ROBERT PARRY: The Sleazy Origins of Russiagate

CN‘s founding editor already wrote in March 2017 that Christopher Steele’s “investigative dossier suggests that we can’t really think for ourselves. We are all Putin’s puppets.” Russiagate adherents clearly stopped thinking for themselves.

Hillary Clinton formally accepts the Democratic Party’s nomination for President on the fourth night of the Democratic National Convention in Philadelphia, July 28, 2016. (A. Shaker/VOA/Wikimedia Commons)

By Robert Parry
Special to Consortium News
March 29, 2017

An irony of the escalating hysteria about the Trump camp’s contacts with Russians is that one presidential campaign in 2016 did exploit political dirt that supposedly came from the Kremlin and other Russian sources. Friends of that political campaign paid for this anonymous hearsay material, shared it with American journalists and urged them to publish it to gain an electoral advantage. But this campaign was not Donald Trump’s; it was Hillary Clinton’s. C

And, awareness of this activity doesn’t require you to spin conspiracy theories about what may or may not have been said during some seemingly innocuous conversation. In this case, you have open admissions about how these Russian/Kremlin claims were used.

Indeed, you have the words of Rep. Adam Schiff, the ranking Democratic member of the House Intelligence Committee, in his opening statement at last week’s public hearing on so-called “Russia-gate.” Schiff’s seamless 15-minute narrative of the Trump campaign’s alleged collaboration with Russia followed the script prepared by former British intelligence officer Christopher Steele who was hired as an opposition researcher last June to dig up derogatory information on Donald Trump.

Steele, who had worked for Britain’s MI-6 in Russia, said he tapped into ex-colleagues and unnamed sources inside Russia, including leadership figures in the Kremlin, to piece together a series of sensational reports that became the basis of the current congressional and FBI investigations into Trump’s alleged ties to Moscow.

Since he was not able to go to Russia himself, Steele based his reports mostly on multiple hearsay from anonymous Russians who claim to have heard some information from their government contacts before passing it on to Steele’s associates who then gave it to Steele who compiled this mix of rumors and alleged inside dope into “raw” intelligence reports.

Lewd Allegations

Besides the anonymous sourcing and the sources’ financial incentives to dig up dirt, Steele’s reports had numerous other problems, including the inability of a variety of investigators to confirm key elements, such as the salacious claim that several years ago Russian intelligence operatives secretly videotaped Trump having prostitutes urinate on him while he lay in the same bed in Moscow’s Ritz-Carlton used by President Obama and First Lady Michelle Obama.

That tantalizing tidbit was included in Steele’s opening report to his new clients, dated June 20, 2016. Apparently, it proved irresistible in whetting the appetite of Clinton’s mysterious benefactors who were financing Steele’s dirt digging and who have kept their identities (and the amounts paid) hidden. Also in that first report were the basic outlines of what has become the scandal that is now threatening the survival of Trump’s embattled presidency.

But Steele’s June report also reflected the telephone-tag aspects of these allegations: “Speaking to a trusted compatriot in June 2016 sources A and B, a senior Russian Foreign Ministry figure and a former top level Russian intelligence officer still active inside the Kremlin respectively, the Russian authorities had been cultivating and supporting US Republican presidential candidate, Donald TRUMP for a least 5 years.

“Source B asserted that the TRUMP operation was both supported and directed by Russian President Vladimir PUTIN. Its aim was to sow discord and disunity both within the US itself, but more especially within the Transatlantic alliance which was viewed as inimical to Russia’s interests. … In terms of specifics, Source A confided that the Kremlin had been feeding TRUMP and his team valuable intelligence on his opponents, including Democratic presidential candidate Hillary CLINTON, for several years. …

“The Kremlin’s cultivation operation on TRUMP also had comprised offering him various lucrative real estate development business deals in Russia, especially in relation to the ongoing 2018 World Cup soccer tournament. However, so far, for reasons unknown, TRUMP had not taken up any of these.”

Besides the anonymous and hearsay quality of the allegations, there are obvious logical problems, especially the point that five years ago, you could have gotten astronomical odds about Trump’s chances to win the U.S. presidency, although perhaps there is more an astrological explanation. Maybe the seemingly logical Putin went to some stargazing soothsayer to see the future.

There also may have been a more mundane reason why Trump’s hotel deal fell through. A source familiar with those negotiations told me that Trump had hoped to get a half interest in the $2 billion project but that Russian-Israeli investor Mikhail Fridman, a founder of Russia’s Alfa Bank, balked because Trump was unwilling to commit a significant investment beyond the branding value of the Trump name.

Yet, one would assume that if the supposedly all-powerful Putin wanted to give a $1 billion or so payoff to his golden boy, Donald Trump, whom Putin just knew would become President in five years, the deal would have happened.

Whetting the Appetite

Despite the dubious quality of Steele’s second- and third-hand information, the June report appears to have won the breathless attention of Team Clinton. And once the bait was taken, Steele continued to produce his conspiracy-laden reports, totaling at least 17 through Dec. 13, 2016.

The reports not only captivated the Clinton political operatives but influenced the assessments of Obama’s appointees in the U.S. intelligence community. In the last weeks of the Obama administration, I was told that the outgoing intelligence chiefs had found no evidence to verify Steele’s claims but nevertheless believed them to be true.

Still, a careful analysis of Steele’s reports would have discovered not only apparent factual inaccuracies, such as putting Trump lawyer Michael Cohen at a meeting with a Russian official in Prague (when Cohen says he’s never been to Prague), but also the sort of broad conspiracy-mongering that the mainstream U.S. news media usually loves to ridicule.

For instance, Steele’s reports pin a range of U.S. political attitudes on Russian manipulation rather than the notion that Americans can reach reasonable conclusions on their own. In one report dated Sept. 14, 2016, Steele claimed that an unnamed senior official in President Vladimir Putin’s Presidential Administration (or PA) explained how Putin used the alleged Russian influence operation to generate opposition to Obama’s Pacific trade deals.

Steele wrote that Putin’s intention was “pushing candidate CLINTON away from President OBAMA’s policies. The best example of this was that both candidates [Clinton and Trump] now openly opposed the draft trade agreements, TPP and TTIP, which were assessed by Moscow as detrimental to Russian interests.”

In other words, the Russians supposedly intervened in the U.S. presidential campaign to turn the leading candidates against Obama’s trade deals. But how credible is that? Are we to believe that American politicians – running the gamut from Senators Bernie Sanders and Elizabeth Warren through former Secretary of State Hillary Clinton to President Donald Trump – have all been tricked by the Kremlin to oppose those controversial trade deals, which are also broadly unpopular with the American people who are sick and tired of trade agreements that cost them jobs?

Steele’s investigative dossier suggests that we can’t really think for ourselves. We are all Putin’s puppets.

Greater Skepticism?

Normally, such a ludicrous claim – along with the haziness of the sourcing – would demand greater skepticism about the rest of Steele’s feverish charges, but a curious aspect of the investigations into Russia’s alleged “meddling” in Election 2016 is that neither Steele nor the “oppo research” company, Fusion GPS, that hired him – reportedly with funding from Clinton allies – has been summoned to testify.

Rep. (now Sen,) Adam Schiff, D-CA

Usually, official investigations begin with testimony from the people who are making the allegations, so their credibility and motives can be tested in an adversarial setting. Plus, some baseline information should be established: Who, for instance, paid for the contract? How much was the total and how much went to Steele? How much did Steele then pay his Russian contacts and did they, in turn, pay the alleged Russian insiders for information? Or are we supposed to believe that these “insiders” risked being identified as spies out of a commitment to the truth?

None of these answers would necessarily discredit the information, but they could provide important context as to whether this “oppo” team had a financial motive to sex-up the reports to keep Clinton’s friends coming back for more. Arguably the funders of this “oppo” research should be called to testify as well regarding whether they would have kept ponying up more money if Steele’s reports had concluded that there were no meaningful contacts between Trump’s people and the Russians. Were they seeking the truth or just dirt to help Hillary Clinton win?

Since last November’s election, Steele has ducked public inquiries and Glenn Simpson, the former Wall Street Journal journalist who heads Fusion GPS, has refused to divulge who hired his firm or answer other relevant questions. That means we still don’t know which Clinton friends paid for the dirt and how much money was given to subcontractors like Steele and his Russian associates. (One source told me it may have totaled around $1 million.)

According to various press reports, Fusion GPS first worked for a Republican opponent of Trump’s, but then switched over to the Clinton side after Trump won the Republican race. With Steele generating his reports every few days or every few weeks, people close to Clinton’s campaign saw the Russia allegations as a potential game-changer. They reached out to reporters to persuade them to publish Steele’s allegations even if they could not be verified.

Before the election, a longtime Clinton operative briefed me on aspects of Steele’s investigation, including the “golden shower” allegations, and urged me to at least publish the accusations as a rumor citing the fact that some major news organizations were looking into the charges, an offer that I declined.

In a different setting – when Gov. Bill Clinton was seeking the presidency and Republican “oppo” researchers were pushing various wild and salacious allegations about him – the Clinton team dismissed such claims and the motivations of the people behind them as “cash for trash.”

Following the Storyline

Yet, Schiff’s opening statement at the hearing on March 20 relied heavily on Steele’s narrative and the supposed credibility of the ex-British spy and his anonymous Russian sources, even to the point of naming Americans who presumably joined in a scheme to collaborate with the Russians to help rig the U.S. election, an act that some commenters have compared to treason.

President Bill Clinton, First Lady Hillary Clinton and daughter Chelsea parade down Pennsylvania Avenue on Inauguration Day, Jan. 20, 1997. (White House)

The California Democrat said, “Russian sources tell [Steele] that [Carter] Page [a Trump foreign policy adviser who made a public trip to Russia in early July 2016] also had a secret meeting with Igor Sechin, CEO of Russian gas giant Rosneft. … According to Steele’s Russian sources, Page is offered brokerage fees by Sechin on a deal involving a 19 percent share of the company.”

These “Russian sources” also tell Steele, according to Schiff, that “the Trump campaign is offered documents damaging to Hillary Clinton, which the Russians would publish through an outlet that gives them deniability, like Wikileaks. The hacked documents would be in exchange for a Trump Administration policy that de-emphasizes Russia’s invasion of Ukraine and instead focuses on criticizing NATO countries for not paying their fare share.”

Schiff continued: “Is it a coincidence that the Russian gas company Rosneft sold a 19 percent share after former British Intelligence Officer Steele was told by Russian sources that Carter Page was offered fees on a deal of just that size? Is it a coincidence that Steele’s Russian sources also affirmed that Russia had stolen documents hurtful to Secretary Clinton that it would utilize in exchange for pro-Russian policies that would later come to pass?”

However, is it also not possible that Steele and his profit-making colleagues made their reports conform to details that already were known or that they had reason to believe would occur, in other words, to match up their claims with independently known facts to give them greater credibility? That is a classic way for conmen to establish “credibility” with marks who are either gullible or simply want to believe.

Also, clever prosecutors in presenting a “circumstantial case” – as Schiff was doing on March 20 – can make innocent coincidences look suspicious. For instance, though Trump’s resistance to escalating tensions with Russia was well known through the primary campaign, Schiff made a big deal out of the fact that Trump’s people opposed a plank in the Republican platform that called for shipping lethal military supplies to Ukraine for the government’s war against ethnic Russian rebels in the east. Schiff presents that as the quo for the quid of the Russians supplying purloined emails from the Democratic National Committee to WikiLeaks (although WikiLeaks denies getting the emails from the Russians).

In his opening statement, Schiff said: “In the middle of July, Paul Manafort, the Trump campaign manager and someone who was long on the payroll of pro-Russian Ukrainian interests, attends the Republican Party convention. Carter Page, back from [a business meeting in] Moscow, also attends the convention.

“According to Steele, it was Manafort who chose Page to serve as a go-between for the Trump campaign and Russian interests. [Russian] Ambassador [Sergey] Kislyak, who presides over a Russian embassy in which diplomatic personnel would later be expelled as likely spies, also attends the Republican Party convention and meets with Carter Page and additional Trump Advisors J.D. Gordon and Walid Phares. It was J.D. Gordon who approved Page’s trip to Moscow.

“Ambassador Kislyak also meets with Trump campaign national security chair and now Attorney General Jeff Sessions. Sessions would later deny meeting with Russian officials during his Senate confirmation hearing. Just prior to the convention, the Republican Party platform is changed, removing a section that supports the provision of ‘lethal defensive weapons’ to Ukraine, an action that would be contrary to Russian interests.

“Manafort categorically denies involvement by the Trump campaign in altering the platform. But the Republican Party delegate who offered the language in support of providing defensive weapons to Ukraine states that it was removed at the insistence of the Trump campaign. Later, J.D. Gordon admits opposing the inclusion of the provision at the time it was being debated and prior to its being removed.”

Problems with the Conspiracy

So, not only is Schiff relying on Steele to provide key links in the conspiracy chain but Schiff ignores the surrounding reality that Trump had long opposed the idea of escalating the confrontation with Russia in Ukraine – as, by the way, did President Obama who resisted pressure to send lethal military hardware to Ukraine.

Plus, Schiff ignores other logical points, including that party platforms are essentially meaningless and that the savvy Putin would not likely take the huge risk of offending the odds-on winner of the presidential race, Hillary Clinton, for something as pointless as a word change in the GOP platform.

There is also the point that if Trump were a true “Manchurian candidate,” he would have taken the more politically popular position of bashing Russia during the campaign and only reverse course after he got into the White House. That’s how the scheme is supposed to work. (And, of course, all embassies including American ones have spies assigned to them, so there is nothing unusual about Ambassador Kislyak presiding at an embassy with spies.)

Other independent-minded journalists have noted various chronological problems with Steele’s narrative, such as Marcy Wheeler at her emptywheel.net Web site.

In other words, there are huge holes in both the evidence and the logic of Schiff’s conspiracy theory. But you wouldn’t know that from watching and reading the fawning commentary about Schiff’s presentation in the mainstream U.S. news media, which has been almost universally hostile to Trump (which is not to say that there aren’t sound reasons to consider the narcissistic, poorly prepared Trump to be unfit to serve as President of the United States).

The journalistic problem is that everyone deserves to get a fair shot from reporters who are supposed to be objective and fair regardless of a person’s popularity or notoriety or what the reporter may personally feel. That standard should apply to everyone, whether you’re a foreign leader despised by the U.S. government or a politician detested for your obnoxious behavior.

There is no professional justification for journalists joining in a TV-and-print lynch mob. We also have seen too often where such wrongheaded attitudes lead, such as to the groupthink that Iraq’s hated dictator Saddam Hussein was hiding WMDs, or in an earlier time to the McCarthyism that destroyed the lives of Americans who were smeared as unpatriotic because of their dissident political views.

So, yes, even Donald Trump deserves not to be railroaded by a mainstream media that wants desperately – along with other powerful forces in Official Washington – to see him run out of town on a rail and will use any pretext to do so, even if it means escalating the risks of a nuclear war with Russia.

And, if mainstream media commentators truly want a thorough and independent investigation, they should be demanding that it start by summoning the people who first made the allegations.

The late investigative reporter Robert Parry broke many of the Iran-Contra stories for The Associated Press and Newsweek in the 1980s. He founded Consortium News 30 years ago in 1995.

Donate to CN’s

2025 Summer

 Fund Drive

 

12 comments for “ROBERT PARRY: The Sleazy Origins of Russiagate

  1. Piotr Berman
    July 30, 2025 at 17:35

    Trump himself make his name within GOP voters by flogging Obama birth certificate phony issue. That could inspire Democrats to resort to an idiotic fallacy, bolstered by repetition and solemn (if hedged) blessings from intelligence community. The latter probably did not care who will win, as long as the winner is sufficiently pliable from their narrow point of view. Having dirt on both Clinton and Trump was what they needed. Thus both disclosures and innuendoes about Hillary laptop and Russia gate (that served wider needs as well).

  2. Sick and tired
    July 30, 2025 at 15:14

    I wasn’t reading Consortiums News when Robert Parry wrote this but was reading Aaron Mate and others who were debunking Russiagate as MSNBC and R Maddow were frothing at the mouth with it and the HRC email “hack”.

    It is frightening that even now my friends who are smart and questioning in so many ways still buy this nonsense.

    It is also frightening that at least one good journalist I read and supported for years is gleefully covering the exposure of this debacle and ignoring the horror that is the current Project 2025 GOP.

  3. Will
    July 28, 2025 at 19:41

    pretty sure I recall that the initial query via Fusion GPS that led to the steel report was originally instigated and financed by one or more of Trump’s Republican adversaries. What difference that makes is open to interpretation, but none the less, it’s good to be accurate. The bigger question is likely how much Israel interfered in the election and to who’s benefit-i’m thinking Trump would get the lion’s share if its true that Mossad has video of trump boffing 14 year olds.

    • Consortiumnews.com
      July 28, 2025 at 23:18

      They were completely separate opposition research projects totally unconnected. First Republicans hired GPS to dig up dirt on Trump but once he got the nomination they ended the contract. Later the Clinton campaign hired GPS on a totally different contract to get dirt on Trump. There is no interpretation and nothing is inaccurate about the reporting.

  4. Winifred "Fred" Aimes
    July 28, 2025 at 17:47

    Here’s what I saw in my seat high as a kite in the back row of the peanut gallery.

    In 2016, the Democratic Party was staging a very un-democratic nomination process. The Elites at the top of the Dem party were working closely with Hillary to make sure she was the nominee, no matter what those pesky voters might say. From what we now know about how the mega-donors control the decisions in the party, it is safe to say in hind-sight that the mega-donors were making sure Hillary won over Bernie.

    Politics relies on cheap labor from idealistic teenagers and college students. It appeared that one of these people working for the DNC did not accept the Dems having the mega-donors rig and collude the process to make sure Hillary was selected. This got leaked from the DNC. Occam’s Razor says that the leak came from an idealistic young staffer at the DNC who suddenly found themselves in the stinky swamp with the elite alligators.

    Hillary saw her long-time dream of one-upping Bill going up in smoke. If the “Progressive” base of the party walked away from her just before the conventions, she’d be doing good to get 40-45% of the vote and would surely lose to the Billionaire Populist who lives in an elite country club. So, she appeared to meet with her staff, and with hind-sight, assume with the mega-donors for a day or two, then she strode out and gave her solution ….. “Russia Did It.”

    The Dems then embarked on their campaign to ignore the content of the leaks behind the cries and smoke-screen of blaming the Russians. This revealed much about Hillary and the mega-donors, in order to grab power, they were willing to push the world even closer to nuclear war by using smears against a nuclear power as a partisan political tool to cover their ass when they got caught rigging and fixing an election.

    But, we should notice that in terms of solving their immediate “wag the dog” problem, their creation of a Russian attack to defuse the immediate political problem that was about to definitely cost them the ’16 election in July/August worked rather well. At least well enough to kick the can down the highway to hell to the Fall, giving Hillary a chance to call American voters as “despicable.”

    That, from the high rows of the peanut gallery, is a summary of the sleazy origins of Russiagate.

  5. Rob
    July 28, 2025 at 17:17

    It’s always good to read Robert Parry’s incisive, pathbreaking work. He was one of the first journalists to pick up on the Russiagate hoax at a time when the mainstream media were promoting it like a Hollywood blockbuster (which, in a way, it was).

  6. July 28, 2025 at 16:51

    Trump being accused of submitting to a “golden shower” is utterly inconsistent with the power dynamic implicit in his sexual proclivities, not to mention the view by many health professionals that his self-obsessed preoccupation with dominance is a textbook example of malignant narcissism (https://www.choosingtherapy.com/malignant-narcissist#:~:text=Traits%20of%20Malignant%20Narcissism).

    According to a Nov. 23, 2021, Australian Broadcasting Corporation article, “Golden Showers 101: Everything you wanted to know about watersports but were too afraid to ask”: “Then there’s the power dynamic of it. Submitting to the piss of someone who’s more dominant, or vice versa, is it’s own kind of role play.”

    Are we supposed to believe that Trump, who bragged in the Access Hollywood Tape that he can “grab ’em by the pussy”; is accused by numerous women of sexual assault, including rape; and is widely assumed, because of his years-long close friendship with Jeffrey Epstein and the unrecanted testimony of women claiming Trump abused them sexually when they were children, to be a pedophile, gets off on being urinated on?

    It makes no sense.

    According to the U.S. Department of Justice Office of Sex Offender Sentencing, Monitoring, Apprehending, Registering, and Tracking, “Child sexual abuse is the use of force/coercion . . .” etc.

    Also, Hillary Clinton returned late from a commercial break in one of his debates because she seems to have made a trip to the ladies room. Fastidious Mr. Trump voiced his opinion upon her return that relieving herself in the midst of a debate was “disgusting.”

    Late night TV comics’ audiences roared with laughter night after night for years as they flogged the pee tape story for laughs, cementing in the minds of millions of viewers that it was true.

  7. Carolyn Zaremba
    July 28, 2025 at 14:10

    I clearly remember when Adam Schiff embarrassed him self by giving an anti-Russia speech worthy of Joseph McCarthy. “Reds under the bed” style.

    • Winifred "Fred" Aimes
      July 28, 2025 at 18:45

      I thought one of Joe Biden’s early speeches of hate against China came awfully close to the classic “Yellow Peril” racist screeds. He pretty much said that we should never allow ‘those people’ to be our equals, or even think of themselves as our equals. But never quite touched the ‘yellow’ bit directly, Progressive Democrat that Strom Thurmond’s old friend had become.

      Nice to see the Democrats going back to their traditional, hateful, racist roots. The party of Stephen Douglass who argued against Lincoln’s position that all people should be free, is definitely reaching back into its history.

  8. Drew Hunkins
    July 28, 2025 at 10:56

    Robert Parry and CN were absolutely invaluable during the 2016-’17 time period when the dangerous Russophobic excrement of the mass media was flowing fast and heavy.

    • Winifred "Fred" Aimes
      July 28, 2025 at 18:52

      Robert Parry and CN have been absolutely invaluable from 1995 to present.

      • Drew Hunkins
        July 28, 2025 at 21:03

        Very, very true.

        Back in the mid 1990s I was reading a lot of Alexander Cockburn, Chomsky, Michael Parenti, and Hitchens (before he became a wind up doll for Cheney and Wolfowitz). Occasionally I’d come across Parry’s work which of course was always dynamite.

Comments are closed.