Attorney General William Barr dared to use the “s” word.
He said in congressional testimony that the Trump campaign had been spied on by the American government. Pressed by incredulous Senate Democrats, he clarified: “I think spying did occur. The question is whether it was adequately predicated.”
“Spying” has a negative connotation, so perhaps “surveilling” would have been the better way to put it. But a key question is indeed whether there was improper surveillance of the campaign, as Barr stated at another point in the hearing.
Barr is committed to reviewing the conduct of the Russia investigation, for which he is being denounced by his critics on the left. But why shouldn’t the attorney general seek to understand his department’s role in the high-stakes investigative melodrama of the past two years?
The Mueller probe was a national trauma. Its boosters didn’t experience it as such, of course. They enjoyed it and played it up and hoped for the very worst.
But it cast a shadow over the White House, occupied an inordinate share of the nation’s political attention and saddled innocent people with large legal bills.
And for what?
To establish that the far-fetched theory that the Russians coordinated with the Trump campaign indeed wasn’t true, and to take a pass on pronouncing one way or the other whether President Trump allegedly obstructed justice?
You don’t have to be a deep-state conspiracy theorist to want to know how this all got started and why.
We should try to find out as reliably as possible how much FBI and other officials were legitimately freaked out by some of the Russia connections of Trump associates, and how much they were acting in an amateurish panic and acting out of partisan malice.
How was it that a garbage anti-Trump dossier gathered by an ex-foreign spy from shadowy Russian sources came to set so much of the media narrative about the Russia probe and evidently have an outsize influence on the thinking and the actions of the FBI?
It may be that without the dossier there wouldn’t have been a Foreign Intelligence Surveillance Act warrant against one-time Trump foreign-policy adviser Carter Page. Barr is surely at least thinking of Page when he talks of spying.
It’s true that the FISA warrant on Page was approved after he had left the campaign, but the surveillance would have extended both forward and backward in time, to likely include campaign communications.
And the FBI obviously had the campaign in mind. The agency wrote in the FISA application, “The FBI believes that the Russian government’s efforts are being coordinated with Page & perhaps other individuals associated with [Trump’s] campaign.”
How was it that the FBI opened an investigation against the president when he fired the agency’s director? And why did it apparently think it could make an obstruction-of-justice case against Trump for acting within his lawful powers?
In the aftermath of the firing of James Comey, why did Deputy Attorney General Rod Rosenstein appoint Robert Mueller, in part, to investigate the cashiering of Comey, which Rosenstein was party to, and without specifying the crime that the president was being investigated for, as required under the special-counsel regulation?
The appointment of Mueller was so momentous, because once you have a special counsel, even a highly professional one, you have an investigative beast roaming the landscape that will inevitably command an enormous amount of attention and find crimes to prosecute even if they are removed from his original charge.
Of course, this is one of the reasons why Mueller had such fervent support among Trump’s detractors. But there is no reason that Barr should share their assumptions, or their horror at the idea of finding out more about the investigation that they portrayed as the single most important event in American public life.
Maybe the “s” word is indeed too pejorative. By getting as much information out publicly about the roots of the Russia probe, Barr can let American people finally decide for themselves.
Twitter: @RichLowry