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OPINION

How John Brennan Lied To Congress

The opinions expressed by columnists are their own and do not necessarily represent the views of Townhall.com.
AP Photo/Pablo Martinez Monsivais, File

The Justice Department is evaluating a criminal referral accusing former CIA Director John Brennan of lying to Congress. In the referral, Republican members of the House allege that Brennan lied to investigators trying to figure out what the nation's intelligence agencies did in their pursuit of President Donald Trump over the Russia collusion matter. The case is a strong one.

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It started back in 2017. Congressional Republicans were trying to trace the FBI, CIA, and other agencies' activities in what is often known as the "Russia hoax." One central focus was the Steele dossier, the collection of false and salacious accusations that Trump conspired with Russia to steal the 2016 election.

The dossier, as everyone knows today, was a political opposition research job. It was put together by a former British spy who was hired and paid by operatives working on behalf of the 2016 Hillary Clinton campaign. As an investigative document, it was 100% BS.

That, of course, did not stop the FBI from embracing it. The bureau accepted the dossier as a legitimate source. The FBI included material from the dossier in a secret court application to wiretap a former low-level Trump campaign aide named Carter Page. And it even briefly hired the dossier's fabricator, Christopher Steele.

Here was where things did not add up for Hill investigators. Given what the FBI was doing, one might have expected that the CIA would also have played some role in the whole dossier saga. But Brennan, then the head of the CIA, swore under oath that the CIA had nothing to do with the dossier.

A lot of the Republicans' questions had to do with what was called the Intelligence Community Assessment, the document produced by the CIA, FBI, NSA, and other agencies describing their investigation into Russian efforts to influence the 2016 election. The assessment had famously -- and controversially -- concluded that Russian President Vladimir Putin "developed a clear preference" for candidate Trump and "aspired" to help Trump win the election.

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GOP investigators wanted to know: Was that conclusion based on the dossier? Did Brennan's CIA support including the dossier in the assessment? In testimony on May 23, 2017, Brennan said absolutely not, that the dossier played no role in the CIA's work. Brennan told lawmakers the dossier "was not in any way used as a basis for the Intelligence Community Assessment."

Six years later, on May 11, 2023, Brennan again found himself answering questions from Hill Republicans, and he again denied CIA involvement with the dossier. "I was not involved in analyzing the dossier at all," Brennan said. "I said the first time I actually saw it, it was after the election. And the CIA was not involved at all with the dossier. ... It was [the FBI's] purview, their area, not ours at all." Brennan also reiterated earlier testimony when he said, "The CIA was very much opposed to having any reference or inclusion of the Steele dossier in the Intelligence Community Assessment."

Now it appears that what Brennan told congressional investigators was false. The current CIA director, John Ratcliffe, who used to be one of the House investigators looking into the Russia matter, has declassified documents from Brennan's time at the agency which show that, far from keeping the dossier at arm's reach, Brennan actually forced CIA analysts to use it and overruled those who wanted to leave the dossier out of the Intelligence Community Assessment.

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Ratcliffe has also declassified a 2020 House Intelligence Committee report, which the CIA had kept under wraps, that outlined Brennan's involvement in the dossier. The report, based on the committee's interviews with CIA staff, said that "two senior CIA officers," both with extensive Russia experience, "argued with [Brennan] that the dossier should not be included at all in the Intelligence Community Assessment, because it failed to meet basic tradecraft standards, according to a senior officer present at the meeting. The same officer said that [Brennan] refused to remove it, and when confronted with the dossier's many flaws, responded, 'Yes, but doesn't it ring true?'"

Taken together, these accounts show that significant portions of Brennan's congressional testimony about the dossier and the Intelligence Community Assessment were untrue.

Here's the bottom line, which Republicans have believed for a long time. In the politically supercharged atmosphere of late 2016 and early 2017, the FBI and CIA both knew the dossier was BS. They knew they had no business including it in their assessment of Russia's 2016 activities. But they included it anyway because it told them what they wanted to hear -- that Trump had colluded with Russia. And then, under oath before Congress, Brennan lied about it.

In a letter last week to Attorney General Pam Bondi, House Judiciary Committee Chairman Jim Jordan (R-OH) wrote that the 2020 House report and the CIA's analysis "confirm not only that the Steele dossier was used as a basis for the Intelligence Community Assessment, but that Brennan insisted on its inclusion." Brennan's testimony to Congress, Jordan continued, "was a brazen attempt to knowingly and willfully testify falsely and fictitiously to material facts." Jordan asked Bondi to investigate whether Brennan's statements warrant a criminal charge of making false statements.

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Now it is up to the attorney general. Will Brennan contend that he somehow was telling the truth when he made the above statements? Of course, he will. But if he is charged, that will be a hard case to make.

This content originally appeared on the Washington Examiner at washingtonexaminer.com/opinion/columnists/3864515/how-john-brennan-lied-to-congress/.

Editor’s Note: The Schumer Shutdown is here. Rather than put the American people first, Chuck Schumer and the radical Democrats forced a government shutdown for healthcare for illegals. They own this.

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