By Rich
Lowry
Tuesday,
December 06, 2022
The “Twitter
Files” released by Elon Musk give us a more fine-grained
understanding of how and why the social-media company decided to censor the
Hunter Biden laptop story.
This was
a woefully stupid decision. The New York Post’s account was
suspended for two weeks for the offense of coming up with a scoop that we are
still talking about and that will surely play a large role in upcoming GOP
investigations into Biden-family corruption.
That’s
the kind of thing that newspapers should get awards for; Twitter thought it
should get punished for it.
But the
Twitter officials caught up in the progressive bubble that caused them to
censor first, ask questions later — all in the name of “safety,” of course —
weren’t the most blameworthy actors in this episode.
That
dishonor belongs to the former intelligence officials who put out a widely
cited, deliberately misleading letter suggesting that the Hunter Biden laptop
was Russian disinformation. It muddied the discussion over the laptop and gave
President Joe Biden a handy tool to try to deflect the laptop story.
These
former officials knew what they were doing, traded on their public service for
a tawdry political purpose, and have by and large demonstrated no remorse.
Even the
former head of trust and safety at Twitter — who sounds like he just came from
a sit-in at a university president’s office demanding the disinvitation of a
right-wing speaker from campus — has said Twitter shouldn’t have suppressed the
Hunter Biden story.
Amazingly,
the former officials, once entrusted with some of the most sensitive powers and
roles in the U.S. government, aren’t as responsible and accountable as a
social-media functionary from woke central casting. As a sheer matter of public
accountability, their disgraceful performance should be one focus of House
Republican investigators beginning in January.
More
than 50 former intelligence officials signed the letter, including five former
CIA directors or acting directors. Biden cited the letter in a debate with Donald
Trump. “There are,” he said, “50 former national intelligence folks who said
that what . . . he’s accusing me of is a Russian plant.”
That
statement was strictly true; it just didn’t hold the significance that Biden
hoped the average listener would assume. When Trump derisively noted that Biden
sounded like he was saying that the laptop was another Russian hoax, Biden
doubled down: “That’s exactly what we’re told.”
Of
course, we all know that there’s no way Biden heard about the laptop with all
its tawdry and compromising information and thought, “No, that’s not my boy —
must be the insidious work of an extremely adept, undetected Russian spy
network trying to influence the election.”
Now that
multiple other news outlets have confirmed the legitimacy of the laptop, the
letter-writers haven’t repented about themselves spreading clever
disinformation meant to influence the election. They’ve fallen back on a
Jesuitical defense of their handiwork.
And,
indeed, the letter-writers played a game. They didn’t actually say that the
Hunter Biden laptop story was disinformation, at the same time they created
that impression. This has given them plausible — or more accurately,
implausible — deniability.
Cornered
about the letter on Fox News, former CIA officer David Priess said the laptop
story, just as the letter asserted, had “all the classic earmarks” of Russian
disinformation. That didn’t mean it was disinformation, just
that it had the earmarks.
That’s
not how the letter was promoted at the time, though. Nick Shapiro, a prime
mover behind the missive and a former top aide under CIA director John Brennan,
told Politico, “The real power here however is the number of
former, working-level IC officers who want the American people to know that
once again the Russians are interfering.”
No
weasel words there. And the press coverage leaned heavily on the suspicions of
the intelligence officials, not their lawyerly caveats.
Even
more than the former management of Twitter, the letter-writers have shown they
never should be trusted again.
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