New Details About Meeting FBI Source Suggest Carter Page Was Set Up        Margot Cleveland            thefederalist.com                                   
   Yesterday’s  exclusive  at The Federalist, revealing that Carter Page first met Stefan Halper  at a small dinner at Magdalene College in Cambridge, triggered an  immediate response from Svetlana Lokhova, the Russian-born British  citizen who sued Halper last year for defamation for branding her a  Russian spy.
   Magdalene College was Halper’s college, Lokhova  tweeted, adding that he held a lifetime fellowship there.
   This added detail raises even more questions concerning the mid-July  encounter between Halper and then-Donald Trump campaign advisor Page,  given what we now know from Inspector General Michael Horowitz’s  investigation into the four Page Foreign Intelligence Surveillance Act  (FISA) applications. We know from Horowitz’s report that the FBI tasked  Halper, identified solely as Source 2, to target Page, campaign advisor  George Papadopoulos, and a high-level Trump campaign member, Sam Clovis.  And we know the IG’s report concluded that the FBI had not used any  confidential human sources prior to the July 31, 2016, launch of  Crossfire Hurricane.
   These facts made Halper’s mid-July encounter with Page at a  conference in the United Kingdom suspicious. The added fact that Halper  met Page not during the conference proper, but at a small dinner  gathering to kick off the conference, seemed even more suspect. Now that  we know Halper wasn’t a mere fellow dinner guest at the gathering but  was instead sitting abreast the table at his own college, it screams  “set-up.”
   One wonders, otherwise, what would prompt one of the limited number  of seats at the welcome dinner to be allocated to Page, given the number  of dignitaries and distinguished attendees in town for what was  billed  as “a major international conference focusing on the 2016 U.S.  presidential election and implications that this will have for future  U.S. foreign policy.”
   So, did Halper have a hand in extending an invite to Page for this  private dinner gathering in order to forge a connection with the  campaign advisor? He seems to have had the clout to make that call, as  one of only ten  Life Fellow faculty members of the college, an apparent  substantial  donor of Magdalene College, and a member of the college’s Buckingham  Society, which is reserved to those who have arranged bequests to  Magdalene.
   One also wonders whom, besides Halper and Page, attended this  intimate dinner gathering. The confirmed speakers for that event  included the keynote speaker, former U.S. Secretary of State Madeleine  Albright; former head of MI6 Sir Richard Dearlove; German Ambassador to  the UK Peter Ammon; the British former Defense and Foreign Secretary,  Sir Malcom Rifkind; the BBC’s diplomatic correspondent, Bridget Kendall;  and Republican Party strategist and former Congressman Vin Weber.
   Albright and Dearlove may be the obvious names of interest, but Vin  Weber shouldn’t be overlooked. He was a featured speaker at the  conference and billed at the time as a “Republican Strategist,” although  he would later profess that he couldn’t “imagine remaining a Republican  if Trump becomes president,” and  promised that “if my vote decided the election, I would vote for Hillary Clinton over Donald Trump.”
   (Weber’s disdain for Trump later took an ironic turn when he became  entwined  in the lobbying scandal that sent Trump’s former campaign chair, Paul  Manafort, and Manafort’s business partner, Rick Gates, to prison for  illegally lobbying on behalf of the Ukraine government.)
   In addition to Weber’s presence at the conference, another intrigue  concerns a talk Halper gave just four days before meeting Page. A  write-up of Halper’s lecture, part of the Cambridge’s Pembroke-Kings  Programme’s Plenary lecture series,  recapped the event:
   His talk focused on the phenomenon which is ‘Trump’s  maverick candidacy’ while also explaining the deficits in Clinton’s  campaign which have caused the campaign to become almost too close to  call. Professor Halper concluded his talk by stating that if the media  focuses on Clinton, she will lose, whereas if they continue to focus on  Trump, he will lose. This will be true despite Trump’s adept handling of  the media that has resulted in him receiving two billion dollars worth  of free media coverage. The floor was then opened up for students to ask  questions which Professor Halper answered, only declining to tell the  gathering who he was planning on voting for.
 
   Halper’s insight is fascinating given that soon after the Cambridge conference ended, the featured keynote speaker, Albright,  claimed  that “Vladimir Putin wants Donald Trump to defeat Hillary Clinton.”  Albright would further suggest that “Russia was likely behind the hack  of the Democratic National Committee’s emails.”
   Albright’s July 26, 2016, proclamation must have seemed  prescient  to the FBI, which mere days later would launch Crossfire Hurricane on  the premise that Trump campaign had colluded with Russia over WikiLeaks’  release of the hacked emails. But maybe not so prescient to Halper?
    Margot Cleveland is a senior contributor to The Federalist.  Cleveland served nearly 25 years as a permanent law clerk to a federal  appellate judge and is a former full-time faculty member and current  adjunct instructor at the college of business at the University of Notre  Dame. The views expressed here are those of Cleveland in her private capacity. |