ADVERTISEMENT

Sens. Grassley & Johnson release declassified Annex to ICA based on the debunked Steele Dossier ****

WVU82

Hall of Famer
May 29, 2001
179,804
52,330
718
https://www.grassley.senate.gov/new...ase-declassified-annex-intelligence-community

Jun 11, 2020

Officials knew early on that debunked dossier at heart of unlawful surveillance lacked verification well before Mueller took over Russia probe

WASHINGTON – U.S. Sens. Chuck Grassley (R-Iowa), chairman of the Senate Finance Committee, and Ron Johnson, chairman of the Senate Homeland Security and Governmental Affairs Committee, released a recently declassified annex to the Intelligence Community’s assessment of Russian election interference, which they received in response to their request for a declassification review by the Director of National Intelligence.

At the FBI’s insistence, the Intelligence Community’s Assessment (ICA) about Russian meddling in the 2016 election included information from the Steele Dossier as “Annex A.”

Intelligence officials disagreed about including it in the body of the assessment given its lack of verification, according to a highly-redacted report by the Senate Select Committee on Intelligence. The annex released today further confirms the material concerns about the credibility of the dossier. The Department of Justice Inspector General’s report about the FBI’s Crossfire Hurricane investigation quoted the annex as explaining that there was “only limited corroboration of [Steele]’s reporting[.]” Annex A also noted that Steele provided the FBI with other information even though he was “unable to vouch for … [its] sourcing and accuracy.” Although Annex A itself acknowledged that “the source’s reporting appears to have been acquired by multiple Western press organizations starting in October [2016],” it was classified and concealed from the public. Though Annex A acknowledged that the reports were produced for private clients, it did not disclose that those clients were the Democratic National Committee and the Clinton campaign. In the spirit of transparency, Sens. Grassley and Johnson are publicly releasing this document so the American people can know the truth about the information contained in the annex.

By the time the ICA was completed on December 30, 2016, the FBI had already relied on the Democrat-funded opposition research dossier to obtain authority to spy on Trump campaign aide Carter Page. Less than two weeks later, the FBI received intelligence reporting that portions of the dossier were inaccurate and “part of a Russian disinformation campaign to denigrate U.S. foreign relations.” Despite that warning, the FISA warrant targeting Page was renewed the same day. That same month, Steele’s primary sub-source told the FBI that Steele’s reporting included misstatements and exaggerations. The following month, another intelligence reports assessed that key claims against Trump “were false, and that they were the product of RIS ‘infiltrat[ing] a source into the network.’” Despite the apparent absence of any initial corroboration and these mounting concerns, the FBI’s investigation continued seemingly unabated. It’s also unclear what, if any, steps were taken by the Intelligence Community to update their assessment based on the warnings.

The Foreign Intelligence Surveillance Court has since rebuked the FBI for misrepresenting the facts in its surveillance applications. The FBI has admitted that at least two of its warrants following the assessment lacked probable cause and the former Deputy Attorney General recently testified that he would not have approved the warrant applications had he known of their deficiencies.


-30-
 
Last edited:
UNCLASSIFIED
DIRECTOR OF NATIONAL INTELLIGENCE
WASHINGTON, DC

The Honorable Charles E. Grassley
Chairman
Committee on Finance
United States Senate
Washington, DC 20510

The Honorable Ron Johnson
Chairman
Committee on Homeland Security and Governmental Affairs
United States Senate
Washington, DC 20510


Chairmen Grassley and Johnson,
JUN 1 O 2020
I am writing in response to your 22 May 2020 letter seeking the declassification of Annex
A of the 30 December 2016 Intelligence Community (IC) Assessment titled Assessing Russian
Activities and Intentions in Recent US Elections and the 22 March 2018 report from the House
Permanent Select Committee on Intelligence (HPSCI) titled Report on Russian Active Measures.

We have a shared interest in public transparency consistent with the need to protect
classified information. To that end, I have reviewed Annex A to the 2016 IC Assessment and
have concluded, in consultation with Department of Justice, Federal Bureau of Investigation, and
Central Intelligence Agency, that it can be publicly released with minimal redactions. I have
enclosed a declassified version of that document.

The 2018 HPSCI report is a Congressional record. To ensure that the IC does not
encroach on Congressional prerogatives, I have requested that the Chairman of HPSCI share a
copy of the report with me so that the IC can conduct a classification review.

If you have any questions, please do not hesitate to reach out to Ryan Crumpler, ODNI
Director, Legislative Affairs at 703-275-2032 (unsecure).

Enclosure:
Intelligence Community Assessment Annex A, Additional Reporting From an FBI Source on
Russian Influence Efforts, Declassified on 09 June 2020 (U)

UNCLASSIFIED
Cc:
Acting Chairman Marco Rubio
Vice Chairman Mark R. W amer
UNCLASSIFIED
2
UNCLASSIFIED
DECLASSIFIED by DNI Ratdiffe on 9 June 2020
(U) AnnexA
 
ica-annex-a.jpg



still, not a good copy...


The “Annex A” supporting the narrative was made out of claims by Christopher Steele. The two-page document is stunningly obtuse by design; and despite the FBI knowing the purpose of Christopher Steele, the Annex pretends not to know his agenda.

By keeping the ridiculous Steele claims in the annex the FBI was able to use the claims and yet afford themselves plausible deniability under the pretense of non-verification. When James Comey briefed President Trump about the claims he pretended not to know the political intents of the information; and worse still, he covered-up that Clinton’s campaign had paid for the information. A stunningly political move based on deception.


In many ways the refusal of the FBI, CIA and DOJ to admit their knowledge of the material from Chris Steele is the biggest example of how those same agencies were playing politics. None of the Steele claims were based on actual evidence; everything was hearsay, gossip, innuendo and entirely made-up. The agencies knew this and yet they pretended not to know the motives for the fraudulent intelligence.

As bad as it was to not clearly disclose to FISA court the Steele Dossier had been paid for by the Hillary Clinton campaign, it was far worse to not disclose this to President-elect (and outgoing President) in the intelligence community assessment.

Deceptive and fraudulent official intelligence documents, purposefully designed to achieve a political agenda, outline a level of serious misconduct even beyond the fabricated claims within the Carter Page FISA application.
 
ica-annex-a-2.jpg



The release of this “Annex A” document shows something beyond the willfully blind intentions of James Comey and John Brennan, and speaks to an intentional effort to fabricate claims against the incoming administration on the weakest of possible grounds.

Our research previously outlined how the December 29th, 2016, Joint Analysis Report (JAR) on Russia Cyber Activity was a quickly compiled bunch of nonsense about Russian hacking.

The JAR was followed a week later by the January 7th, 2017, Intelligence Community Assessment. The ICA took the ridiculous construct of the JAR and then overlaid a political narrative that Russia was trying to help Donald Trump.

The ICA was the brain-trust of John Brennan, James Clapper and James Comey. While the majority of content was from the CIA, some of the content within the ICA was written by FBI Agent Peter Strzok who held a unique “insurance policy” interest in how the report could be utilized in 2017. NSA Director Mike Rogers would not sign up to the “high confidence” claims, likely because he saw through the political motives of the report.

Questioning the construct of the ICA is a smart direction to take for a review or investigation. By looking at the intelligence community work-product, it’s likely USAO John Durham will cut through a lot of the chatter and get to the heart of the intelligence motives.

Apparently John Durham is looking into just this aspect: Was the ICA document a politically engineered report stemming from within a corrupt intelligence network?

The importance of that question is rather large. All of the downstream claims about Russian activity, including the Russian indictments promoted by DAG Rod Rosenstein and the Mueller team, are centered around origination claims of illicit Russian activity outlined in the ICA.
 
ADVERTISEMENT

Latest posts

ADVERTISEMENT