Did Fox News’ Report on Dem. Sen. Mark Warner and the Russia Investigation Come Straight from the Kremlin?
Photo by Chip Somodevilla/Getty
We don’t know this for certain obviously, but holy cow is there a lot of compelling circumstantial evidence (you’ll see why this title picture is an appropriate fit towards the end of the column). First, let’s start with Wikileaks. What began as a broke whistleblowing outlet is now most certainly a laundromat for Russian intelligence—as I wrote in my deep dive into Edward Snowden:
Wikileaks is a mysterious organization, seemingly constructed around the ego of Julian Assange, who according to former employee James Ball, would do things like “privately promise several thousand Australian dollars to fund Juice News, the makers of humorous pro-WikiLeaks YouTube videos” in 2010 when Wikileaks was struggling to get many donations itself.
Towards the end of that year, Wikileaks threatened that they would release documents on powerful individuals in Russia, and according to their spokesperson, Kristinn Hrafnsson “Russian readers will learn a lot about their country.” An official from the FSB (the successor to the KGB) responded “It’s essential to remember that given the will and the relevant orders, [WikiLeaks] can be made inaccessible forever.”
The documents never came out. Two years later, Julian Assange had his own show on Russia Today, the Kremlin’s West-facing propaganda outlet. Wikileaks even sent a delegation to meet Bashar al-Assad, a President only two major countries support (Russia and Iran). While stuck in in the Ecuadorian embassy in London, Assange stated in a press release that he requested Russian security.
So when I say that Fox News may have received a tip straight from the Kremlin, I mean Wikileaks—which is inextricably linked to Russian intelligence (quick side note: a lot of those on the left have come to admire Wikileaks for exposing government malfeasance, and bristle at the notion that they have become a Russian disinformation outlet. If you think this to be the case—and that everything Wikileaks publishes is real and earnest—then you must also believe that per their dump of his e-mails, John Podesta is aware of “nonviolent extraterrestrial intelligence from the contiguous universe helping us bring zero point energy to Earth.”)
Our story begins on Twitter, because that’s apparently how America works these days. Sean Hannity had his account temporarily deleted a couple weeks ago, and a bunch of impostors soon sprang up. One of those fakes, @SeanHannity_, was contacted by Julian Assange. Dell Gilliam—the woman behind the parody—provided screenshots of her conversation with Assange to The Daily Beast.
This is not the first time that Hannity has been involved in confusion surrounding parody Twitter accounts. Last April, he seemingly believed that @SovietSergey was actually Russian Foreign Minister, Sergei Lavrov, and he asked for confirmation that he was being surveilled by American intelligence.
I know, DM me. https://t.co/kHUtQSXQxS
— Soviet Sergey (@SovietSergey) April 5, 2017