David Rothkopf Profile picture
Mar 25 12 tweets 3 min read
I don't want to stir up the hornets nest of Merrick Garland defenders (yes, I know, seeing nothing is exactly what we should be seeing), but I've got to say, so far all we get daily is more proof of serious crimes from Trump & his bunch and so far...
...not one single example of holding them accountable. This is true at the state and local level too. (The @ManhattanDA situation is a clear example of the wrong decision being made at the wrong time in the wrong way.) Yes, yes...don't @me...it all takes time.
Yes, yes...the processes are all deeply secretive. Yes, yes...there are clues buried in the fourteenth paragraph of the twelfth page of the most recent DoJ filing that suggest that it is possible that Trump might be a person of interest in some unspecified investigation someday.
Yes, yes...I know I'm not a lawyer and that all the lawyers and judges and former DoJ people I know and talk to regularly are wrong to be as nervous and upset as me and you, voices of the Twitterverse are right. So, let's set all that aside. Let's stipulate my ignorance.
What is indisputable as of now, whatever may or may not being happening behind the scenes, is that Trump and Co. and the purveyors of the Big Lie are empowered by the current silence and inaction.
At the same time, the people of the country, seeing the evidence and shocking stories pile up followed by months and months and months of silence and apparent inaction, are losing faith in our system of justice.
Trump's legacy so far is that he more than any individual in US history hast throughout his life demonstrated that the rich & powerful are, effectively, above the law, even if they are serial criminals as Trump is. Even if they have sought to undermine our entire system of gov't.
The inscrutability of due process aside, given the cynical politics of the GOP in our Senate and House, the political activism of the right on our courts (and then some), and the polarization and near-insanity of our state politics, people are losing faith in our system.
The coming election is not likely to improve that situation. Victories by the GOP will elevate a party that has embraced as a leader a man who led a coup and sold out our foreign policy to the most dangerous, evil foreign leader on the planet.
Their past behavior indicates that given more power that will further corrupt our system, gut our democracy, and place themselves above the law. Systemic corrosion will have precisely the same effect as the disinformation campaigns of Putin or Trump or the rest of the GOP.
We will lose faith in the foundational principles and structures of our government. They will weaken and ultimately become unrecognizable. That's the issue of the moment. We are facing a crisis of faith in our justice system of a scope that many Americans have seldom seen before.
(Black Americans have never seen that system work. Nor have the poorest among us. This isn't new for many.) So, leaving the reading of DoJ chicken entrails aside for the moment, let's agree, Trump & Co. must be held accountable soon or the damage done may be irreparable.

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More from @djrothkopf

Mar 27
Brief, cool-headed, foreign policy analysis on why the President saying Putin has got to go is not a problem.
1.) It's true. So long as Putin is at the helm in Russia, the country will be isolated and its people will needlessly suffer.
2.) Offending a sociopathic mass-murderer who has serially violated internationally law, committed countless war crimes and crimes against humanity, and has the deaths of tens of thousands of innocents on his hands, is not actually the wrong thing to do.
3.) No, seriously, what is he going to do that he has not already done? (And please, he is not going to escalate the war because Biden called for him to go when countless others have done so, called him a war criminal, and worse.) He's not that thin skinned.
Read 7 tweets
Mar 26
Naturally, much press attention is being devoted to Biden's final remark. First, it shouldn't distract from the historical significance of the speech. We're a watershed in history. Biden described the stakes well & is correct that this will be the defining struggle of our times.
Next, Russian "outrage" at the remark is transparent, hypocritical & they would have found reason for outrage no matter what Biden said. They are serially committed war crimes against an innocent neighbor. They have attacked American democracy directly.
They have actually tried to choose who America's leader was and depose the leader of Ukraine. They have no moral standing to make any criticism of Biden whatsoever. Finally, while Biden's final comment, that Putin has to go, may have distracted from the foreign policy thrust...
Read 5 tweets
Mar 26
President Biden's historic speech will be seen as defining a line in history, a moment when the world was once again formally divided between the forces of democracy and those of autocracy, between those who value freedom and those who fear it.
It was resonant because it echoed the past. It was resonant because not far from where the President spoke, the brutality of the enemy we are facing, the stakes in this battle and the courage of those we fight alongside were all being made so clear in Ukraine.
But it was also resonant for Americans because unlike in the past, we know the dividing line about which @POTUS spoke cuts through our country like a knife. The forces of authoritarianism have already attacked our democracy and continue to do so.
Read 13 tweets
Mar 26
The Russian invasion of Ukraine has revealed a geopolitical landscape quite different from that officials and many experts thought was in place. On the one hand, as many have noted, the Atlantic alliance has come together and is now more unified than in decades.
There are countries that have indicated that within that alliance that they are less reliable and more sympathetic to Russia, like Hungary. Next, Russia and China have revealed they are committed to a close working partnership.
China may be ill at ease with some of the conduct of this war but has committed to assisting Russia. Both Xi and Putin see the U.S. as a threat to their ambitions and their desire to counter U.S. influence is one of the primary motivations behind the partnership.
Read 18 tweets
Mar 25
Before the invasion began, it looked like there were a couple possibilities for the Russians, strengthen claims to Donbas, Luhansk, Crimea or expand them westward possibly to Dnieper or go for all of Ukraine, take Kiev and decapitate the government.
They tried the last option, the big one, and are failing. Now there are rumblings they may fall back to the least ambitious option--after having devastated Ukraine and their own army. If they do, and it's a way out for Ukraine...well, that's up to Ukraine.
But, by any other metric it will have been a failure, a black eye for Russia, the economic consequences of sanctions and the war itself will take many years from which to recover and even if Ukraine cedes those territories, it can be a win for Kiev and Zelenskyy.
Read 6 tweets
Mar 25
The current trip to Europe is a good an example of leadership in action from a US president as we have seen in many years. Not just confidence, competence, and a clear vision at a critical moment but leading by example. We're not just talking the talk, we're walking the walk.
In critical area after critical area, we've seen concrete steps to ratchet up support for Ukraine, for Europe and to increase pressure on Europe, meaningful measures on military & humanitarian aid, sanctions, energy security for our allies.
As importantly, thanks to effective diplomacy and a real commitment to being a good partner, @POTUS, @SecBlinken, @SecDef, @JakeSullivan46 & their teams have helped usher in an era in which the Atlantic Alliance is more unified than it has been for years.
Read 11 tweets

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