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Salon
Salon
Politics
Chris Hedges

Trump's real crimes are being ignored

This article originally appeared at ScheerPost. Used by permission.

Donald Trump — now under indictment and facing four government-run investigations, three criminal and one civil — is not being targeted because of his crimes. Nearly every serious crime he is accused of carrying out has been committed by his political rivals. He is being targeted because he is deemed dangerous for his willingness, at least rhetorically, to reject the Washington consensus regarding neoliberal free-market and free-trade policies, as well as the idea that the U.S. should oversee a global empire. He has not only belittled the ruling ideology, but urged his supporters to attack the apparatus that maintains the duopoly by declaring the 2020 election illegitimate.

The Donald Trump problem is the same as the Richard Nixon problem. When Nixon was forced to resign under the threat of impeachment, it wasn't for his involvement in war crimes and crimes against humanity, nor was it for his illegal use of the CIA and other federal agencies to spy upon, intimidate, harass and destroy radicals, dissidents and activists. Nixon was brought down because he targeted other members of the ruling political and economic establishment. Once Nixon, like Trump, attacked the centers of power, the media was unleashed to expose abuses and illegalities it had previously minimized or ignored.

Members of Nixon's re-election campaign illegally bugged the headquarters of the Democratic National Committee in the Watergate office building. They were caught after they broke back into the offices to fix the listening devices. Nixon was implicated in both the pre-election illegality, including spying on political opponents, as well as attempting to use federal agencies to cover up the crime. His administration maintained an "enemies list" that included well known academics, actors, union leaders, journalists, businessmen and politicians.

One 1971 internal White House memo entitled "Dealing with our Political Enemies" — drafted by White House counsel John Dean, whose job it was to advise the president on the law — described a project designed to "use the available federal machinery to screw our political enemies."

Nixon's conduct, and that of his closest aides, was clearly illegal and deserving of prosecution. There were 36 guilty verdicts or guilty pleas associated with the Watergate scandal two years after the break-in. But it was not the crimes Nixon committed abroad or against dissidents that secured his political execution but the crimes he carried out against the Democratic Party and its allies, including in the establishment press.

"The political center was subjected to an attack with techniques that are usually reserved for those who depart from the norms of acceptable political belief," Noam Chomsky wrote in the New York Review of Books in 1973, a year before Nixon's resignation.

As Edward Herman and Chomsky point out in their book, "Manufacturing Consent: The Political Economy of the Mass Media": 

The answer is clear and concise: powerful groups are capable of defending themselves, not surprisingly; and by media standards, it is a scandal when their position and rights are threatened. By contrast, as long as illegalities and violations of democratic substance are confined to marginal groups or dissident victims of U.S. military attack, or result in a diffused cost imposed on the general population, media opposition is muted and absent altogether. This is why Nixon could go so far, lulled into a false sense of security precisely because the watchdog only barked when he began to threaten the privileged.

What led to the unraveling of Nixon's government, and what lies at the core of the attacks against Trump, is the fact that, like Nixon, Trump's targets included "the rich and respectable, spokesmen for official ideology, men who are expected to share power, to design social policy, and to mold popular opinion," as Chomsky noted about Nixon at the time. "Such people are not fair game for persecution at the hands of the state."

This is not to minimize Trump's crimes. Trump — nearly even in the polls with President Joe Biden in the 2024 presidential race — appears to have committed several misdemeanors and serious felonies.

In November 2022, the Department of Justice appointed a special prosecutor to investigate Trump's retention of classified documents at his Mar-a-Lago home in Florida and any potential criminal liability resulting from that act, as well as any unlawful interference with the transfer of power after the 2020 presidential election.

Separately, a district attorney in Georgia is working with a special purpose grand jury in relation to Trump's attempts to overturn the 2020 election result. A key piece of evidence is the notorious phone call between Trump and Georgia's secretary of state, Brad Raffensperger, in which the president kept insisting he needed more votes to be found. Charges in this case could include conspiracy to commit election fraud, racketeering and pressuring and/or threatening public officials.

Manhattan District Attorney Alvin Bragg has now apparently indicted Trump for the $130,000 payment he made to porn star Stormy Daniels, with whom Trump allegedly had a sexual relationship. This payment was misreported in the Trump Organization's records as a legal retainer in violation of campaign finance laws.

Finally, New York Attorney General Letitia James is bringing a civil lawsuit alleging that the Trump Organization lied about its assets in order to secure bank loans. If the attorney general's lawsuit is successful, Trump and other members of his family may be barred from doing business in New York, including buying property there for five years.

Trump's alleged offenses should be investigated. But the cases involving Daniels and the retention of classified documents seem relatively minor, and frankly similar to those committed by Trump's political opponents.

Last year, Hillary Clinton's 2016 campaign and the Democratic National Committee agreed to pay fines of $8,000 and $105,000 respectively, for mislabeling a $175,000 expenditure on opposition research, namely the long-discredited "Steele dossier," as "legal expenses." The improper retention of classified documents has typically resulted in a slap on the wrist when other powerful politicians have been investigated. Clinton, for example, used private email servers instead of a government email account when she was secretary of state. The FBI concluded that she sent and received materials classified as top secret on her private server. Ultimately, FBI director James Comey declined to prosecute her. Trump's former vice president Mike Pence and Biden also had classified documents at their homes, though we are told this may have been "inadvertent." The discovery of these classified documents, rather than triggering outrage in most of the media, initiated a conversation about "overclassification." Former CIA director David Petraeus was given two years probation and a $100,000 fine after he admitted to providing highly classified "black books" that contained handwritten classified notes about official meetings, war strategy, intelligence capabilities and the names of covert officers to his lover, Paula Broadwell, who was also writing a fawning biography of Petraeus.

As was the case with Nixon, the most serious charges Trump may face involve his attack on the foundations of the two-party duopoly, especially undermining the peaceable transfer of power from one branch of the duopoly to the other. In Georgia, Trump could face very serious criminal charges with potentially lengthy sentences if convicted, likewise if the federal special prosecutor indicts Trump for unlawful interference in the 2020 election. We won't know until any indictments are made public.

Yet the most egregious of Trump's actions while in office either received minimal media coverage, were downplayed or lauded as acts carried out in defense of democracy and the U.S.-led international order.

Trump faces a number of serious charges that merit investigation. But his most egregious actions while in office received minimal media coverage — or were applauded.

Why hasn't Trump been criminally investigated for the act of war he committed against Iran and Iraq when he assassinated Iranian Maj. Gen. Qassem Soleimani and nine other people with a drone strike in Baghdad airport? Iraqi Prime Minister Adel Abdul-Mahdi condemned the strike and told his parliament that Trump lied in order to get Soleimani exposed in Iraq as part of peace talks between Iraq, Iran and Saudi Arabia. Iraq's parliament passed a resolution demanding that all foreign troops leave the country, which the U.S. government proceeded to reject.

Why not prosecute or impeach Trump for pressuring his first secretary of state, Rex Tillerson, to lie and say that Iran wasn't complying with the Joint Comprehensive Plan of Action, known as the Iran nuclear deal? Trump ultimately fired Tillerson and resumed unilateral, devastating and illegal sanctions against Iran, in violation of international law and quite possibly domestic U.S. law.

Why wasn't Trump impeached for his role in the ongoing attempts to engineer a coup and overthrow the democratically elected president of Venezuela? Trump declared previously unknown right-wing politician and would-be coup leader Juan Guaidó to be the true Venezuelan president and then illegally handed him control of the Latin American country's U.S. bank accounts. The illegal U.S. sanctions that facilitated this coup attempt have blocked food, medicine and other goods from entering the country and prevented the government from exploiting and exporting its own oil, devastating the economy. Over 40,000 people died between 2017 and 2019 due to the sanctions, according to the Center for Economic and Policy Research. That figure is certainly higher now.

Nixon, like Trump, was not impeached for his worst crimes. He was never charged for directing the CIA to destroy the Chilean economy and back a far-right military coup that overthrew the democratically elected left-wing government of Salvador Allende. Nixon wasn't brought to justice for his illegal, secret mass bombing campaigns in Cambodia and Laos that killed hundreds of thousands of civilians, and his government's role in the slaughter of Vietnamese people, resulting in at least 3.8 million killed, according to a joint report from Harvard University and the University of Washington — and even higher casualties according to investigative journalist Nick Turse. Nixon wasn't held accountable for what then-President Lyndon Johnson privately blasted as "treason" when he discovered that the yet-to-be-elected Republican candidate for president, and his future national security adviser, Henry Kissinger, were deliberately and illegally sabotaging Johnson's peace negotiations in Vietnam, ultimately prolonging the war for another four years. 

Articles of impeachment against Nixon were passed by the House Judiciary Committee. Articles I and III focused on allegations related to Watergate and Nixon's failure to deal properly with congressional investigations. Article II related to allegations of violations of citizens' civil liberties and abuse of government power. But they became moot once Nixon resigned, and in the end the disgraced former president didn't face charges related to Watergate. A month after Nixon left office, President Gerald Ford pardoned him for "all offenses against the United States" that he "committed or may have committed or taken part in during the period from January 20, 1969 through August 9, 1974." 

Like most of his opponents, Trump serves the interests of the billionaire class — but he is impulsive, bigoted, inept and ignorant, an embarrassment to the established power elite.

This pardon cemented into place the imperial presidency. It entrenched the modern notion of "elite immunity," as the constitutional lawyer and journalist Glenn Greenwald notes. Neither Republicans nor Democrats want to set a precedent that might hamstring the unchecked and unaccountable power of a future president.

The most serious crimes are those that are normalized by the power elite, regardless of who initiated them. George W. Bush may have started the wars in the Middle East, but Barack Obama maintained and expanded them. Obama's crowning achievement may have been the Iran nuclear deal, but Biden, his former vice president, hasn't reversed Trump's trashing of it, nor has he reversed the decision by Trump to move the U.S. embassy in Israel from Tel Aviv to Jerusalem in violation of international law. 

Trump, like most of his opponents in the Republican and Democrat parties, serves the interests of the billionaire class. He, too, is hostile to the rights of workers. He, too, is an enemy of the press. He, too, backs the diversion of hundreds of billions of federal dollars to the war industry to maintain the empire. He, too, does not respect the rule of law. He, too, is personally and politically corrupt. But he is also impulsive, bigoted, inept and ignorant. His baseless conspiracy theories, vulgarity and absurd antics are an embarrassment to the established power elite in the two ruling parties. He is difficult, unlike Biden, to control. He has to go, not because he is a criminal, but because he is not trusted by the ruling crime syndicate to manage the firm.

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