The story was titled “Murphy ‘Country should be scared’ of
Republican partisanship over Ukraine.” The story was an
accurate review of U. S. Senator Chris Murphy’s appearance on Meet the Press early in October.
Murphy was meeting the press to “push back” at “Republican
critics of the impending House impeachment inquiry into President Donald
Trump’s phone call with the president of Ukraine.” Murphy admonished, “This
entire country should be scared that at a moment when we need patriots, what we
are getting is blind partisan loyalty.”
The interviewer, a cringingly sympathetic Chuck Todd, did
not remind Murphy in his interview that, during a trip to Ukraine with
Republican U.S. Senator Ron Johnson,
Murphy also had intervened in an on again off again Ukrainian investigation of
the country’s natural gas producer, Burisma and, inescapably, Democrat
candidate for president Joe Biden’s roll
in firing a prosecutor whose investigation of Biden’s son, Hunter Biden, had
been dormant two years before Hunter was hired by Burisma at $50,000 per month,
largely for being the Vice President’s son. In a later interview with Murphy's companion in Ukraine, GOP Senator Ron Johnson, Todd got some well deserved push-back.
According to an piece in The Hill written by John Solomon
that names names and pointedly does not rely on anonymous sources or "whistle
blower" complaints, “Let's get real: Democrats were first to
enlist Ukraine in US elections,” the presumed corruption of Ukraine by
Trump has an extensive pre-history. It
always takes two to corrupt, and the first corrupter out of the gate, Solomon
reminds us, was the Obama administration.
“As early as January 2016,” Solomon writes, “the Obama White
House unexpectedly invited Ukraine’s top prosecutors to Washington to discuss
fighting corruption in the country.” The meeting, passed off as a training
exercise, was in fact “a pretext for the Obama administration to pressure
Ukraine’s prosecutors to drop an investigation into the Burisma Holdings gas
company that employed Hunter Biden and to look for new evidence in a
then-dormant criminal case against eventual Trump campaign chairman Paul
Manafort, a GOP lobbyist.”
Solomon quotes “Andrii Telizhenko, the former political
officer in the Ukrainian Embassy in Washington who organized and attended the
meetings” to this effect: “U.S. officials ‘kept talking about how important it
was that all of our anti-corruption efforts be united.’” And Ukraine’s chief
anti-corruption prosecutor Nazar Kholodnytsky told Solomon that “soon after he
returned from the Washington meeting, he saw evidence in Ukraine of political
meddling in the U.S. election. That's when two top Ukrainian officials released
secret evidence to the American media, smearing Manafort,” the Connecticut
native dismissed from the Trump presidential campaign. “A Ukrainian court,”
Solomon tells us “concluded last December that the release of the evidence
amounted to an unlawful intervention in the U.S. election by Kiev’s government,
although that ruling has since been overturned on a technicality.”
In March 2016, “a contractor for the Democratic National
Committee (DNC) pressed his embassy to try to find any Russian dirt on Trump
and Manafort that might reside in Ukraine’s intelligence files,” then Ukrainian
ambassador to the United States Valeriy Chaly confided to Solomon. “The DNC
contractor also asked Chaly's team to try to persuade Ukraine’s president at
the time, pro-Russian Petro Poroshenko, to make a statement disparaging
Manafort when the Ukrainian leader visited the United States during the 2016
election. Chaly said his embassy rebuffed both requests because it recognized
they were improper efforts to get a foreign government to try to influence the
election against Trump and for Hillary Clinton.”
Murphy was performing a useful partisan service when, during
a recent visit with Ukraine’s new and as yet uncorrupted President Volodymyr Zelensky, Connecticut’s Junior Senator “made clear — by his own account — that Ukraine
currently enjoyed bipartisan support for its U.S. aid but that
could be jeopardized if the new president acquiesced to requests by
President Trump’s
lawyer Rudy Giuliani to
investigate past corruption allegations involving Americans, including former
Vice President Joe
Biden’s family (links original).”
At present, there are only two kinds of interventionists in
Ukraine: a party of maximum disclosure, and a party of highly edited minimum
disclosure. One group, led by Connecticut U.S. Attorney John Durham,
wants to peel back the “Russian collusion” onion and make public what this
columnist elsewhere has called the “prequel
to the Mueller investigation” which, after two long years of blaring
anti-Trump headlines, found there was no provable collusion between Trump
and President of Russia Vladimir Putin. The Durham investigatory effort
embraces much more than the Biden intervention in Ukraine. The second group
wants to smother the Durham investigation by over-layering it with news of a
secret impeachment investigation designed to create a plausible narrative --
salacious parts of which will be leaked to favored left of center news outlets
-- that would overshadow any richly researched detailed findings of
the Durham report.
And Ukraine
– always in danger of Putin predations -- is simply the canary in this
political explosive mine shaft.
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