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Missing from the Intelligence Report: The Word ‘Podesta'
[National Review] Disclosure of embarrassing information should not be confused with disinformation.

There is a word missing from the non-classified report issued Friday, in which three intelligence agencies assess "Russia’s Influence Campaign Targeting the 2016 US Presidential Election." The FBI, CIA, and NSA elide any mention of . . . "Podesta."

Seems like a pretty significant omission -- not just because of how the 2016 campaign played out but also in light of the intelligence community’s recent history of politicizing its analyses. The report is replete with references to Russian "cyber espionage," "covert intelligence," "false-flag," "propaganda," and "influence" operations by which Vladimir Putin is alleged to have tried to put his thumb on the electoral scale.

Very sinister stuff, to be sure. But when the public hears these terms, it thinks of spies, misdirection, disinformation campaigns -- i.e., schemes intended to deceive the target audience. People don’t instantly think, "Oh, you mean an effort to publicize true but embarrassing information"; they don’t read "covert operation" and say to themselves, "That must mean they subjected only one side of a political contest to a high level of scrutiny."

That’s the kind of behavior people associate with the American media, not the Kremlin. The three intelligence agencies’ report pointedly declines to tell us what specific information gives them such "high confidence" that they know the operation of Vladimir Putin’s mind. They plead that the nature of their work does not allow for that: To tell us how they know what they purport to know would compromise intelligence methods and sources.
Posted by: Besoeker 2017-01-09
http://www.rantburg.com/poparticle.php?ID=477931