The
Washington Post reported last week that there’s very good reason to
believe that Egypt’s dictator, Gen. Abdel Fattah El-Sisi, organized a $10
million cash bribe to Donald Trump when he was most desperate for the same
amount of money during the 2016 election.
American
intelligence reported that el-Sisi ordered $10 million in $100 bills be taken
from a bank in Egypt — representing a large chunk of that country’s entire US
dollar foreign reserves — and have them transported, possibly, to Donald Trump.
As The
Washington Post reported: “Five days before Donald Trump became president in January 2017, a
manager at a bank branch in Cairo received an unusual letter from an
organization linked to the Egyptian intelligence service. It asked the bank to
“kindly withdraw” nearly $10 million from the organization’s account — all in
cash. …
“Federal
investigators learned of the withdrawal, which has not been previously
reported, early in 2019. The discovery intensified a secret criminal
investigation that had begun two years earlier with classified U.S.
intelligence indicating that Egyptian President Abdel Fatah El-Sisi sought to
give Trump $10 million to boost his 2016 presidential campaign, a Washington
Post investigation has found.”
If
proven, it’d be the worst presidential corruption scandal in American history.
And it might have been proven (or disproven) years ago, were it not for the
intervention of Trump’s then-Attorney General Bill Barr.
The
Washington Post reports that Barr fired two US attorneys in a row —
Timothy Shea and Michael Sherwin — in an apparent attempt to make the
investigation into the possible Trump bribe go away. His final choice made the
investigation go away.
This
sort of Republican criminal coverup by Bill Barr shouldn’t surprise us. There was also a time when George HW Bush
and Ronald Reagan were facing the possibility of treason charges, much like
Trump is facing with regard to January 6th — both even worse than accepting a
bribe like Agnew did. Who did they call? Bill Barr.
That
was in the ’80s and early ’90s, but now we discover that Bill Barr really,
truly, definitely also lied to America about presidential treason this decade.
And, based on The Washington Post’s reporting, appears to have
covered up the possibility that Trump took a $10 million bribe.
In
March of 2019, Robert Mueller and the FBI laid out 10 prosecutable incidents of Donald Trump committing
felony obstruction of justice, all to cover up the assistance he was seeking
and receiving from Russian oligarchs and the Russian government that ultimately
helped him win the 2016 election.
Looking
back five years ago, seeing the actual documents from the time, Federal Judge
Amy Berman Jackson noted that Barr’s lies to the American people, to
Congress, and to federal judges were “so inconsistent with evidence in the
record, they are not worthy of credence.”
In
other words, Barr lied or covered up repeatedly to protect Trump. And he did it
to avoid prosecuting Trump, who we can now see had clearly committed crimes —
particularly reaching out to a foreign power for a bribe — that would’ve landed
any other American in prison for decades.
Geoffrey
Berman’s 2022 book details Barr’s attempts to stop prosecutions
of Trump’s friends and co-conspirators, to fire prosecutors with integrity and
replace them with toadies who corrupted the Justice Department, and even to
focus the police power of government against people Trump considered enemies.
For
example, when Trump got pissed at John Kerry, he tweeted that he should be
investigated and prosecuted. Immediately Barr jumped into action, as former
U.S. Attorney for the Southern District of New York Geoffrey Berman told Joe Scarborough on Morning Joe:
“[T]he
statute they wanted us to use was enacted in 1799 and had never been
successfully prosecuted. So for about 220 years, this criminal statute had been
on the books, and not a single conviction, so we investigated it and John Kerry
was entirely innocent, and yet the Justice Department pushed us and pushed us
and pushed us and when I declined, Bill Barr did not take no for an
answer."
Meanwhile,
Barr succeeded in getting Trump’s role in a variety of the felony crimes
ignored, including the crime of campaign fraud for paying off Stormy Daniels to
keep her mouth shut about Trump having sex with her. The list in Berman’s book
is mind-boggling. And now, as of this week, we can add the possibility of
accepting a $10 million bribe from a foreign dictator.
The
corruption of law enforcement and the courts is a cardinal characteristic of
fascism, which is what Trump and — it turns out, Barr — apparently did to
America.
But
this shouldn’t surprise us: it’s not Bill Barr‘s first time playing cover-up
for a Republican president who had committed crimes that could rise to treason
against The United States.
Back
in 1992, the first time Bill Barr was U.S. Attorney General, iconic New York
Times writer William Safire referred to him as “Coverup-General Barr” because of
his role in burying evidence of then-President George H.W. Bush’s involvement
in “Iraqgate” and the “Iran-Contra” scheme with Iran to steal the election from
Jimmy Carter.
Christmas
day of 1992, the New York Times featured a screaming all-caps headline across the top of its
front page: Attorney General Bill Barr had covered up evidence of crimes by
Reagan and Bush in the Iran-Contra scandal.
Earlier
that week of Christmas, 1992, George H.W. Bush was on his way out of office.
Bill Clinton had won the White House the month before, and in a few weeks would
be sworn in as president. But Bush’s biggest concern wasn’t that he’d have to
leave the White House to retire back to Connecticut, Maine, or Texas (where he
had mansions) but, rather, that he may end up embroiled even deeper in the
Iran-Contra treason.
In
other words, George HW Bush’s concern was that he and his colleagues may face
time in a federal prison after he left office.
Independent
Counsel Lawrence Walsh was closing in fast on him and Reagan, and Bush’s
private records, subpoenaed by the independent counsel’s office, were the key
to it all. Walsh had been appointed independent counsel in 1986 to investigate
the Iran-Contra activities of the Reagan administration and determine if crimes
had been committed.
Was
the Iran-Contra criminal conspiracy limited, as Reagan and Bush insisted
(and Reagan said on TV), to later years in the Reagan
presidency, in response to a hostage-taking in Lebanon?
Or
had it started in the 1980 presidential campaign against Jimmy Carter with
treasonous collusion with the Iranians, as the then-president of Iran asserted? Who knew what, and when? And what was George H.W.
Bush’s role in it all?
In
the years since then, the President of Iran in 1980, Abolhassan
Bani-Sadr, has gone on the record saying that the Reagan campaign
reached out to Iran to hold the hostages in exchange for weapons.
“Ayatollah
Khomeini and Ronald Reagan,” President Bani-Sadr told the Christian Science Monitor,
“had organized a clandestine negotiation, later known as the ‘October
Surprise,’ which prevented the attempts by myself and then-US President Jimmy
Carter to free the hostages before the 1980 US presidential election took
place. The fact that they were not released tipped the results of the election
in favor of Reagan.”
That
wouldn’t have been just an impeachable crime: it was treason. Walsh had zeroed in on documents that were in
the possession of Reagan’s former defense secretary, Caspar Weinberger, who all
the evidence showed was definitely in on the deal, and President Bush’s diary
that could corroborate it…
From
The Hartmann Report
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