marvin martian
Diamond Member
Brennan needs to be fitted for an orange jumpsuit.
This was an attempt to subvert an election and the will of the American people.
The HPSCI launched its investigation into the ICA on January 25, 2017, just days after Trump was sworn in. Then-Chairman Devin Nunes, who would later play a pivotal role in unraveling the Russiagate hoax, apparently sensed something was deeply wrong. But the committeeâs investigation was met with years of stonewalling and obstruction from intelligence agencies. The report just released dates back to September 2020 but was kept from the public until now. Only now, under Gabbardâs leadership, is it finally seeing the light of day.
And it is explosive.
The report doesnât just detail flaws in tradecraft or analytic sloppiness. It documents an intentional fraud â driven by then-CIA Director John Brennan â designed to paint Trump as a Russian asset and delegitimize his presidency.
The ICA
The ICAâs core purpose was to tie Trumpâs victory to Putin, and the HPSCI report makes clear that this narrative was constructed from day one. Crucially, it was not supported by actual intelligence.
One key document, newly released by Gabbard just days ago, serves as a critical anchor: the draft Presidentâs Daily Brief (PDB) from Dec. 8, 2016. It stated that Russian activity was âprobably intended to cause psychological effects, such as undermining the credibility of the election process and candidates.â Notably, it did not assess that Putin preferred Trump.
Yet, as the new HPSCI report reveals, President Obama had already ordered the creation of the ICA two days earlier, on Dec. 6, before the PDB, and before any intelligence concluded that Putin had a preference. The conclusion came first. The intelligence was bent to match it.
Brennan
To justify the ICAâs conclusion that Putin wanted Trump to win, Brennan pushed four specific claims into the document, despite strenuous objections from intelligence professionals. The HPSCI report notes that no previous CIA director had ever overruled senior analysts on basic factual grounds in this way.
1. The Single-Source âFragment
The first was a snippet from a lone HUMINT (human intelligence) source, with an anti-Trump bias who claimed: âPutin had made this decision [to leak DNC emails] after he had come to believe that the Democratic nominee had better odds of winning the U.S. presidential election, and that [candidate Trump], whose victory Putin was counting on, most likely would not be able to pull off a convincing victory.â
As one senior CIA officer told HPSCI staff, âWe donât know what was meant by that,â and âfive people read it five ways.â CIA officers also admitted: âWe donât have direct information that Putin wanted to get Trump elected.â
The HPSCI report offers several alternative explanations, including that âcounting onâ may have simply meant âexpected,â or that the reference was possibly to Trump securing the Republican nomination, not the presidency. The ICA also failed to mention that the exact circumstances under which the sourceâs subsource obtained the information were unclear, nor was it established whether the statement reflected the subsourceâs own opinion. It also did not mention that the sourcesâ motivations âwere in part driven by a strong dislike for Putin and his regime, and that the source had an anti-Trump bias.â Despite this bias, the source never actually said that Putin preferred Trump. Yet Brennan used this vague, unverified snippet as a cornerstone of the ICAâs central claim.
The New York Times has now confirmed, without explicitly naming him, what had long been an open secret among Russiagate researchers that Brennanâs supposed super source was Oleg Smolenkov. According to Dmitry Peskov, press secretary to the Russian president, Smolenkov was a low-level staffer in the presidential administration until 2016 or 2017 and had no direct contact with Putin. Yet for feeding Brennan a vague snippet suggesting Putinâs supposed preference for Trump, Smolenkov appears to have been rewarded with a U.S. green card and a comfortable home in Northern Virginia â where he allegedly lived openly, under his real name, and apparently without much fear of Russian retaliation.
2. The Anonymous Ukrainian Tip
The second of Brennanâs tips was even flimsier: Brennan ordered inclusion of information from an anonymous email claiming Russia planned engagement with the Trump campaign as far back as February 2016. There was zero evidence that the Trump team ever reciprocated or was even aware of such plans.
What the ICA did not disclose was that the tip came from a Ukrainian intelligence source with known anti-Trump bias. In fact, at the time, the Ukrainian government was openly hostile to Trump, with top officials publicly attacking him.
While much of the information on Ukrainian sourcing is redacted in the newly released HPSCI report, one paragraph lets âKievâ slip through. The date is also revealing. In January 2016, a delegation of Ukrainian officials met with Obama administration figures, including later Ukraine impeachment âwhistleblowerâ Eric Ciaramella. According to Ukrainian participant Andrii Telizhenko, the meeting focused on targeting Trump, specifically by pushing connections between Trump, Paul Manafort, and Russia to benefit Hillary Clinton.
3. The âPutin Inner Circleâ Fantasy
The third Brennan claim â that members of Putinâs inner circle preferred Trump â is probably the flimsiest of all, though the competition is admittedly fierce. A supposedly âestablishedâ source claimed to have heard a secondhand account about something allegedly said in 2014, before Trump was even a candidate. No one knows where the information originated, or if it did at all.
Even worse, the actual CIA reports cited in the ICA said the opposite: that senior Russian officials feared Republicans for being too hawkish. So while the ICA told the public Russia preferred Trump, the raw intelligence said Russia feared him.
4. The Steele Dossier
The fourth â and most infamous â input was the fraudulent Steele dossier.
For years we were told the dossier was merely an appendix, peripheral to the ICA. That was a lie. The new HPSCI report confirms it was cited in the main text as evidence of Putinâs alleged support for Trump.
Just as with his other three supposed intelligence leads, career intelligence officials urged Brennan not to include it. One CIA officer recalled Brennan brushing aside concerns about the dossierâs complete lack of verification: âYes, but doesnât it ring true?â After overruling their objections, Brennan lied to Congress about the dossierâs use in the ICA, first in 2017, then again in 2023.
The report notes that FBI Director James Comey also pushed for inclusion of the Steele dossier â despite knowing by early 2017 that its primary source, Igor Danchenko, had already disavowed it. According to the HPSCI report, Comey later lied to the White House in February 2017, specifically to thenâChief of Staff Reince Priebus, when asked about the ICA. He claimed that all three agencies had agreed to include the dossier (false), that Christopher Steele was a credible source (false), and that the dossierâs claims were corroborated by other intelligence (also false).
5.
As bad as all this is, the most brazen abuse may be buried in a footnote.
According to the HPSCI report, Brennan personally blocked two HUMINT reports â presumably because they contradicted his narrative â from being formally disseminated.
From the report:
âCIA officers also said that DCIA [Brennan] personally directed that two of the most important reports not be formally disseminated ⌠By briefing information orally, however, DCIA could have tailored his message to different officials, unconstrained by a consistent record copy.â
This isnât run-of-the-mill fudging. Itâs a calculated abuse of power. Thereâs little doubt that DOJ officials handling the Brennan criminal referrals will now zero in on this footnote, which stands as prima facie evidence of deliberate deception.
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John Brennan's 5 Lies That Set Russiagate In Motion
Brennanâs purported intelligence was so flimsy and comically absurd that it only further exposes the fraudulent nature of the assessment.thefederalist.com
He looks scared. And now he's vaguely threatening DOJ employees on camera: