Charlie Savage Profile picture
Aug 24, 2020 14 tweets 7 min read Read on X
I read @AndrewCMcCarthy’s nearly 3000 word take (just part 1 of 3!) on the Clinesmith plea. I agree with some of it, but think he is also serving up to readers of NR a distorted picture about certain empirical things. /1 nationalreview.com/2020/08/clines…
As a preliminary matter, tho, I note that McCarthy accurately describes Clinesmith as “a junior officer – support personnel.” Some pro-Trump voices get mad when Clinesmith is described as a lower-level FBI lawyer, so I wonder if they will give him flak for that. /2 Image
In 2008-13 Page was an “operational contact” for CIA, meaning it could contact him & talk to him about his work w/ Russians but not assign him tasks. McCarthy twists this, calling Page a “CIA operative” the agency somehow “authorized for ‘operational contact’ w/ Russians.” /3 ImageImageImage
McCarthy elevates the relative importance of the suspicions about Page, calling them the "linchpin” of the entire Trump-Russia investigation. They were just one of many strings the F.B.I. was tugging on simultaneously, alongside Manafort, Flynn, Trump Tower, etc. /4 Image
McCarthy portrays Page’s past w/ CIA as meaning the theory he was helping Russia “was untenable” from get-go. Doesn’t mention that CIA dropped him after a GRU recruitment effort in 2013 nor that GOP-controlled SSCI said counterintelligence concerns about Page were justified. /end ImageImage
.@AndrewCMcCarthy has posted another 2500 words on Clinesmith. He continues to mislead @NRO readers (if there is any real-world audience for what’s on track to be 8000 words on this by the 3rd part) about Page's 2008-13 status with the CIA. /6
nationalreview.com/2020/08/clines…
McCarthy keeps twisting the meaning of the CIA term “operational contact,” portraying Page as a CIA “operative” whom the CIA “authorized” to have “operational contact” with Russians & “tasked” him to do so & report back. Is he is feigning ignorance himself or just confused? /7 ImageImage
In the real world, an “operational contact” is an American the *CIA* is authorized to contact but forbidden from tasking for any operational use. Today McCarthy even cites the IG report that makes that explicit, tho he steers his readers away from the page with the definition. /8 ImageImage
Why skew this, while omitting why the CIA abandoned Page in '13 & the GOP-run SSCI's deeming the FBI's suspicions about Page as "justified?" Distorting who Page was enables him to use Clinesmith's crazy June 2017 act to smear the entire FBI team for treating Page as suspicious./9 Image
Anyway, the plausible part of his verbose analysis fits into a tweet: Clinesmith likely recognized in June 2017 that the FBI was facing a bad footnote belatedly disclosing a fact it should have included in previous applications, too, and was trying to paper over the problem. /end
I appreciate that @AndrewCMcCarthy has conceded error in exaggerating Page's status into a kind of spy for the US by saying the CIA tasked him to talk to Russians and report back when it actually was forbidden from tasking him to do anything, but... /1
nationalreview.com/corner/respond… Image
he bizarrely digs in on error of calling Page an "operative" authorized by CIA to have "operational contact" with Russia, despite now acknowledging the IG footnote that makes clear the term means only that CIA was authorized to contact Page but not make operational use of him. /2
He cites p 3 of the information, where the term appears without any def; skipping where p 2 said Page was an operational contact *for the CIA.* Even if he was confused in good faith, having now acknowledged the actual definition, he should correct both pieces on this, too. /end Image
No quarrel with @AndrewCMcCarthy's part 3 on Clinesmith, which doesn't mention "operational contact" and avoids his earlier broader insinuations. It basically rehashes Horowitz's narrative. McCarthy's take on what was specifically going on is plausible.
nationalreview.com/2020/08/kevin-…

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More from @charlie_savage

Dec 9, 2023
Next in our reported-out 2025 Trump policy stakes series went up this a.m. and will be Sunday NYT front: the prospect of withdrawing the USA from or gutting NATO, abandoning Ukraine and a retreat from Europe. w/ @jonathanvswan & @maggieNYT
Gift link: nyti.ms/3uSNafa
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We've been working on this series for 6 months & have been gratified lately to see others start to join in the conversation. We have been determined to stay grounded in what Trump & his truly close advisers have said & to add substantive reporting. Gift links to other chapters:/2
June 15: Trump plans to use the Justice Department as an instrument of vengeance against his adversaries, ending of the post-Watergate norm of DOJ investigative independence from the White House political control./3
nyti.ms/47RfJrQ
Image
Read 18 tweets
Aug 12, 2023
Seeing folks portraying it as a problem or gotcha that Garland appointed Weiss – a sitting US attorney – special counsel even though a 1999 regulation for special counsels has a provision that envisions them being appointed from outside government. Here's an explanation. /1
Takeaway up front: that part of the reg hasn't been understood to impose a controlling limit. It’s a tell that a commentator is not a credible & good-faith source of info if he doesn’t mention that Durham was *also* a sitting US attorney when Barr made him special counsel. /2
An attorney general’s legal authority to appoint someone to run a special investigation doesn’t come from the regulation. It comes from statutes enacted by Congress. Those laws don’t say that appointee has to come from outside government. /3 Image
Read 15 tweets
May 19, 2023
It occurred to me that one of the dishonest things about @marcthiessen’s column that I pointed out yesterday was actually even more egregious and is another affirmative factual error (a charitable word choice) that the WP should correct./15
When he backed his criticism of the FBI's decision to open a full investigation by misleadingly citing a passage about warrant renewal applications, Thiessen inserted "[the Trump campaign]” into a quote from the report. In context, "the target" instead meant Carter Page./16 ImageImage
Ironically, this comes in the same graph that falsely says the FBI presented a doctored email to the FISA court as evidence. That's wrong–it was not shown to the court–but Thiessen himself demonstrably presented a falsely doctored Durham report quote to WP readers as evidence./17 Image
Read 5 tweets
May 18, 2023
.@marcthiessen wrote a shoddy Washington Post column using as a foil the headline of my piece yesterday assessing how the Durham inquiry fell flat after years of political hype. (He didn’t engage with its substance, of course.) A dissection follows. /1
washingtonpost.com/opinions/2023/…
As an initial matter, Thiessen got his start at a lobbying firm that included two named partners – Paul Manafort and Roger Stone – who were convicted of felonies in the Russia investigation & pardoned by Trump. He does not disclose that conflict to the WP’s readers. /2 Image
Thiessen opens by insinuating that I am downplaying Durham bc I'm implicated in (his tendentious portrayal of) the media’s Trump-Russia coverage. Aside from whether he is accurately describing Mueller's complex findings, I wasn't part of the NYT’s Trump-Russia coverage team./3 Image
Read 14 tweets
Apr 27, 2023
DOJ detention memo for Jack Teixeira storage.courtlistener.com/recap/gov.usco… /1
DOJ says he smashed his electronics /2 Image
DOJ says he was suspended from high school for talking about violence and making racial threats /3 Image
Read 9 tweets
Mar 26, 2023
As Alberto @Ibarguen -- the head of the Knight Foundation @knightfdn and former publisher of The @MiamiHerald -- retires, I would like to add a public note of personal appreciation to the encomiums. /1 philanthropy.com/article/knight…
In 1999, when I went to work for The Miami Herald as a cub reporter just out of college and he was its publisher, he took a mentor-like interest in me. We got to know each other over occasional dinners/drinks, a Miami Heat game, etc. /2
In late 2001 or early 2002, when I was thinking about applying for a Knight Foundation journalism fellowship at Yale Law School, he encouraged it (he has a law degree from Penn) and wrote a strong letter of recommendation that really helped me stand out from the pack. /3
Read 5 tweets

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