RUSSIA IS A DISTRACTION FROM A REAL THREAT…
1800 by Jeff HessWe’re all a buzz with events yesterday in Helsinki (see below), but long before President Donald John Trump cozied up to President Vladimir Vladimirovich Putin, Glenn Greenwald sat down with New York magazine writer Simon van Zuylen-Wood for
Does This Man Know More Than Robert Mueller? Glenn Greenwald’s war on the Russia investigation. After breezy magazine opening, Zuylen-Wood gets to his buried lede:
For the better part of two years, Greenwald has resisted the nagging bipartisan suspicion that Trumpworld is in one way or another compromised by a meddling foreign power. If there’s a conspiracy, he suspects, it’s one against the president; where others see collusion, he sees “McCarthyism.” Greenwald is predisposed to righteous posturing and contrarian eye-poking — and reflexively more skeptical of the U.S. intelligence community than of those it tells us to see as “enemies.”
And even if claims about Russian meddling are corroborated by Robert Mueller’s investigation, Greenwald’s not sure it adds up to much — some hacked emails changing hands, none all that damaging in their content, maybe some malevolent Twitter bots. In his eyes, the Russia-Trump story is a shiny red herring—one that distracts from the failures, corruption, and malice of the very Establishment so invested in promoting it.
Greenwald told Zuylen-Wood:
When Trump becomes the starting point and ending point for how we talk about American politics, [we] don’t end up talking about the fundamental ways the American political and economic and cultural system are completely fucked for huge numbers of Americans who voted for Trump for that reason. We don’t talk about all the ways the Democratic Party is a complete fucking disaster and a corrupt, sleazy sewer, and not an adequate alternative to this far-right movement that’s taking over American politics.
I don’t think Greenwald is wrong. Zuylen-Wood continues:
Greenwald’s been yelling about this, quite heatedly, since before the election. In the Democratic Echo Chamber, Inconvenient Truths Are Recast As Putin Plots, reads the headline of an Intercept piece published in October 2016. The Increasingly Unhinged Russia Rhetoric Comes From a Long-Standing U.S. Playbook, reads another, from February 2017. As Mueller’s investigation widened, no fallen domino—not the guilty plea of former Trump national-security adviser Michael Flynn, not the indictment of former campaign chairman Paul Manafort—chastened Greenwald. When it was recently reported that Steve Bannon had lobbed a “treason” charge in the direction of Donald Trump Jr.—precipitating his break with the president—Greenwald rolled his eyes. Bannon’s “motives are pure & pristine and he is simply trying to inform the public about the truth,” Greenwald tweeted sarcastically.
These views have gotten, in Zuylen-Wood’s words, Greenwald excommunicated from the liberal salons that celebrated him in the Snowden era. Greenwald said, “I used to be really good friends with Rachel Maddow. And I’ve seen her devolution from this really interesting, really smart, independent thinker into this utterly scripted, intellectually dishonest, partisan hack.”
Greenwald’s views have resulted in an O-Henryesque twist in the Trumpverse:
His view of the liberal online media is equally charitable. “Think about one interesting, creative, like, intellectually novel thing that [Vox’s] Matt Yglesias or Ezra Klein have said in like ten years,” he says. “In general, they’re just churning out Democratic Party agitprop every single day of the most superficial type.” (Reached for comment, none of these people would respond to Greenwald.)
All this has led to one of the less-anticipated developments of the Donald Trump presidency: Glenn Greenwald, Fox News darling. For his sins, Greenwald has been embraced by opportunistic #MAGA partisans seeking to discredit the Trump-Russia story. When alt-right ringleader Mike Cernovich sat for a 60 Minutes interview last year, he praised only one journalist: Greenwald. “My opinion of Glenn ten or 15 years ago was entirely negative,” says Fox News’ Tucker Carlson, who now heralds him as one of the “clearest thinkers” in media. (A parallel phenomenon involves the rehabilitation by the Resistance of an armada of neoconservative zombies—David Frum, Max Boot, Robert Kagan, Bill Kristol—and the lionization, at least temporarily, of Trump-skeptical Republican politicians like John McCain, Jeff Flake, and Lindsey Graham.)
I think that an observation made by Greenwald at the top of the interview is telling. He said:
I really believe that if I still lived in New York, the vast majority of my friends would be New York and Washington media people and I would kind of be implicitly co-opted. It just gives me this huge buffer. You’ve seen how I live, right? When I leave my computer, that world disappears.
That remove gives Greenwald the ability to see the forest. I’m thankful for that.










