Elizabeth Zentos was co-host (with Eric Ciaramella) of Jan 19, 2016 meeting with Ukrainian prosecutors. She insolently refused to identify her superiors or her subordinates, either at NSC or State Dept. Insolence of bureaucracy to Republicans is quite astounding.
3/ Zentos even refused to confirm that "Eric" in March 4, 2016 email was Eric Ciaramella, her co-host of Jan 19, 2016 meeting with Ukrainians.
4/ Senate committee referred to Jan 19, 2016 meeting hosted by Zentos and Ciaramella, citing email correspondence and itinerary, but unaccountably failed to consult Obama WH visitor logs (discussed in this corner of twitter long ago).
5/ other attendees at Jan 19, 2016 meeting, besides those named in Senate report, included Jeffrey Cole, Catherine Newcombe, Anna Iemelianova and Svitlana Pardus.
6/ Senate report failed to mention or discuss a Jan 28, 2016 email from Deputy Secretary State Tony Blinken's office about Hunter Biden. Blinken is a Joe Biden operative and in present campaign.
7/ Senate Report begins discussion of Blue Star Strategies (p 42) in March 2016. They described Blue Star as "Democrat", but didn't mention that Tramontano was former Bill Clinton COS. Didn't mention her Feb 24 email to U/S State Novelli
8/ they cite a Mar 21, 2016 email from Blue Star to Hochstein (omitted in original FOIA), one day prior to Joe Biden demand for Shokin dismissal, asking for meeting on "sensitive energy matter" prior to Poroshenko visit [on Mar 31]
9/ a new detail: on Mar 22, Tramontano and Painter met with Oksana Shulyar at Ukraine Embassy and discussed Burisma.
10/ they didn't discuss Shulyar any further. Shulyar is shown in Apelbaum's opus as being "handled" by notorious Democrat operative Alexandra Chalupa and close to Melanie Verveer apelbaum.wordpress.com/2018/03/17/the…
10/ another new detail: after Mar 22 meeting, Blue Star asked Ukraine Embassy at 6:06 pm to help set up meeting with Prosecutor General on April 6. Same day as Biden was demanding firing of Shokin.
11/ in exchange, the Democrat fixers at Blue Star offered their influence with Obama admin in arranging meetings, up to an including Obama chief of staff McDonough
12/ Senate report didn't follow up on Lozhin. Lozhin's June 2016 visit to US was discussed by Cyber-Berkut, where he was supposedly given documents by Glenn Simpson on Manafort via Evan Ryan of State Dept (Biden operative Tony Blinken's wife) web.archive.org/web/2016111918…
13/ Senate report didn't analyse Oksana Shulyar's visits to White House, which included visits to Vice President Biden staffer Carpenter, Zentos and Biden himself.
14/ another new detail: on Mar 24, Blue Star operatives met with Hochstein at State Dept and, inter alia, discussed their Dec 2015 meeting with ambassador Pyatt
15/ there are many interesting new details in Senate report on Biden transactions outside Ukraine, but I'll continue here on Ukraine chronology, about which I've written previously.
16/ Senate reports numerous, previously unknown out-of-office meetings between Zentos (+sometimes Ciaramella) and Ukrainian embassy's Telizhenko: Feb 9, 23; Mar 4, 10, Apr 13, May 4, all in Washington. Jul 9 in Ukraine. By July, Blue Star had hired Telizhenko.
17/ In June, Ukraine embassy employee Telizhenko had advised Blue Star on how to get meeting with new Prosecutor General. (Buretta's May 21 request had got nowhere.) In July, Telizhenko got contract from Blue Star.
18/ Blue Star later told WSJ that they had never paid off a Ukraine embassy employee while he was an embassy employee. However, with, so to speak, military timing, Telizhenko went directly from embassy employee to Blue Star contractor. A quid pro Joe, I guess.
19/ digressing from Ukraine, startling new revelations of other payoffs. On Feb 14, 2014, at height of Maidan regime change coup under Joe Biden's direction, Elena Baturina, a Russian oligarch, paid $3.5 million to firm owned by Kerry's stepson and Hunter Biden for "consulting".
20/ in 2015, Baturina sent another nearly $400,000 to the Hunter Biden-Kerry stepson firm.
21/ on Apr 22, 2014, as Joe Biden was becoming US viceroy in Ukraine, Kenges Rakishev, a Kazakh businessman, wired $142,300 to the Hunter Biden-Kerry stepson company "for a car". (Bill's help in embezzlement of Kazakh uranium was source of huge "donation" to Clinton Foundation.)
22/ Hunter Biden's Chinese connections are discussed at length hsgac.senate.gov/imo/media/doc/… and too lengthy to briefly summarize. This caught my eye: $5 million in fees paid by Chinese company to Hunter's law firm in 2017-18.
24/ Solomon observed that Biden's partner, Kerry protege and fellow Burisma director Devon Archer, claimed that Russian oligarch Butarina had invested over $200 million in Archer's investment funds. justthenews.com/sites/default/…
25/ back to Ukraine chronology: in previous release justthenews.com/sites/default/… on August 29, 2016, Telizhenko, as employee of Ukraine embassy, was arranging visit of former Ukraine Prosecutor General Yarema to Washington. Senate report says contract with Blue Star began in Jul 2016
26/ in same Kent correspondence, on Jan 13, 2017, Kent told Yovanovitch that Blue Star fixers Tramontano, Painter on "Atlantic Council roster" and that Atlantic Council's Ukraine program being funded by Burisma and oligarchs Pinchuk, Akhmetov
27/ @willchamberlain has excellent commentary on payment of $6 million to Hunter Biden from crooked Chinese oligarch. Will thinks that it may be bank fraud.
Will also points out that this is all brand new information.
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Here's a listing of Minority HPSCI Staff in early 2017. Most of the redactions in yesterday's release can be identified here.
In two of the 302s, WHISTLEB described the HPSCI Democrat system for exfiltrating secret information from a secure room in a three letter agency: presumably FBI, from which copies and notes were prohibited.
As a work-around, three HPSCI Democrat staffers would attend the Secure Room and, after each visit, "would immediately compose summaries" on a standalone computer set up in a back room by "committee's network administrator" for exclusive use by "Russian team" members. After the three Russian team members had completed their visit summaries, they briefed certain other staffers.
All of the names underneath the redactions can be plausibly identified from contemporary HPSCI Democrat staff rosters as shown below.
Here is a transcription of each of the two descriptions of the Russian team and secondary briefees, showing character counts.
The Russian Team had two 16s (at least one with LN8) and an 11. (number denotes character count of full name.)
The secondary briefees were a 6+5 (12), two 13s (one a 5+7), an 11, and the communications director (a 14). One of the 13s was a new hire.
Durham Classified Appendix is almost entirely about "Clinton Plan". Unsurprisingly, nothing about the post-election events during which Russiagate collusion hoax actually metastasized under FBI and CIA into a national flesh-eating disease.
Emails from Lenny Benardo of Soros' Open Society Foundation feature prominently. Note that Benardo was mentioned in a Washington Post article by Demirjan and Devlin Barrett on May 24, 2017 (a few days after Mueller appointment) - archive archive.is/w43O2 reporting that the email had been dismissed by FBI as "unreliable". DWS, Benardo and Renteria said at the time that they had never been interviewed by FBI.
Fool_Nelson proposed Julie Smith as Foreign Policy Advisor-2 in Durham report at the time:
Here's a July 27, 2016 email (attributed to Benardo) which contains a detail relevant to the argument against @DNIGabbard's first drop, claiming that Russian interference concern was NEVER about election infrastructure, but always about DNC hack and Buff Bernie memes. Here Benardo talks about how to make Russia "a domestic issue" by raising the spectre of a "critical infrastructure threat for the election". Brennan subsequently did just that: raised concern about "infrastructure threat". ODNI played down that threat in their briefings and ultimately in the proposed post-election PDB of December 8, 2016 which was cancelled by Obama intervention.
the ICA version in the recent DNI documents is a different version (dated January 5, 2017) than the released version (dated January 6, 2017). There were many changes overnight - some substantive.
Before editorializing, I'll laboriously go through comparisons - final version on left, previous day version on right. (I apologize for not marking this on each of the following slides.)
The Jan 6, 2017 version contained a preface entitled "Background... The Analytic Process and Cyber Incident Attribution", not present in the Jan 5 version (as shown). It has two sections.
The first section entitled "The Analytic Process" stated that these assessments "adhere to tradecraft standards".
"On these issues of great importance to US national security, the goal of intelligence analysis is to provide assessments to decisionmakers that are intellectually rigorous, objective, timely, and useful, and that adhere to tradecraft standards."
Now recall the dispute over inclusion of Steele dossier information in the ICA as an appendix and, as we recently learned, as a bullet supporting the assessment that Putin "aspired" to help Trump. Some IC professionals objected to the inclusion of Steele dossier information on the grounds that it did not meet tradecraft standards for inclusion in an ICA. Comey, McCabe and FBI insisted on its inclusion on the grounds that Obama had said to include "everything" - which they interpreted as mandating inclusion of Steele dossier information even though it didn't meet tradecraft standards.
Reasonable people can perhaps disagree on whether this was justified or not. What was not justified was the claim that the inclusion decision complied with "tradecraft standards". It was bad enough to include non-compliant material, but the claim that the included material "adhered to tradecraft standards" was miserably false. The recent Tradecraft Review should have addressed this fault.
The preface also included the following assertion:
"The tradecraft standards for analytic products have been refined over the past ten years. These standards include describing sources (including their reliability and access to the information they provide), clearly expressing uncertainty, distinguishing between underlying information and analysts’ judgments and assumptions, exploring alternatives, demonstrating relevance to the customer, using strong and transparent logic, and explaining change or consistency in judgments over time."
The "past ten years" here refers to the period of time since the savage tradecraft review by the WMD Commission, an excellent repot on a previous intelligence failure of similar scale to the Russia collusion hoax as an //intelligence failure// - which it was (even if non-criminal).
They state that "standards include describing sources (including their reliability and access to the information they provide)". Now apply that to the description of the Steele network in the classified appendix (declassified and released in 2020) shown below and transcribed as follows:
"the source is an executive of a private business intelligence firm and a former employee of a friendly foreign intelligence service who has been compensated for previous reporting over the past three years. The source maintains and collects information from a layered network of identified and unidentified subsources, some of which has been corroborated in the past. The source collected this information on behalf of private clients and was not compensated for it by the FBI".
This description does not remotely comply with the warranty in the Preface. We know that Steele (the "source") had told the FBI that his information was funneled through a "Russian-based sub-source" who Steele refused to identify. Steele did however tell the FBI that Sergei Millian was one of the sub-subsources to the "Russian-based sub-source". By mid-December 2016, the FBI had figured out that Steele's "Russian-based sub-source" was Igor Danchenko, an alumnus of U of Louisville, Georgetown and Brookings Institute, who lived in northern Virginia and had an American-born daughter. A fulsome description of sources IN ACCORDANCE WITH THE WARRANTY IN THE PREFACE would have included these details and more.
It would have also stated that the FBI planned to interview the Primary Sub-Source as soon as possible. Given the importance of the document, the obvious question from any sane reviewer of the draft ICA would be: "uh, why don't you interview Steele's Primary Sub-Source right now? Today? " "And, by the way, why are you saying that he is 'Russian-based' when he lives in northern Virginia?"
If the reviewers had known that Steele's Primary Sub-Source had lived in northern Virginia and was available for interview, maybe they would have said: "uh, maybe we should hold off this ICA until we talk to Danchenko. This is a big document, maybe we should do some due diligence". But they weren't given that option, because Danchenko's location in northern Virginia was concealed from them. The warranty in the prefatory Background was false.
Subsequently, a few weeks later, when the FBI interviewed Danchenko and he revealed that there wasn't any "layered network" and that the key allegations were based (at best) on an anonymous phone call and that many of the sourcing claims in the dossier were untrue, the intelligence community had an obligation to fess up. To retract their claims about the Steele dossier, which, by the end of January, had emerged in public consciousness as the driving predicate of the Russia collusion investigation. Once the FBI knew that the sourcing claims were fraudulent, they had an obligation to disclose that to the rest of the IC and to publicly disown the Steele dossier, which had become important to the public precisely because of its endorsement in the ICA.
Trump's latest tariff venture is a 50% tariff on copper, ostensibly for national security reasons. Copper markets are something that I analysed in the 1970s; so I know the structure of the markets and statistics. I was even been involved as a junior analyst in a trade case about US copper tariffs.
Under the US Defense Production Act, Canada is considered "domestic production" for the purposes of national security, but neither Trump nor the Canadian government seem to have had any interest in this legislation.
I remember the difficulties of trying to make long-term forecasts of copper supply and demand. Copper is also a market with voluminous statistics maintained consistently for a very long period. US Geological Survey for US consumption and primary production of refined copper for 1950-2024 are shown below. As someone who, in the 1970s, actually thought about what this chart would look like, it was interesting to re-visit.
In the 1920s and 1930s, US copper company were industrial behemoths: Anaconda, Kennecott, Phelps Dodge and Asarco, all now forgotten, were among the top 20 or top 50 US stocks back in the day. In the 1970s, they were still major companies. US accounted for about 25% of world production and consumption.
But, as you can see, since 2000, both US primary production and US refined consumption have declined precipitously. US refined consumption is now at lower levels than in the 1970s and US primary production is less than the early 1950s.
What will be the impact of a 50% tariff on copper imports? In the next post, I'll show how the changes in US market compare to world production.
although US copper production has declined since the 1970s, world copper production has almost quadrupled. US share of world copper refined production (here primary plus secondary scrap) has decreased from about 25% to 3%.
US copper production and consumption no longer dominate world markets - despite what the Beltway may imagine. An approximate 3% share doesn't get to dictate prices.
That means that the 50% copper tariff will be borne entirely by US copper consumers (i.e. manufacturers using copper). US producers will almost certainly increase their price to match the price of imports. So the tariff will be a bonanza for US domestic producers (e.g. Freeport McMoran) and a burden for US manufacturers.
the copper data also shows a vignette into the remarkable change in world economic geography since 9/11. In 2001, US still produced more copper than China. In 2024, China produced more than 13(!) times as much copper as USA. This isn't just production, but also consumption. Chinese manufacturers consume most of their copper production; their copper consumption is accordingly an order of magnitude greater than US copper consumption.
So when Trump puffs about the importance of USA as a market, this is simply not true of a basic commodity like copper. And I'm skeptical that it is true for other basic commodities.
on first page: Brennan's lawyer, Robert Litt, was General Counsel at ODNI in 2016 and involved in some key events. Litt published an article in October 2017 lawfaremedia.org/article/irrele… which claimed that "The dossier itself played absolutely no role in the coordinated intelligence assessment that Russia interfered in our election." The recent Tradecraft Review, abysmal as it was, admitted that the dossier was cited in the classified ICA as a bullet support for the claim that Putin "aspired" to help Trump get elected.
@15poundstogo very Clintonian here
Brennan refers here to two press releases issued by William Evanina in July and August 2020. The Evanina statements were prompted in large part by the release of Biden-Poroshenko tapes by Ukrainian parliamentarian Andrii Derkach (who had previously in October 2016 published receipts showing that Hunter Biden was getting paid $1 million per year by Burisma). Shortly after Evanina's statements, "Trump" administration sanctioned Derkach. As a result of these sanctions, Derkach was de-platformed and the Biden-Poroshenko tapes were deleted from nearly all locations. One of the tapes showed that Poroshenko and Biden gloated in August 2016 about the removal of Manafort as Trump campaign chair as a result of Ukrainian interference (Black Ledger announcement.)
I just noticed that the information in Binder on Trump briefing in Aug 2016 was previously published by Grassley in July 2020, a few days after identification of Steele Primary Sub-source (and thus we, in this corner, were otherwise preoccupied). grassley.senate.gov/imo/media/doc/…
The new version sheds light on a previous redaction. Katrina, Norm, Ted, John and Amir were mentioned. Just noting this for future reference.
something else that I'm noticing in the less redacted documents: Kevin Clinesmith was much more prominent in Crossfire Hurricane operation than we previously realized.
In real time, Hans, myself and others had vehemently and savagely criticized Durham's useless plea agreement with Clinesmith that had failed to use their leverage over Clinesmith to obtain a road map of the Russiagate hoax operation. Compare for example Mueller's use of leverage over Rick Gates to interview him about 20 times, If anything, there was more leverage over Clinesmith.
Durham's failure to lever Clinesmith looks worse and worse as we now see Clinesmith's name in multiple Crossfire documents that had previously been redacted.
For example, here is Clinesmith on August 30, 2016 - early days of Russiagate hoax - approving the reporting of FBI surveillance of Trump and Flynn while they were supposedly providing a counterintelligence briefing.
In this briefing, they failed to give Trump and Flynn the same warning about Turkey that they had previously given Clinton's lawyers.
here's an example where the "declassified" Binder contains a redaction not made in the version published by Grassley almost five years ago. the name of Edward (Ted) Gistaro of ODNI