500-word research paper and was paid for his work. He did not hear again from the informant.

Mr. Page, a Navy veteran, served briefly as an adviser to Mr. Trump’s campaign until September 2016. He said that he first encountered the informant during a conference in mid-July of 2016 and that they stayed in touch. The two later met several times in the Washington area. Mr. Page said their interactions were benign.

The two last exchanged emails in September 2017, about a month before a secret warrant to surveil Mr. Page expired after being repeatedly renewed by a federal judge. Mr. Trump’s congressional allies have also assailed the surveillance, accusing law enforcement officials, with little evidence, of abusing their authority and spying on the Trump campaign.

The informant also had contacts with Mr. Flynn, the retired Army general who was Mr. Trump’s first national security adviser. The two met in February 2014, when Mr. Flynn was running the Defense Intelligence Agency and attended the Cambridge Intelligence Seminar, an academic forum for former spies and researchers that meets a few times a year.

According to people familiar with Mr. Flynn’s visit to the intelligence seminar, the source was alarmed by the general’s apparent closeness with a Russian woman who was also in attendance. The concern was strong enough that it prompted another person to pass on a warning to the American authorities that Mr. Flynn could be compromised by Russian intelligence, according to two people familiar with the matter.

Two years later, in late 2016, the seminar itself was embroiled in a scandal about Russian spying. A number of its organizers resigned over what they said was a Kremlin-backed attempt to take control of the group.

Reporting was contributed by Nicholas Fandos, Sharon LaFraniere, Katie Benner and Eileen Sullivan.
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A version of this article appears in print on , on Page A1 of the New York edition with the headline: Trump Distorts Role of Informant in Campaign. Order Reprints | Today’s Paper | Subscribe
Virginia Senator Mark Warner warns against outing FBI sources
 

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Why is the FBI Outing Stefan Halper As Their Informant In the Trump Campaign?
 

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This is just insane.
The FBI and Department of Justice has been fighting tooth and nail to not tell Congress the identity of the informant they used to gather intelligence on the Trump campaign. And their allies in Congress and elsewhere have chimed in with all manner of ridiculous and bullsh** threats directed at Devin Nunes…though not at Trey Gowdy who is working with Nunes to identify this FBI source. A reflexively leftwing law professor (but I repeat myself) made this astonishing statement tonight:
This is just stupid. The law clearly defines who it covers as employees of an intelligence agency. This does not cover informants or sources and intelligence agencies are forbidden by law from collecting information on US persons. And the very idea that the Department of Justice is going to okay a grand jury investigation and indictment of a member of Congress when the FBI has leaked the same information to multiple media outlets is simply insane.
The ranking member of the Senate Intelligence Committee made a similar threat today:

The top Democrat on the Senate Intelligence Committee warned Friday that his colleagues could be committing a crime if they obtain the identity of a secret FBI source and use it to undermine the ongoing investigation into Russian interference in the 2016 election.
Sen. Mark Warner (D-Va.) raised the alarm in a Friday evening statement, as Republican allies of President Donald Trump have pressed the Justice Department for details about a source believed to have aided the FBI and Special Counsel Robert Mueller’s probe into Trump campaign contacts with Russians.
“It would be at best irresponsible, and at worst potentially illegal, for members of Congress to use their positions to learn the identity of an FBI source for the purpose of undermining the ongoing investigation into Russian interference in our election,” Warner said. “Anyone who is entrusted with our nation’s highest secrets should act with the gravity and seriousness of purpose that knowledge deserves.”

If Warner were truly concerned about irresponsible or illegal he’s be worried about the FBI and Justice because they have effectively outed their informant. Last week, there was speculation that the informant was a US academic teaching at Cambridge named Stefan Halper. He had a connection to US intelligence. He had a friendship with a retired head of MI6. He contacted George Papadopoulos out of the blue and paid for his flight to London in addition to several thousand dollars for a “research paper.” Papadopoulos broke off contact with Halper started asking about Clinton emails. Halper struck up a friendship with Carter Page.

Today, the FBI and Justice go back the the leak well and give us enough information that we can say pretty conclusively that Halper is the man.
Secret FBI source for Russia investigation met with three Trump advisers during campaign.

In mid-July 2016, a retired American professor approached an adviser to Donald Trump’s presidential campaign at a symposium about the White House race held at a British university.
The professor took the opportunity to strike up a conversation with Carter Page, whom Trump had named a few months earlier as a foreign policy adviser.

The Washington Post — after speaking with people familiar with his role — has confirmed the identity of the FBI source who assisted the investigation, but is not reporting his name following warnings from U.S. intelligence officials that exposing him could endanger him or his contacts.

Page recalled his conversation with the professor as pleasant, if not particularly memorable. It was the first interaction they ever had, he said.

Page and the FBI informant stayed in touch after the conference, meeting several times in the Washington area, Page said. Page said he did not recall exactly what the two men discussed.

People familiar with his outreach to Papadopoulos said it was done as part of the FBI’s investigation. The young foreign-policy adviser had been on the radar of the FBI since the summer, and inside the campaign had been pushing Trump and his aides to meet with Russian officials.
[Trump campaign emails show aide’s repeated efforts to set up Russia meetings]
“Please pardon my sudden intrusion just before the Labor Day weekend,” the professor wrote to Papadopoulos in a message described to The Post.
He said he was leading a project examining relations between Turkey and the European Union. He offered to pay Papadopoulos $3,000 to write a paper about the oil fields off the coast of Turkey, Israel and Cyprus, “a topic on which you are a recognized expert.”

Here the FBI claims that they are trying to protect this guy’s identity but they give it to the Washington Post who then calls people to ask them about their contacts with the source.
And apparently Trump’s tweet today on the subject acted like catnip for the New York Ties because this
yielded this:
F.B.I. Used Informant to Investigate Russia Ties to Campaign, Not to Spy, as Trump Claims.

Law enforcement officials have refused, saying that handing over the documents would imperil both the source’s anonymity and safety. The New York Times has learned the source’s identity but typically does not name informants to preserve their safety.

The informant is well known in Washington circles, having served in previous Republican administrations and as a source of information for the C.I.A. in past years, according to one person familiar with the source’s work.
F.B.I. agents were seeking more details about what Mr. Papadopoulos knew about the hacked Democratic emails, and one month after their Russia investigation began, Mr. Papadopoulos received a curious message. The academic inquired about his interest in writing a research paper on a disputed gas field in the eastern Mediterranean Sea, a subject of Mr. Papadopoulos’s expertise.
The informant offered a $3,000 honorarium for the paper and a paid trip to London, where the two could meet and discuss the research project.
“I understand that this is rather sudden but thought that given your expertise it might be of interest to you,” the informant wrote in a message to Mr. Papadopoulos, sent on Sept. 2, 2016.

Mr. Page, a Navy veteran, served briefly as an adviser to Mr. Trump’s campaign until September 2016. He said that he first encountered the informant during a conference in mid-July of 2016 and that they stayed in touch. The two later met several times in the Washington area. Mr. Page said their interactions were benign.
The two last exchanged emails in September 2017, about a month before a secret warrant to surveil Mr. Page expired after being repeatedly renewed by a federal judge. Mr. Trump’s congressional allies have also assailed the surveillance, accusing law enforcement officials, with little evidence, of abusing their authority and spying on the Trump campaign.
The informant also had contacts with Mr. Flynn, the retired Army general who was Mr. Trump’s first national security adviser. The two met in February 2014, when Mr. Flynn was running the Defense Intelligence Agency and attended the Cambridge Intelligence Seminar, an academic forum for former spies and researchers that meets a few times a year.

The identity of the informant could not be more clear. And the identification didn’t come from a leak by Congress, it came from multiple leaks by the FBI and DOJ who are burning Halper to the ground for their own reasons And I think those reasons will be come abundantly clear as the DOJ IG finishes up his investigations.

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12:01 PM 5/19/2018 – Operation “Crossfire Hurricane”: The Need For Counterintelligence Reform – Selected Articles Review | Global Security News
 

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The Rolling Stones – Jumpin’ Jack Flash (Lyrics)

The Operation Crossfire Hurricane

It looks like the subject of separation of the Counterintelligence Services from the FBI, for a number of the important reasons, some of which were listed by Schindler comes up periodically and persistently, and this subject might be at the height of priorities in the light of the present situation. If the FBI concentrates on the Criminal Justice issues and lets the highly trained, highly professional, elite service of Counterintelligence specialists do their job properly and in more insulated fashion, it might be good for both. Apparently, the issues are complex, and who am I to dispense advice? However, I agree with the major thrust of Shindler’s article wholeheartedly. The need for reforms in this field appears to be apparent, urgent, and probably critical. Mr. Evanina appears to be quite skilled and suitable for the job, with its enormous challenges. I wish our new Intelligence chiefs Good Luck, we need it. 
The need for the urgent CounterIntelligence Reform is underscored harmoniously by the perturbations and the vicissitudes of the “Operation Crossfire Hurricane” itself. Apparently, it happened to be somewhat more than just “Jumping Jack Flash”, as everyone was so sure, and somewhat more and more substantive than just “a gas”, lyricized in the song
And now someone has to clean the fan or to buy a new one. 
“Historically, most of the criticism of the FBI has come from civil libertarians and the Left, whereas more recently attacks on the Bureau have shifted to stemming from the Right, specifically fans of the Trump administration, who in an unhinged fashion have compared the FBI to Nazis and the KGB”, Schindler writes. 
The interesting point is that keeping the domestic intelligence services and the law enforcement services “under one roof”, in a centralized hierarchical fashion, was a structural feature of the KGB, and now FSB, with its newly adopted branching out into foreign intelligence services; and it is a feature of the authoritarian regimes. This combined structure makes them very powerful but somewhat clumsy, slow, and inefficient, due to the centralized bureaucratic pressures. This arrangement might be “an accident of American history”, indeed: 
“As both the leading federal law enforcement agency and our top domestic intelligence agency, the FBI occupies a uniquely powerful position in our country. This situation is frankly anomalous, an accident of American history, and may not be healthy or conducive to good governance in the 21st century. There’s a reason that most Western democracies split law enforcement duties and spying on their own citizens between different agencies. Both those missions include a great deal of bureaucratic power, and placing them under one roof seems like an invitation to abuse if the institution is not monitored very carefully.”
Some authors on this subject are apt to stress the inherent cultural contradiction between the principles and moda operandi of the domestic intelligence service cum secret, political and moral police, which the FBI is de facto, and the psychological and moral foundations of the American national character and the spirit of the nation, which are not the secondary issues from any viewpoints, and the biopsychosocial one in particular. 
The nature of the FBI activities and work in the Criminal Justice vs. Counterintelligence fields are very different, and they might benefit from different organizational structures, hierarchies, personnel, approaches, etc., etc. 
Michael Novakhov
5.19.18
Counterintelligence Reform – Links

FBI Counterintelligence Activities Should Be Separate | Observer
It’s Time to Get the FBI Out of the Spy Business – Observer – Google Search
Counterintelligence Reform – Google Search
Counterintelligence needs reboot for 21st century | TheHill
News – Counterintelligence Reform – Google Search
FBI and Counterintelligence Reform – Google Search
FBI — FBI Reforms to Meet Current Threats
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FBI Trump-Russia investigation codename: Crossfire Hurricane – Business Insider
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The “Crossfire Hurricane”: Counterintelligence Reform

Selected Articles Review

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Counterintelligence Reform – Google Search
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The FBI’s Trump-Russia investigation had a secret codename based on a Rolling Stones song
The Rolling Stones Crossfire Hurricane – clip 9 – YouTube
The Rolling Stones – Jumpin’ Jack Flash (Lyrics) – YouTube
FBI probe into Trump and Russia was codenamed ‘Crossfire Hurricane’
Code Name Crossfire Hurricane: The Secret Origins of the Trump Investigation
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FBI Trump-Russia investigation codename: Crossfire Hurricane
 

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Code Name Crossfire Hurricane: The Secret Origins of the Trump …

New York TimesMay 16, 2018
WASHINGTON — Within hours of opening an investigation into the Trump campaign’s ties to Russia in the summer of 2016, the F.B.I. …
Just in case the FBI wants to rebrand its ‘Crossfire Hurricane …
<a href=”http://AdAge.com” rel=”nofollow”>AdAge.com</a> (blog)May 16, 2018
Spinning a Crossfire Hurricane: The Times on the FBI’s Trump …
InternationalNational ReviewMay 17, 2018
Media image for crossfire hurricane from National Review

National Review

Media image for crossfire hurricane from Fox News

Fox News

Media image for crossfire hurricane from AdAge.com (blog)

AdAge.com (blog)

Media image for crossfire hurricane from Business Insider

Business Insider

Media image for crossfire hurricane from Bustle

Bustle

Media image for crossfire hurricane from The Hill

The Hill
Story image for crossfire hurricane from Vogue.com

This Week in Washington: Sorry, Blocked Number!

<a href=”http://Vogue.com” rel=”nofollow”>Vogue.com</a>May 18, 2018
This week, as ever, we did not get what we want, and the perpetual crossfire hurricane that swirls around us alit with particular ferocity.

Rational Security: The ‘Crossfire Hurricane‘ Edition

Lawfare (blog)May 16, 2018
Israel kills dozens of protesters in Gaza as the US opens a new embassy in Jerusalem. President Trump wants to save jobs at ZTE, the Chinese …
Story image for crossfire hurricane from CNN

NYT: Russia probe code name inspired by Rolling Stones

CNNMay 16, 2018
… Russian election interference and President Donald Trump’s 2016 campaign called “Crossfire Hurricane” just 100 days before Election Day.
Story image for crossfire hurricane from Splinter (blog)

The New York Times Backtracks on One of Its Most Infamous Stories …

Splinter (blog)May 16, 2018
The New York Times’ latest dive into the FBI’s Russia investigation introduces us to “Crossfire Hurricane,” the inquiry’s early code name.
Story image for crossfire hurricane from Consequence of Sound (blog)

The FBI code name for Trump-Russia investigation comes from a …

Consequence of Sound (blog)May 16, 2018
In the early, pre-election days of the investigation, it was known by an internal code name, Crossfire Hurricane, a phrase you might recall from …
Story image for crossfire hurricane from New York Times

FBI Used Informant to Investigate Russia Ties to Campaign, Not to Spy …

New York Times13 hours ago
As part of the operation, code-named Crossfire Hurricane, the F.B.I. also began investigating Mr. Trump’s campaign chairman, Paul Manafort, …
Story image for crossfire hurricane from Yahoo News

Trump aide’s suspicious meeting triggered ‘Crossfire hurricane

Yahoo NewsMay 17, 2018
Trump campaign aide George Papadopoulos triggered the FBI’s Russia probe, which was named “crossfire hurricane” after a Rolling Stones …
Story image for crossfire hurricane from BizPac Review

‘Don’t buy it. It’s bad’: Kim Strassel breaks down NYT’s attempt to gloss …

BizPac ReviewMay 17, 2018
Here’s Kim Strassel’s tweetstorm breaking down “Hurricane Crossfire,” where the Obama FBI privately wasted taxpayer money to rig a public …
The Ten Commandments of Counterintelligence — Central …
 

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The foreign intelligence … I would like to offer some personal observations in the form of “The Ten Commandments of Counterintelligence … The FBI is making …