US spies say Trump's G7 performance suggests he's either a 'Russian asset' or a 'useful idiot' for Putin
Sonam Sheth 8h businessinsider.com
Analysis
* Current and former spies are floored by President Donald Trump's fervent defense of Russia at this year's G7 summit in Biarritz, France.
* "It's hard to see the bar anymore since it's been pushed so far down the last few years, but President Trump's behavior over the weekend was a new low," one FBI agent who works in counterintelligence told Insider.
* At the summit, Trump aggressively lobbied for Russia to be readmitted into the G7, refused to hold it accountable for violating international law, blamed former President Barack Obama for Russia's annexation of Crimea, and expressed sympathy for Russian President Vladimir Putin.
* One former senior Justice Department official, who worked closely with the former special counsel Robert Mueller when he was the FBI director, told Insider Trump's behavior was "directly out of the Putin playbook. We have a Russian asset sitting in the Oval Office."
* A former CIA operative told Insider the evidence is "overwhelming" that Trump is a Russian agent, but another CIA and NSA veteran said it was more likely Trump was currying favor with Putin for future business deals.
* Meanwhile, a recently retired FBI special agent told Insider that Trump's freewheeling and often unfounded statements make it more likely that he's a "useful idiot" for the Russians. But "it would not surprise me in the least if the Russians had at least one asset in Trump's inner circle." ... MUCH MORE businessinsider.com
Poputchiki: Fellow-Travellers and ‘Useful Idiots’ from Lenin to Putin
Communist fellow-travellers (Poputchiki) are reviled figures of 20th century history. Most venomously criticized are those western intellectuals who flocked to the Soviet Union and returned with glowing reports of a utopia under construction. Blind to the brutal realities of Soviet communism, they provided intellectual cover for Stalin’s mass terror.
According to John Gray, these apologists for the Soviet Union – these useful idiots, as Lenin reputedly called them – believed they were in the vanguard of history, members of an elite that would preside over a new, post-capitalist order. As Gray also pointed out, fellow-travellerdom did not die with the collapse of the Soviet bloc. Indeed, the 21stcentury has seen the emergence of a substantial group of what Germans call Putinverstehers – sympathizers with Putin’s Russia.
Those with political axes to grind have generated much of the critical commentary on fellow-travellers. But as Michael David-Fox has argued, “the story of the fellow-travellers is far more than one of latter-day political kowtowing,” Fellow-travellers were not as willfully blind as they are often deemed to be. They made conscious choices about what they said in public as part of a trade-off to influence their communist hosts. The role of a fellow-traveller was a negotiated one and its performance fraught with tension and contradiction.
Much research on fellow-travellers has focused on the Soviet Union during the interwar period. Yet the peak of the fellow-traveller phenomenon occurred after the Second World War. Indeed, the attractions of communism increased considerably when the mass repressions of the Stalin era gave way to a much softer and porous authoritarianism. Especially important were the activities of fellow-travellers associated with organizations such as the World Peace Council, the World Federation of Democratic Women and the International Organization of Journalists.
Fellow-travellers typicallysaw themselves as loyal but critical friends of the USSR. As Nobel Laureate, Frédéric Joliot-Curie, the President of the World Peace Council, said: “loyalty was a good thing in friendship but in politics, as in science, to have faith is not enough, one must also think.” And while some fellow-travellers were virtually indistinguishable from card-carrying communists, other individuals and groups sought an independent path through the polarizations of the cold war.
The speakers at this event are top American and European scholars of the history and politics of fellow-travellers. Their archive-based research presentations will seek to capture the topic in all its complexity and contradiction, from the 1920s to the present-day.
Helsinki Collegium for Advanced Studies The Aleksanteri Institute Political History, University of Helsinki
13-14 June 2019 blogs.helsinki.fi |