The Russians and the Election

by | Nov 1, 2016

According to the New York Times and CNN, the FBI has been looking for links between Donald Trump and the Russians. So far, these news outlets report, no links have been found. Sources also tell the NYT and CNN that Russia’s alleged meddling in the election through email hacks has not be intended to help Trump win but only to sow, in CNN’s Evan Perez’s words, “confusion and chaos.”

If that’s so, the Russians are incompetent. How would disclosing emails from Clinton campaign chief John Podesta or the Democratic National Committee sow confusion or chaos? We’re learning things about the inner workings of the campaign that we all ought to want to know, and so far not one of the emails has been shown to be phony. Considering that Podesta and the DNC have the original emails, it is hilarious that they refuse to confirm or deny the authenticity of the leak materials. I take that as confirmation.

By the way, we have been given no reason to believe the Russian government is the source of the emails that WikiLeaks has disclosed. Clinton may say, and the news media may parrot, that 17 U.S. intelligence agencies have confirmed that Russia and Putin were behind the hacks, but this is untrue — those agencies have not done so. If you want to see why I say this, read Jeremy R. Hammond’s “Is Russia Interfering in the US Election? Why You Can’t Believe the NYT.”

It is hard to square two things: 1) that Putin is a crafty ambitious ruler bent on undermining American democracy and 2) that his cyber experts “broke into” the DNC and Clinton campaign and left their “fingerprints” and “calling cards” all over the place. What is more likely: that Putin is trying — in an insanely obvious way — to influence the election, or that someone is trying to make it look as though he is trying to influence the election?

As judges tell jurors, don’t leave your common sense outside the deliberation room.

About Sheldon Richman

Sheldon Richman is the executive editor of The Libertarian Institute and a contributing editor at Antiwar.com. He is the former senior editor at the Cato Institute and Institute for Humane Studies; former editor of The Freeman, published by the Foundation for Economic Education; and former vice president at the Future of Freedom Foundation. His latest books are Coming to Palestine and What Social Animals Owe to Each Other.

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