https://www.wsj.com/articles/why-the...le_email_share
Why the CIA Needs Its Own Horowitz Report
        No need to speculate: The intelligence agencies saw Trump as a de facto agent of the Kremlin.
                                                        By Holman W. Jenkins, Jr.                                    
                 June 29, 2018 6:36 p.m. ET                           
            Now that the world has digested the Horowitz report, notice  how much of the story it doesn’t tell. The Federal Bureau of  Investigation is treated as a closed loop when, in fact, much of its  decision making was based on intelligence and advice supplied by other  agencies.
              Michael Horowitz            deals with some of this information in a classified appendix,  which the public can’t see. Even so, as Justice Department inspector  general, he is not authorized to examine and dissect the internal  communications and decision-making of other agencies the way he did the  FBI’s. Yet the necessity of doing so fairly screams at us.
                        Mr. Horowitz mentions Russia many times in relation to the  Trump collusion investigation but never in relation to the            Hillary Clinton            email investigation. He refers to secret intelligence that was  pivotal to FBI Chief            James Comey’s            decision to intervene publicly in the Clinton case, but he  doesn’t mention (as media reporting last year did) its Russian origins.
  He  tells us the FBI regarded the intercepted information, involving a  purported improper communication by Attorney General            Loretta Lynch,             as “objectively false.” He doesn’t tell us, as the Washington  Post and CNN did last year, that some in the FBI regarded the  information as a Russian plant. 
  He tells us that Mrs. Clinton  and President Obama exchanged emails on her private server while Mrs.  Clinton was especially vulnerable in the “territory of a foreign  adversary.” He doesn’t tell us the foreign adversary was Russia.
   One  thing we learned, because Mr. Horowitz blurted it out in Senate  testimony on June 18, is that the Loretta Lynch information, so crucial  to Mr. Comey’s actions, has been kept from the public and even members  of Congress because it “was classified at such a high level by the  intelligence community.” Which is certainly convenient for the  intelligence community. 
   Let’s  be realistic. We’ve been told officially many times that Russia didn’t  hide its activity in the 2016 race: It carried out its meddling in a  blunt, in-your-face manner that would have been seen as a direct  challenge to our own intelligence agencies. These agencies, in turn,  viewed Mr. Trump as a witting or unwitting Kremlin agent.
  We  don’t need to speculate about this. The FBI’s Mr. Comey, since Election  Day, has been a model of discretion compared with Obama CIA chief            John Brennan            and Obama Director of National Intelligence            James Clapper.            Mr. Brennan suggested on national TV that            Vladimir Putin            possesses secret information he uses to control President Trump.  Mr. Clapper, also on national TV, called Mr. Trump a Kremlin “asset”  whose election was secured by Russian meddling.
  Their involvement  in the events Mr. Horowitz details was extensive and pervasive and yet  these men are invisible in his report. And it is hardly plausible that  they were more restrained in their accusations against Mr. Trump in  their private dealings with Mr. Comey before the election than they have  been on TV since.
  Which brings us to Mr. Comey’s potentially  most consequential decision, his reopening of the Hillary email  investigation just before Election Day, which many Democrats and  independent analysts say may inadvertently have elected Mr. Trump.
  Mr.  Horowitz finds no convincing explanation of why a month elapsed between  the surfacing of the Weiner laptop and Mr. Comey’s action. It might be  useful, though, to understand what else was going on between Sept. 26  and Oct. 28. The                    Yahoo                       news article based on the Steele dossier had recently appeared. A  Mother Jones piece would soon appear. Inquiries about the Steele  dossier would have been pouring into the agency. The FBI would soon  break off relations with            Christopher Steele            for speaking to the press.            Harry Reid            would soon exploit the FBI’s possession of the dossier to try to  get its allegations into the media.
  Mr. Comey would have seen  that a partisan explosion was coming. Nothing would remain secret. Even  in the expected Hillary victory, a GOP Congress would insist on an  investigation.
  This is the environment in which he made a  decision that objectively seems aimed at redeeming the FBI’s reputation  as a straight shooter amid a welter of intelligence community actions  that eventually would be exposed and second-guessed.
   An under-remarked facet of the Horowitz report reveals just how much  illegal leaking to the press FBI officials were guilty of. The same rock  needs to be turned over with respect to Mr. Brennan’s and Mr. Clapper’s  former agencies. If Mr. Putin’s goal was to make a mockery of U.S.  democracy, his most useful if unwitting allies may well have been our  so-called intelligence community.
  Mr. Comey’s FBI is not the only  intelligence branch that needs a good shaking out. Historians have a  strong case already that both sets of today’s partisan talking points  are valid: The Obama intelligence agencies were biased against Mr. Trump  and also blunderingly helped elect him—a conclusion based in fact and  yet so disconcerting that the press has turned away from it.
        
        
        
