The Daily - Why Trump Still Believes (Wrongly) That Ukraine Hacked the D.N.C.
Episode Date: November 26, 2019In the phone call at the center of the impeachment inquiry, President Trump asked Ukraine for two different investigations. Today, we explore the unexpected story behind one of them. Guest: Scott Shan...e, a national security reporter in the Washington bureau of The New York Times. For more information on today’s episode, visit nytimes.com/thedaily. Background reading:How a fringe theory about Ukraine took root in the White House.Moscow has run a yearslong operation attempting to essentially frame Ukraine for its own 2016 election interference, according to United States intelligence agencies.
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From The New York Times, I'm Michael Barbaro.
This is The Daily.
Today, in the phone call at the center of the impeachment inquiry,
President Trump asked Ukraine for two different investigations.
Scott Shane on the unexpected story behind one of them.
Scott Sheen on the unexpected story behind one of them.
It's Tuesday, November 26th.
We are joined right now, it is our great pleasure to welcome the President of the United States,
Donald Trump, calling in. Mr. Trump, good morning to you.
Good morning.
Good to have you on Fox & Friends today.
So on Friday, President Trump called in to Fox & Friends,
one of his favorite shows on Fox News.
And what ensued was really a 53-minute stream of consciousness.
This was spying on my campaign,
something that has never been done in the history of our country.
They thought I was going to win, and they said, how could we stop them?
You know, a lot of people say deep state.
I don't like to use the word deep state.
I just say they're really bad, sick people.
And one of the things he talked about was a theory that's really at the heart of the
impeachment inquiry.
It's very interesting.
They have the server, right, from the DNC,
Democratic National Committee.
Who has the server?
The FBI went in and they told him,
get out of here, you're not getting it,
we're not giving it to you.
They gave the server to CrowdStrike,
or whatever it's called,
which is a company owned by a very wealthy Ukrainian.
And it was the same theory that he brought up
with the president of Ukraine, President Zelensky, in this famous phone call on July 25th.
The theory, the false theory, is that Ukraine and not Russia was responsible for the hacking of the 2016 election.
And that Ukraine was assisted in this by a company called CrowdStrike.
Scott, what would make the president believe this theory and mention this company by name?
Well, let's start with the undisputed facts. Back in the spring of 2016, of course, it was the middle of the presidential race,
and the Democratic National Committee discovers that its computers have been hacked.
So they call their cybersecurity contractor CrowdStrike. And CrowdStrike is a California company that was co-founded by a fellow who immigrated as a child from Russia and really one of the top cybersecurity companies out there.
examine these computers and basically do what any cybersecurity company does, which is kick out the hackers, kind of clean up the computer servers, and make sure the organization can
keep functioning.
So essentially, CrowdStrike and the DNC report this to the FBI.
Hacking is, of course, a crime, so the FBI begins its own investigation.
And CrowdStrike is in communication the whole time with the FBI.
And so they're essentially working alongside each other and zeroing in, in part, on who did it
by looking at the, essentially, the fingerprints of the burglars who broke into the computer system,
the sort of telltale signs that particular hacking groups leave behind.
And all those telltale signs were pointing to Russia,
and in particular to hackers who work for the Russian government.
And they did it, American intelligence agencies conclude,
And they did it, American intelligence agencies conclude, to assist Donald Trump and especially to damage Hillary Clinton in this presidential race.
So where does this Trump theory that he talks about on Fox News that becomes part of the impeachment inquiry, where does that intersect with the story that you just laid out, the undisputed fact story? Well, President Trump takes the players that exist in real life,
but in each case sort of distorts the facts.
And the main purpose of the distortion seems to be to bring Ukraine in at each point.
So he says that CrowdStrike, this California company,
is Ukrainian, owned by a rich Ukrainian.
Not true.
He says the FBI dropped the ball on this investigation and turned everything over to CrowdStrike and let them essentially take over.
Not true. And he says that as a result of CrowdStrike taking over, because he thinks CrowdStrike is a Ukrainian company, the server, the DNC server that he's very focused on, has somehow ended up in Ukraine.
It's hidden in Ukraine.
So the gist of what he's saying to the American public is you can't believe what the FBI told you about the hacking of the 2016 election. In fact, the FBI messed up this investigation and all signs point not to Russia,
but to Ukraine. So this is a pretty unified theory that CrowdStrike is Ukrainian,
theory that CrowdStrike is Ukrainian, CrowdStrike gets the computer servers, CrowdStrike places them in Ukraine, but none of it is true.
Exactly.
Why does Trump want Ukraine to be involved and not Russia?
So Trump first mentioned this false theory about Ukraine and CrowdStrike back in April
of 2017.
It was in the middle of an interview with the Associated Press.
It was the early months of his presidency.
And I think in some ways he was still smarting from the implication that he had had Russian
help and that maybe his victory was not legitimate.
And I think he's very worried about that.
You see lots of signs of his concern about
that. So if he can somehow disprove or divert attention from the notion that Russia helped him
win, he's psychologically and politically a lot better off. And Ukraine is sort of the perfect fall guy in this story.
Russia and Ukraine are at war.
And Ukraine, while I don't think it's fair to say that Ukraine interfered in the election, it is true that a few Ukrainian officials criticized Trump on the campaign trail, things that he was saying, and in some cases praised Hillary Clinton.
So if he can shift the blame from Russia to Ukraine, he can essentially burnish his victory and remove this cloud over his presidency, and make the claim that his victory is all the greater because
not only did no foreign actor help him, but he had to overcome interference by these hostile
Ukrainians who, as he put it once, tried to take me down. So in this theory, which as you just said
is not true, but in this theory, he's not the beneficiary of an election
surreptitiously aided by Russia. He is the victor over an obstacle course laid out by Ukraine.
Exactly. So it wasn't until this same false theory about CrowdStrike in Ukraine turned up in the White House reconstruction of his July call to the president of Ukraine that everybody began focusing on it.
So everybody asked, why did Trump come to believe that Ukraine and not Russia was somehow involved in the hacking?
And where did this bogus theory come from?
But I couldn't find the origin of that story,
and so it remained a little bit of a mystery.
And then new evidence came to light,
and it turned out that its origin
was even more nefarious than we had imagined.
We'll be right back.
So, Scott, what have you found out about where this theory actually came from?
So, Trump's false theory came, it turns out, not from some wacky website or from Twitter.
It may have actually originated with the Russians.
Wow. How would that have worked. So we learned this new information from FBI documents obtained by BuzzFeed,
the news organization under the Freedom of Information Act. And it turns out that Trump
heard from his campaign chairman, Paul Manafort, that Ukraine and not Russia might be responsible
for the hacking. And Manafort, apparently, according to these new FBI documents,
heard this from Konstantin Kalimnik,
who was an associate of his,
who was a dual Russian-Ukrainian national
with very close ties to Russian intelligence.
So a man with ties to Russian intelligence
who works closely with Paul Manafort, Donald Trump's campaign manager in 2016, gives the information to Manafort.
And our understanding goes Manafort would have then passed that on to Trump.
And if what we know about Russia and the way it handles information is true, this would have potentially been a
deliberate misinformation campaign. That's right, because it was certainly in Russia's interest
to shift the blame for interference in the 2016 election away from its intelligence agencies
to anywhere, but to its enemy, Ukraine, that's all the better. And why would Manafort believe this man who's telling him that it's Ukraine, not Russia, behind this meddling?
Well, Manafort, folks might remember, was a longtime political operative in Ukraine.
But he was working in Ukraine on behalf of a pro-Russia political party.
So his political sympathies were on the Russian
side. So in that sense, it would make sense for him to try to turn the Ukrainians into a scapegoat
for Russia's hacking. So everyone in this chain of information has some motivation to support this
theory. The Russians, of course, they want to distract from what they've just done.
This man who gives it to Manafort
because he works with the Russians,
Manafort because he works for Ukrainian business people
who support Russia,
and finally Donald Trump,
who wants anyone other than the Russians
to be responsible for this.
Exactly.
I think we don't know whether any of these parties
actually believes any of this stuff in their heart
of hearts, but it's certainly in their political interest to pass it along. Scott, were you
surprised that two years after President Trump first publicly raises this theory about Ukraine,
he brings it up in a phone call with a foreign leader, despite all of the evidence that it wasn't true?
Yes, I was, because there has been a very important development.
Well, good afternoon. Today, a grand jury in the District of Columbia returned an indictment
presented by the special counsel's office. The indictment charges 12 Russian military
officers by name for conspiring to interfere with the 2016 presidential election. And that was
the indictment by Robert Mueller's investigators of a number of Russian military intelligence
officers. The defendants worked for two units of the main intelligence directorate
of the Russian general staff.
And this indictment was exquisitely detailed
down to the point of, like, what they Googled
before they carried out the hacking.
First, they used a scheme known as spear phishing,
which involves sending misleading e-mail messages
and tricking
the users into disclosing their passwords and security information. And it had their names,
it had their ranks, it had their locations. We need to keep moving forward to preserve our values,
protect against future interference, and defend America. So it seemed to remove all doubts about the role not
only of Russians, but of specific Russian intelligence officers and the Russian state
in carrying out that operation. And nevertheless, here the president was
once again reviving the notion that somehow Ukraine had carried out the hack and presenting this theory of his not just to anyone but to the president of Ukraine and essentially trying to pressure the president of Ukraine into launching an investigation into this completely baseless theory.
So, of course, this pressure that the president puts on Ukraine's president
becomes central to the impeachment inquiry. So how has this theory factored into and been talked
about in the public hearings of the impeachment inquiry? Today, we are joined by Dr. Fiona Hill
and David Holmes. So there was really a standoff between the diplomatic professionals and the real experts on Russia and Ukraine and the Republicans on the committee.
Mr. Chairman, Ranking Member Nunes and members of the committee, thank you for inviting me to testify before you today.
I have a short opening statement. Based on questions and statements I've heard, some of you on this
committee appear to believe that Russia and its security services did not conduct a campaign
against our country and that perhaps, somehow, for some reason, Ukraine did. The professionals,
in particular Fiona Hill, the former top Russia expert on the National Security Council.
This is a fictional narrative that has been perpetrated and propagated
by the Russian security services themselves.
We're emphatic that there was absolutely no truth to the idea
that Ukraine was somehow responsible for the hack.
Any return to order? Mr. Jordan, you're recognized for five minutes.
Thank you, Mr. Chairman, Ambassador.
Thank you for being here.
But the Republicans on the committee, while not entirely embracing Trump's theory,
kept trying to open the door to it.
Ambassadors, should ambassadors ever try to influence host country elections?
No.
Representative Jim Jordan, one of the most aggressive defenders of the
president, you know, said, well... But that's exactly what happened in 2016. In August of 2016,
the very month you went to Ukraine as our ambassador, the Ukrainian ambassador here
in the United States, Ambassador Cholli, wrote an op-ed in The Hill, said this,
Trump's comments send wrong message. Wasn't it true that there
were some Ukrainian politicians who had criticized Trump? In other words, isn't it possible that some
Ukrainians were trying to, as the president said, take him down? You see why maybe? Maybe the
president was a little concerned about what went on in Ukraine.
They weren't completely embracing his theory, but they were bolstering it as well as they could. Louisiana Senator John Kennedy, a Republican on the Senate Judiciary Committee.
And Senator, welcome back to Fox News Sunday.
Thank you, Chris.
And this is actually continued after the last testimony at the hearings.
This actually continued after the last testimony at the hearings. You had Senator John Kennedy of Louisiana, who, when pressed by Chris Wallace of Fox
News.
Senator Kennedy, who do you believe was responsible for hacking the DNC and Clinton campaign computers,
their emails?
Was it Russia or Ukraine? I don't know. Nor do you. Nor do any of
us said, well, I don't know. And you don't know. Let me just interrupt to say the entire intelligence
community says it was Russia. Right. But it could also be Ukraine. I'm not saying that I know one way or the other.
I'm saying that Ms. Hill is entitled to her opinion, but no rebuttal evidence was allowed to be offered.
He continued to insist that it's all a little bit fuzzy. It's a little murky. We don't really know.
We don't know if Ukraine did that. We don't know to what extent because they won't let the president offer his evidence. And that's why.
In other words, we've left behind the crystal clarity of the Mueller indictment last year
that said exactly who was responsible for the hacking. And we've entered this sort of
twilight zone where we don't really know what's true and what's untrue. And that sort of is a
license for President Trump to say whatever he
wants. Scott, what have we learned from the journey of this conspiracy theory and just
how many people seem to be willing to tolerate it? Well, I mean, first of all, this conspiracy theory concerns something of really the utmost importance,
which is the biggest interference by a foreign power in American democracy in history.
And so it would seem very important that we get the facts straight and keep them straight.
very important that we get the facts straight and keep them straight.
But what we've learned from the durability of this conspiracy theory is that when false beliefs arise and linger not on the fringes of the internet, but right inside the Oval Office,
and you have the President of the United States
repeatedly stating them from the biggest bully pulpit in the world,
it becomes a sort of force field that warps everything around it.
And the politics of the impeachment are such that Trump's Republican allies
see their own political futures as very much tied to his,
so they can't confront him and say,
Mr. President, what you're saying is not true.
So this false conspiracy theory lingers, and the president keeps talking about it.
Scott, thank you very much. Thank you, Michael.
The only evidence I have, and I think it's overwhelming, is that it was Russia who tried to hack the DNC computer.
I've seen no indication that Ukraine tried to do it.
On Monday night, during an interview on CNN, Republican Senator John Kennedy backtracked on his comments about Ukraine,
saying he was wrong to suggest that Ukraine might have hacked the DNC servers.
Let me stop you for a second.
Uh-huh.
You just did something we've never heard this president do,
which was say, hey, I know I said that.
I was wrong.
So, good, let's check a big honking box.
You don't think Ukraine was the one to look at the server, then why
do you think the president keeps saying something that he also knows is not true?
But Kennedy insisted, without evidence, that Ukraine tried to interfere in the 2016 election.
Well here's why. There is a lot of evidence, proven and unproven, everybody's got
an opinion, that Ukraine did try to interfere along with Russia and probably others in the
2016 election. What evidence? In January of... We'll be right back.
Here's what else you need to know today.
On Monday, in a closely watched case,
a federal judge ruled that former White House counsel Don McGahn
must testify before House impeachment investigators,
despite the White House's attempts to bar him from testifying.
McGahn is expected to testify about President Trump's efforts to obstruct the Mueller investigation.
The judge in the case rejected the administration's sweeping claims
that presidential advis advisors are immune
from discussing their official duties before Congress, opening the door for House Democrats
to demand testimony from several additional White House officials, including former National
Security Advisor John Bolton and Chief of Staff Mick Mulvaney. And President Trump has ordered that the military
not remove Edward Gallagher from the Navy SEALs,
delivering the final word in a case that has pitted the president
against his own commanders.
Gallagher was at the center of a high-profile war crimes case in Iraq,
but was acquitted of the most serious charges.
After the trial, his superiors sought to expel him from the unit
as punishment for his conduct.
Trump has repeatedly intervened in the case,
each time seeking to protect Gallagher
from losing his status as a Navy SEAL.
That's it for The Daily.
I'm Michael Barbaro.
See you tomorrow.