Timothy Snyder, a historian of Europe, democracy and atrocities at Yale, writes here about the recent arrest of former FBI agent Charles McGonigal and its implications for the Trump campaign of 2016.
He writes:
We are on the edge of a spy scandal with major implications for how we understand the Trump administration, our national security, and ourselves.
On 23 January, we learned that a former FBI special agent, Charles McGonigal, was arrested on charges involving taking money to serve foreign interests. One accusation is that in 2017 he took $225,000 from a foreign actor while in charge of counterintelligence at the FBI’s New York office. Another charge is that McGonigal took money from Oleg Deripaska, a sanctioned Russian oligarch, after McGonigal’s 2018 retirement from the FBI. Deripaska, a hugely wealthy metals tycoon close to the Kremlin, “Putin’s favorite industrialist,” was a figure in a Russian influence operation that McGonigal had investigated in 2016. Deripaska has been under American sanctions since 2018. Deripaska is also the former employer, and the creditor, of Trump’s 2016 campaign manager, Paul Manafort.
The reporting on this so far seems to miss the larger implications. One of them is that Trump’s historical position looks far cloudier. In 2016, Trump’s campaign manager (Manafort) was a former employee of a Russian oligarch (Deripaska), and owed money to that same Russian oligarch. And the FBI special agent (McGonigal) who was charged with investigating the Trump campaign’s Russian connections then went to work (according to the indictment) for that very same Russian oligarch (Deripaska). This is obviously very bad for Trump personally. But it is also very bad for FBI New York, for the FBI generally, and for the United States of America.
Another is that we must revisit the Russian influence operation on Trump’s behalf in 2016, and the strangely weak American response. Moscow’s goal was to move minds and institutions such that Hillary Clinton would lose and Donald Trump would win. We might like to think that any FBI special agent would resist, oppose, or at least be immune to such an operation. Now we are reliably informed that a trusted FBI actor, one who was responsible for dealing with just this sort of operation, was corrupt. And again, the issue is not just the particular person. If someone as important as McGonigal could take money from foreigners while on the job at FBI New York, and then go to work for a sanctioned Russian oligarch he was once investigating, what is at stake, at a bare minimum, is the culture of the FBI’s New York office. The larger issue is the health of our national discussions of politics and the integrity of our election process.
For me personally, McGonigal’s arrest brought back an unsettling memory. In 2016, McGonigal was in charge of cyber counter-intelligence for the FBI, and was put in charge of counterintelligence at the FBI’s New York office. That April, I broke the story of the connection between Trump’s campaign and Putin’s regime, on the basis of Russian open sources. At the time, almost no one wanted to take this connection seriously. American journalists wanted an American source, but the people who had experienced similar Russian operations were in Russia, Ukraine, or Estonia. Too few people took Trump seriously; too few people took Russia seriously; too few people took cyber seriously; the Venn diagram overlap of people who took all three seriously felt very small. Yet there was also specific, nagging worry that my own country was not only unprepared, but something worse. After I wrote that piece and another, I heard intimations that something was odd about the FBI office in New York. This was no secret at the time. One did not need to be close to such matters to get that drift. And given that FBI New York was the office dealing with cyber counterintelligence, this was worrying

The reason I was thinking about Trump and Putin back in 2016 was a pattern that I had noticed in eastern Europe, which is my area of expertise. Between 2010 and 2013, Russia sought to control Ukraine using the same methods which were on display in 2016 in its influence operation in the United States: social media, money, and a pliable candidate for head of state. When that failed, Russia had invaded Ukraine, under the cover of some very successful influence operations. (If you find that you do not remember the Russian invasion of Ukraine in 2014, it is very possibly because you were caught in the froth of Russian propaganda, spread through the internet, targeted to vulnerabilities.) The success of that propaganda encouraged Russia to intervene in the United States, using the same methods and institutions. This is what I was working on in 2016, when a similar operation was clearly underway in the United States.
To this observer of Ukraine, it was apparent that Russia was backing Trump in much the way that it had once backed Ukrainian president Viktor Yanukovych, in the hopes of soft control. Trump and Yanukovych were similar figures: nihilistic, venal, seeking power to make or shield money. This made them vulnerably eager partners for Putin. And they had the same chief advisor: the American political consultant Paul Manafort. Russian soft control of Trump did not require endless personal meetings between the two principals. It just required mutual understanding, which was abundantly on display during the Trump presidency: think of the meeting between Putin and Trump in Helsinki in 2018, when the American president said that he trusted the Russian one and the Russian president said that he had supported the American one as a candidate. The acknowledgement of mutual debts was obvious already in 2016: Russian media talked up Trump, and Trump talked up Putin.
During Trump’s 2016 presidential campaign, the rapprochement between Trump and Putin could be effected through intermediaries. An obvious intermediary was Paul Manafort: first he worked for the Russian oligarch Deripaska as a consultant to teach the Kremlin how to influence Americans. Then he worked for Russia’s man in Ukraine Yanukovych, helping to get him elected. Finally Manafort worked for Trump, in the same capacity. You might remember Manafort’s ties to Russia as revealed by the press in 2016. He (and Jared Kushner, and Donald Trump, Jr.) met with Russians in June 2016 in Trump Tower. Manafort had to resign as Trump’s campaign manager that August after it become public he had received $12.7 million in cash while he was working Yanukovych and had not reported it.
By 2016, when he was Trump’s campaign manager, Manafort owed Deripaska millions of dollars. At the end of their political collaboration, they had entered into a murky investment, at the end of which Deripaska was pursuing Manafort in court. Manafort acknowledged the debt to Deripaska, in the sense that he treated his work for Trump as a way to pay it off. As Trump’s campaign manager, and as Deripaska’s debtor, Manafort wrote to offer Deripaska “private briefings” on Trump’s campaign. Through an intermediary, Manafort sent the Russians data from the Trump campaign, including campaign polling data about Americans that would be useful for influence operations. Manafort was asked to communicate a Russian plan for the partition of Ukraine to Trump. Manafort was hoping to pay Deripaska back in a currency other than money — in Manafort’s own words, “to get whole.” (These and other details are in Road to Unfreedom.)
Thinking our way back to 2016, keeping in mind Russia’s pattern of seeking soft control, recalling what we know now, let’s now reconsider how the FBI treated the Trump-Putin connection that year. After Trump became president, he and some other Republicans claimed that the FBI had overreached by carrying out any sort of investigation at all. Now that McGonigal has been arrested, Trump has claimed that this somehow helps his case. Common sense suggests the opposite. The man who was supposed to investigate Russian support of Trump then took money from a Russian oligarch close to Putin, who was at one remove from the Trump campaign at the time? That is not at all a constellation that supports Trump’s version of events. If the FBI special agent (McGonigal) who was investigating Trump’s connection to Russia was on the payroll of the Russian oligarch (Deripaska) to whom Trump’s campaign manager (Manafort) owed millions of dollars and provided information, that does not look good for Trump. It looks hideous —but not just for Trump.
Anne Applebaum once put the question the right way: why didn’t the FBI investigate Trump’s connections to Putin much earlier? In retrospect, it seems as though the FBI investigation of Trump’s campaign and its Russian connections in 2016 was not only late, but weirdly understated. Known as “Cross-Fire Hurricane,” it defined the issue of Russian influence narrowly, as a matter of personal contact between Trump campaign officials and Russians. Meanwhile, as that investigation was going on, Russia was in the middle of a major social media campaign which, according to the leading scholar of presidential communications, made it possible for Trump to be elected. And that larger influence campaign was not investigated by the FBI, let alone countered.
If anything, it looks as though the New York office of the FBI, wittingly or unwittingly, rather pushed in the same direction than resisted Russia’s pro-Trump influence operation. As no doubt everyone remembers, Russia was able to phish for emails from institutions and people around Clinton, and used some of them, out of context, to create harmful fictional narratives about her. Simultaneously, there was a concern about Clinton’s use of a private email server. In the popular mind, these two issues blurred together, with Trump’s help. Trump asked the Russians to break into Clinton’s email account, which they immediately tried to do. Nothing about Clinton’s emails proved to be of interest. The FBI closed an investigation in July 2016, saying that there was no basis for criminal charges against Clinton.
Then, weirdly, FBI director James Comey announced on 28 October 2016, just ten days before the election, that the investigation into Clinton’s emails had been reopened. This created a huge brouhaha that (as polls showed) harmed Clinton and helped Trump. The investigation was closed again after only eight days, on 6 November, with no charges against Clinton. But that was just two days before the election, and the damage was done. As I recall it, in the fury of those last forty-eight hours, no one noticed Comey’s second announcement, closing the investigation and clearing Clinton. I was canvassing at the time, and the people I spoke to were still quite excited about the emails. Why would the FBI publicly reveal an investigation on a hot issue involving a presidential candidate right before an election? It now appears that Comey made the public announcement because of an illicit kind of pressure from special agents in the FBI New York office. Comey believed that they would leak the investigation if he did not announce it.
In office, Trump knew that Russia had worked to get him elected, but the standard of guilt was placed so high that he could defend himself by saying that he personally had not colluded. The Mueller Report, which I still don’t believe many people have actually read, demonstrated that there was a multidimensional Russian influence campaign on behalf of Trump. The Trump administration countered by claiming that there was no evidence that Trump personally had been in contact with Putin personally. That defense was certainly misleading; but it was available in part because of the narrow scope of FBI investigations in 2016.
To be fair, FBI, along with Homeland Security, did investigate cyber. But this was after the election when it could make no difference; and in the report, cyber was defined narrowly, limited to phishing and the breach of systems. These are important issues, but they were not the main issue. What the phishing and breach of systems enabled was the main issue: a social media campaign that exploited emotions, including misogyny, to mobilize and demobilize voters.
Russia used the raw email in specific operations on Trump’s behalf, for example by rescuing him from the Access Hollywood tapes scandal. Right after it emerged that Trump advocated sexual assault, Russia released a fictional scandal connecting Clinton to the abuse of children. That allowed Trump’s followers to believe that whatever he did, she was worse; and the scandal was blunted. It verges on inconceivable that McGonigal was unaware of Russia’s 2016 influence campaign on behalf of Trump. He knew the players; he is now alleged to have been employed by one of them. Even I was aware of the Russia’s 2016 influence campaign. It became one of the subjects of my book Road to Unfreedom, which I finished the following year.
The Russian influence campaign was an issue for American counterintelligence. It is worth pausing to understand why, since it helps us to see the centrality of McGonigal and the meaning of this scandal. Intelligence is about trying to understand. Counterintelligence is about making that hard for others. Branching out from counterintelligence are the more exotic operations designed to make an enemy not only misunderstand the situation, but also act on the basis of misunderstandings, against the enemy’s own interests. Such operations, which have been a Russian (or Soviet) specialty for more than a century, go under the name of “provocation,” or “active measures,” or “maskirovka.” It is the task of counterintelligence to understand active measures, and prevent them from working. The Russian influence operation on behalf of Trump was an active measure that the United States failed to halt. The cyber element, the use of social media, is what McGonigal personally, with his background and in his position, should have been making everyone aware of. In 2016, McGonigal was section chief of the FBI’s Cyber-Counterintelligence Coordination Section. That October, he was put in charge of the Counterintelligence Division of the FBI’s New York office.
And it was just then, in October 2016, that matters began to spin out of control. There were two moments, late in the presidential campaign, that decided the matter for Donald Trump. The first was when Russian rescued him from the Access Hollywood scandal (7 October). The second was FBI director James Comey’s public announcement that he was reopening the investigation of Hillary Clinton’s emails (28 October). The reason Comey made that public announcement at that highly sensitive time, ten days before the election, was not that he believed the public needed to know, nor that the matter was likely of great consequence. On his account, it was that he believed that FBI New York office was going to leak it anyway. Rudolph Giuliani had apparently already been the beneficiary of leaks; claimed to know in advance of what he called a “surprise” that would help Donald Trump, namely Comey’s public announcement of the email investigation.
It looked at the time like Comey had been played by people in FBI New York who wanted Trump to win. Comey has now confirmed this, although his word choice might be different. And I did wonder, back then, if those special agents in New York, in turn, were being played. It was no secret at the timethat FBI special agents in New York did not like Hillary Clinton. Making emotional commitments public is asking to be exploited. For people working in counterintelligence, this is a particularly unwise thing to do. The nature of working in counterintelligence is that, if you are not very good, you will find yourself in the vortex of someone else’s active measure. Someone else will take advantage of your known vulnerabilities – your misogyny, perhaps, or your hatred of a specific female politician, or your entirely unjustified belief that a male politician is a patriotic messiah — and get you to do something that feels like your own decision.
Now that we are informed that a central figure in the New York FBI office was willing to take money from foreign actors while on the job, this line of analysis bears some reconsideration. Objectively, FBI New York was acting in concert with Russia, ignoring or defining narrowly Russia’s actions, and helping deliver the one-two punch to Clinton in October that very likely saved Trump. When people act in the interest of a foreign power, it is sometimes for money, it is sometimes because the foreign power knows something about them, it is sometimes for ideals, and it is sometimes for no conscious motive at all — what one thinks of as one’s own motives have been curated, manipulated, and directed. It seems quite possible — I raise it as a hypothesis that reasonable people would consider — that some mixture of these factors was at work at FBI New York in 2016.
All of these pieces of recent history must hang together in one way or another, and the fresh and shocking revelation of McGonigal’s arrest is a chance for us to try to see how. Again, if these allegations are true, they will soon be surrounded by other heretofore unknown facts, which should lead us to consider the problem of election integrity in a general way. As of right now, the circumstantial evidence suggests that we consider the possibility that the FBI’s reporting work in 2016, which resulted in a framing of the issue which was convenient for Trump and Russia, might have had something to do with the fact (per the indictments) that one of its lead agents was willing to takemoney from foreign actors while on the job. In connection with the leaks from FBI New York late in the 2016 campaign, which had the obvious effect of harming Clinton and helping Trump, McGonigal’s arrest also demands a broader rethink of the scale of the 2016 disaster. How much was FBI New York, wittingly and unwittingly, caught up in a Russian active measure?
The charges have not been proven. If they are, it would be a bit surprising if the two offenses with which McGonigal is now charged were isolated events. There is a certain danger, apparently, in seeing them this way, and letting bygones be bygones. A U.S. attorney presenting the case said that McGonigal “should have known better”; that is the kind of thing one says when a child gets a bellyache after eating too much cotton candy at the county fair; it hardly seems to correspond to the gravity of the situation.
Failing to understand the Russian threat in the 2010s was a prelude to failing to understand the Russian threat in 2020s. And today Americans who support Russia in its war of atrocity tend to be members of the Trump family or people closely aligned with Trump, such as Giuliani. The people who helped Trump then take part in the war on Ukraine now. Consider one of the main architects of Russia’s 2016 campaign to support Trump, Yevgeny Prigozhin. In 2016, his relevant position was as the head of the Internet Research Agency; they were the very people who (for example) helped spread the story about Clinton that rescued Trump from the Access Hollywood scandal. Without the Internet Research Agency covering his back, Trump would have had a much harder time in the 2016 election. Today, during the war in Ukraine, Prigozhin is now better known as the owner of Wagner, sending tens of thousands of Russian prisoners to kill and die.
The implications of the arrest go further. McGonigal had authority in sensitive investigations where the specific concern was that there was an American giving away other Americans to foreign governments. Untangling what that means will require a concern for the United States that goes beyond party loyalty. Unfortunately, some key political figures seem to be reacting to the news in the opposite spirit: suppressing the past, thereby destabilizing the future. Immediately after the McGonigal story broke, House Speaker Kevin McCarthy ejected Adam Schiff from the House intelligence committee, in a grand exhibition of indifference to national security. A veteran of that committee, Schiff has has taken the time to learn about Russia. It is grotesque to exclude him at this particular moment, in the middle of a war, and at the beginning of a spy scandal.
McCarthy’s recent move against Schiff also recalls 2016, sadly. Much as I did, House Speaker Kevin McCarthy had an inkling, back then, that something was wrong with Trump and Russia. He expressed his view that June that Donald Trump was the Republican most likely to be taking money from Vladimir Putin. This showed a fine political instinct, sadly unmatched by any ethical follow-through. McCarthy did not share his suspicion with his constituents, nor do anything to follow through. He made the remark it in a conversation with other Republican House members, who did not disagree with him, and who apparently came to the conclusion the the risk of an embarrassment to their party was more important than American national security. Republicans in the Senate, sadly, took a similar view. They deliberately marginalized a CIA investigation that did address the Russian influence campaign for Trump. In September 2016, Mitch McConnell made it clear to the Obama administration that the CIA’s findings would be treated as political if they were discussed in public. The Obama administration bowed to this pressure.
The Russian operation to get Trump elected in 2016 was real. We are still living under the specter of 2016, and we are closer to the beginning of the process or learning about it than we are to the end. Denying that it happened, or acting as though it did not happen, makes the United States vulnerable to Russian influence operations that are still ongoing, sometimes organized by the same people. It is easy to forget about 2016, and human to want to do so. But democracy is about learning from mistakes, and this arrest makes it very clear that we still have much to learn.
26 January 2023
Snyder’s analysis is amazingly good.
Media report that McGonigal’s lawyer, Seth DuCharme, formerly worked for Barr-appointed John Durham.
The Koch’s Heritage Foundation posted a report back when the investigation into Trump and Russia was on-going. It’s worth reading for the spin.
IMO, The Federalist’s recent post about McGonigal’s arrest is embarrassing for its attempt at selective containment. When contrasted with the full truth in Snyder’s paragraphs, the difference is notable.
Republican women, those who aren’t too stupid, should take note of the misogynistic beliefs of those opposed to Democrats. Snyder includes the point about misogyny in his analysis.
Well you can’t charge a sitting President. The crimes were committed when he wasn’t in office and that President is no longer in office.
Nah wrong AG. The last guy made up the crime and spent 4 years trying to prove it .Does John Durham have a lifetime appointment?
“And today Americans who support Russia in its war of atrocity tend to be members of the Trump family or people closely aligned with Trump, such as Giuliani.”
Remember that when our resident purveyor of “Putin is just rooting out Nazis” nonsense who posts here to excuse Putin’s most repulsive actions likely comments here soon to attack Diane Ravitch for once again victimizing poor Trump by mentioning what she wants readers to believe is simply the Russia hoax that never existed.
NYC public school parent
Slightly off topic but not very far:
” There is no such thing as “the liberal media.”
“That is language concocted by the Republican Party and right-wing consultants with the goal of bullying the American news media into being compliant and subservient to the “conservative” agenda. ”
https://www.alternet.org/media-trump-officials/
Thank you for the link to that excellent article.
Another good quote from your link:
“access to the powerful — especially for DC beltway journalists — is more important than bold truth-telling and consistently speaking truth to power.”
You posted the NYT article above, which for the first time did reporting beyond “access journalism” about the Durham investigation. But two of the three writers of that article have spent years being stenographers of the Barr/Durham propaganda, writing articles right up to the verdict that Durham’s political prosecution of a democrat lawyer was practically a slam dunk given the huge weight of evidence against him. Because I also read Marcy Wheeler (emptywheel.net) instead of just the lazy NYT journalist stenographers who mistook stenography for journalism, I knew the evidence was outrageously thin. (FYI, I highly recommend reading Marcy Wheeler, who carefully examines evidence and explains her reasoning for why it is valid or flawed.)
That better than usual NYT article you posted above about the Durham investigation still casually presents right wing misinformation as if it were fact (there never was any proper Alfa Bank investigation), but my suspicion is that the 3rd reporter – Charlie Savage – is trying to be a journalist while the other two – Katie Benner and Adam Goldman – are like this (also a quote from your link):
“There’s a class of journalists belonging to legacy outlets and corporate media who are incapable of shedding their antiquated, toxic skin and adapting to the changing political and cultural landscape where disinformation, white supremacist conspiracy theories, and right-wing stochastic terrorism is the norm. Instead, they chase the North Star, which isn’t the truth, but rather access to power, ratings, and a path toward personal success….
Instead of bending the knee to right-wing intimidation, platforming their lies, mainstreaming their hate, and engaging in “both sides” nonsense to create the fiction of symmetry in an utterly asymmetrical reality, these political journalists need to be biased in favor of the truth and democracy.”
And one last excerpt from your link that is too good not to post:
“As the economist/pundit Paul Krugman observes of Republican efforts to bully the media into accepting the party’s Orwellian arguments about Social Security privatization: “The next time the administration insists that chocolate is vanilla, much of the media–fearing accusations of liberal bias, trying to create the appearance of ‘balance’–won’t report that the stuff is actually brown; at best they’ll report that some Democrats claim that it’s brown.”
I have a memory of reading in 2016, during the campaign, that there was a large number of emails from AlfaBank to Trump Tower. Then nothing more.
Diane,
The reason you didn’t hear anything about Alfa Bank after that is that the FBI assigned the investigation to a couple of inexperienced agents who did a 1 day (or maybe 1 hour) investigation that seemed to consist of asking Alfa Bank what was going on, Alfa Bank telling them there was nothing going on, and the FBI accepting that as a full exoneration that there was nothing going on. That was it.
Put it this way – the FBI’s Alfa Bank investigation was similar to the FBI’s investigation into Kavanaugh. It was cursory in which the FBI avoided speaking to the obvious witnesses who might force them to actually investigate and instead the FBI spent a day or two talking to people connected to Alfa Bank who told them there was nothing there and the FBI declared the matter closed while the so-called liberal media presented it as fully investigated and closed. (In fact, even in yesterday’s article the NYT left out the very relevant information that no proper investigation into the Alfa Bank communication actually happened – readers are misled by NYT reporters using the highly misleading phrase that the FBI “briefly looked at the allegation but dismissed it.”)
Just like the FBI briefly looked into all the allegations into Kavanaugh and dismissed them.
A far more accurate story would report that instead of doing a full and proper investigation into the Alfa Bank communication and Kavanaugh’s actions, the FBI did cursory investigations that EXCLUDED speaking with the many obvious witnesses who any proper investigation would have never excluded.
I have no doubt that the tip that Italian officials gave to Barr and Durham about Trump’s financial improprieties got the same cursory faux investigation that the Alfa Bank tip was given. Durham probably did what the FBI did with the Alfa Bank investigation and asked Trump or someone close to Trump who told Durham that there was nothing there and Durham declared the matter fully investigated and closed.
I am used to the sycophantic DC bureau reporters at the NYT dutifully reporting a matter closed because one of their coveted Republican sources told them so. I mean, that’s what NYT reporters did a few days before the 2016 election when the NYT wrote a big story assuring readers that Trump had been fully exonerated of any ties with Russia.
But what happened with Alfa Bank was unprecedented. Because not only did the FBI do a non-investigation, but then Durham decided to send a message by declaring that the real crime was reporting a potential crime to the FBI! The FBI prosecuted the lawyer (Michael Sussmann) who told the FBI about the odd communication between Alfa Bank and the Trump server! So not only did the FBI spend no time investigating this, but then Durham prosecuted the lawyer for giving a tip that the FBI didn’t properly investigate! I have no doubt that if Durham was assigned to investigate the “illegal” criticism of Kavanaugh, Durham would have prosecuted all the people who left messages on the FBI tip line about Kavanaugh’s wrongdoing – those tips that the FBI ignored and never investigated before declaring Kavanaugh totally exonerated – and then Durham would have said that all the people leaving tips lied to the FBI and needed to be jailed.
It’s pretty shocking, but even more shocking to me is that the NYT legitimized the prosecution of Sussmann and presented the prosecution as if it was completely justified by copious evidence that Durham had compiled of Sussmamn’s lawbreaking. All this time, I was reading emptywheel.net and wondering how the NYT reporters were not at all skeptical of this so-called evidence. But they were not. They treated Durham’s evidence as credible, copious, and unimpeachable right up to the time that the jury came back with a not guilty verdict a couple hours later.
The NYT reporters got played for fools, and the ones who were clearly from the Judith Miller school of reporting should have been fired. I guess they hoped in writing this story, no one would notice how awful their previous reporting was. Maybe today, Judith Miller could have written a story about how Iraq didn’t have WMD and like today’s NYT reporters, get away with the great harm her years of terrible and lazy stenography reporting did.
I can remember seeing the Russian lawyer going up in the elevator at Trump Tower after the election and thought, “This doesn’t smell right to me.” Also, when Trump didn’t want anyone to sit in on his meeting with Putin, it seemed suspicious as well. Alarm bells were going off in my mind.
Trump met the Russian foreign minister with a Russian aide in the Oval Office in D.C. Afterwards, he invited the Russian press to take photos and excluded American media.
And who can forget the meeting in Helsinki when he said, “I trust Putin, not my own intelligence agencies.”
Faced with a lifetime in prison will McGonigal flee to Russia, spill the beans or face an untimely suspicious demise
He might accidentally fall out of a window
Might turn out to be his best option.
Accidentally, Like a Traitor (apologies to Warren Zevon’s memory).
Defenestration…
“There are three of them, and Alleline.” Fictional Bill Haydon, meet real life Charles McGonigal.
For years if not decades, Putin has wanted to topple the US as the world’s only super power and replace the U.S. with Russia. Putin also wants to get rid of NATO and the EU to achieve his goals of a Russian global spanning empire he rules.
Time Magazine published a piece about how Putin has been doing this for a long time.
https://time.com/5564173/how-putin-built-russian-empire/
My view is that Putin wants to reassemble the USSR. Capturing Ukraine is a first step. Next Poland, then Lithuania, Estonia, Latvia. Hungary will be easy because of Orban. One by one he will reabsorb them.
I never forget that Lutin said the collapse of the USSR was “the greatest geopolitical disaster of the 20th century.”
In his essay “On the Historical Unity of Russia and Ukraine,” Putin explicitly decries the breakup of the Soviet Union, excoriates the wealth for stealing Russia’s greatness, and lays out his plan for creating a Greater Russian Empire.
He’s a Fascist and an Imperialist.
cx: excoriates the West
Autocorrect error
In the immediate aftermath of the 2016 republican Convention, during which I was inspired to reread Hannah Arendt’s The Origins of Totalitarianism, I wrote in my notes, “…rather than becoming an interesting historical intellectual exercise, Arendt’s analysis is once again pertinent in, of all places, the United States in the 21st century, even though I don’t think the U.S. will become a totalitarian dictatorship, even if the possible election of the 2016 Republican nominee for president causes many to think it might.” It was obvious to anyone who could recognize it that the party had officially become a fascist entity. Now with Snyder’s analysis of a very plausible and likely probable scenario, the only thing I would disagree with on my view is that I do think, given the current political trajectory, we are closer to becoming a totalitarian dictatorship than ever. And the prognosis does not look good. If there were ever a time for the Justice Department to act assertively, it is now. Another reason I’m pessimistic.
Under Garland?
DO NOT HOLD BREATH.
Another truly outstanding piece by Timothy Snyder, for whom I have enormous, enormous respect.
And yeah, Barr. What a disreputable scoundrel. But give him is due for helping to forge the modern Department of Just Us.
Sinisterly fascinating, reads like an updated Le Carré plot. Glad I started reading about it with this exposé. I’m finding other coverage murky by comparison. Snyder’s is like those whiteboard charts fictional detective teams draw up in the squad room, complete with circled photos and arrows captioned with motives.
As usual the MAGhAt crowd has it bassackwards. They’ve been braying about corrupt FBI & DOJ for ages, for all the wrong reasons.
Unlike a lot of people who write about these matters, Snyder writes from a position of profound scholarship. He actually knows what he is talking about.
As usual the MAGhAt crowd has it bassackwards.
Exactly
In a normal world, Timothy Snyder would be an academic whose writings would have interested a few weirdos like me. They would have been instructive, but for a limited niche of academics and obsessed lay persons. It is instructive about our times that he is a bit of a celebrity. His lessons should be about past times, not contemporary events. When an academic becomes well known, we need to worry and find out why.
Clarify?
As a side note- Snyder was born in Ohio and attended Centerville high school.
It’s like good governing. In a normal world, average citizens are generally not aware of the names of cabinet members outside of Sec of State and maybe Atty Gen. Timothy Snyder wrote an excellent book, Bloodlines, that normally would have been of academic interest in certain circles, perhaps even NYRB readers, which is a pretty small sample size. If not for the Idiot and his cult, Snyder would never have become known outside of academia. (Another example: how many people in our generation can name a Sec of Interior? The fact that James Watt still comes to mind is because of bad things, not because he ran the agency well.)
The quote about democracy requiring vigilance…
It’s reported that the Federalist is funded by Uihlein.
I’d like to see a deep dive investigative report that looks at wealthy GOP funders and political activities that benefit Putin.
While we are discussing the rise of Fascism in the U.S., and solemnly marking Holocaust Remembrance Day, which was yesterday, here:
It’s important to remember what Fascists do when they seize power.
Two things:
Rudy Giuliani working in SDNY seems to have cleared the path for the Russian Mafia by pursuing the Italian Mafia. (Rudy’s father Harold had been a leg breaker for the Italians, so Rudy was acquainted.)
George Santos’ funding comes from the Russians. It’s why Kevin McCarthy hasn’t ousted him.
Diane,
I am no longer receiving emails from your blog. This is the last one I received on 1/27/23. I checked your Twitter account and you are still posting. I was worried that something had happened to you! Can you check and see what happened to the emails?
Thanks!
Shannon
Shannon L. Price
976 Washington Blvd.
Bushnell, IL 61422
Ph. (309) 333-5895
E-Mail: pricecollins@comcast.net pricecollins@comcast.net
From: Diane Ravitch’s blog comment-reply@wordpress.com Sent: Friday, January 27, 2023 11:02 AM To: pricecollins@comcast.net Subject: [New post] Timothy Snyder: The Specter of 2016
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dianeravitch posted: ” Timothy Snyder, a historian of Europe, democracy and atrocities
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