Russian hacking and glass houses
Recalling dubious actions of past U.S. presidents from both parties
Many top U.S. intelligence agencies have concluded that Russian President Vladimir Putin directed a secret intelligence operation for the purpose of discrediting Hillary Clinton, thereby helping Donald Trump win the 2016 presidential election.
Hillary Clinton has done more to discredit herself, going back to her time as first lady of Arkansas, than the Russians could ever do.
According to an April 2015 Quinnipiac University poll, a majority of U.S. voters, 54 percent, found Hillary Clinton to be dishonest and untrustworthy. As Election Day approached, an ABC News/Washington Post poll found 46 percent of respondents thought Trump more trustworthy.
Granted, this last poll followed emails and documents the intelligence agencies claim Russia hacked from the Democratic National Committee and the posting of “fake news” on social media. Even so, if Clinton had consistently displayed good character, it would have been difficult for anyone to smear her.
While Democrats and some Republicans are blasting Russia, they should recall dubious actions by the United States. Presidents from both parties have a long history of lying and attempting to dictate who should rule other nations.
Presidents from both parties have a long history of lying and attempting to dictate who should rule other nations.
The John F. Kennedy Presidential Library and Museum website reminds: “… on November 1, 1963, the South Vietnamese government was overthrown. The coup had the tacit approval of the Kennedy administration. President Diem was assassinated, after refusing an American offer of safety if he agreed to resign.”
In 1973, Henry Kissinger urged President Richard Nixon to overthrow the democratically elected government in Chile because Kissinger believed President Salvador Allende’s “model effect can be insidious,” according to now unclassified documents from the National Security Archive.
President George W. Bush launched Operation Iraqi Freedom in an effort to rid the world of Iraq’s tyrannical dictator Saddam Hussein on the pretense that he had, or was developing, weapons of mass destruction, which were never found.
President Barack Obama undermined the government of Egyptian President Hosni Mubarak, which led to the election of President Mohamed Morsi, a leader in the radical Muslim Brotherhood. He was replaced by the current government, installed by Egyptians displeased with the radicals, despite opposition from the Obama administration.
President Obama and Hillary Clinton advocated for the overthrow of Libyan dictator Muammar Qaddafi, which created a vacuum filled by terrorists who murdered the U.S. ambassador and two other Americans in Benghazi.
Two years ago, top Obama campaign aide Jeremy Bird advised a group sent to Israel from the United States for the purpose of defeating Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu. Is that morally different from what Putin allegedly orchestrated to influence the American election?
U.S. presidents and politicians have been lying to us for decades, going back to the U-2 incident when President Dwight D. Eisenhower first denied and then was forced to admit that the spy plane had flown over the Soviet Union.
Military leaders inflated the enemy body counts in Vietnam in a failed attempt at persuading the public we were winning that war.
Cooked intelligence information about ISIS was given to President Obama. As the New York Post reported in September 2015, “An open revolt is under way within the U.S. intelligence establishment, with more than 50 veteran analysts charging their reports on ISIS were systematically changed to reflect the White House line.”
Any Russian involvement in the November election appears to have uncovered information that Democrats were trying to hide and that reporters missed or ignored. What’s worse, the deeds or the way the deeds were discovered?
Given America’s record of meddling in other countries and of leaders who have lied to us, we shouldn’t throw stones from glass houses.
Listen to Cal Thomas’ commentary on the Jan. 10 edition of The World and Everything in It.
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