If there is one word to describe the last 14 months in media, it is “collusion.”
Open any newspaper, turn on any news program, and there’s a good chance you’ll see something about the allegations that President Trump (or some member of his inner circle) conspired with Moscow in 2016 to win the election. This particular story line has been in the news cycle since practically day one of the Trump presidency.
On Friday evening, there was yet more talk about an American working covertly with members of a hostile foreign government to undermine official U.S. diplomacy. The difference with this particular story, however, is that it involves neither Trump nor the Russians. It involves former Secretary of State John Kerry and the Iranians.
The Boston Globe reports [emphases added]:
The story’s headline is simple: “Kerry quietly seeking to salvage Iran deal he helped craft.”
Just so we’re all on the same page, Iran still tops the State Department’s list of “state sponsors of terrorism,” ahead of Sudan, Syria, and even North Korea. And Kerry is conducting his own parallel U.S. foreign policy with them.
What Kerry is reportedly doing sounds a whole lot like an actual, verifiable act of an American conspiring with a hostile foreign power to thwart an agenda pushed by duly elected U.S. officials, thereby undermining the will of the voters. (To be fair, recent polling shows 56 percent of surveyed voters support the Iran deal. But elections do matter, and all that).
As to whether any of this amounts to a violation of the Logan Act, let’s leave that answer to the legal expert quoted by the Boston Globe, who said, “The act only applies to conduct that is designed to ‘defeat the measures of the United States’ or influence the conduct of foreign governments. If all Kerry is doing is working to keep in place something that’s still technically a ‘measure of the United States,’ I don’t see how the statute would apply even if someone was crazy enough to try it.”
Then again, this interpretation implies that private actors who help the administration achieve its goals of changing current foreign policy would be violating the Logan Act. So go figure.
Lastly, I know it’s silly, but can you imagine the reaction if former Secretary of State Condoleezza Rice was caught in 2015 trying to sabotage the Obama administration’s efforts to get this stupid Iran deal passed in the first place? My goodness, we would still be hearing about it.
In the meantime, I have a crisp $5 bill that says this Kerry story gets little play outside of the Boston Globe’s initial report, and that it drifts off mostly unnoticed into eventual obscurity. Still, three cheers for the reporters who broke the story.
(h/t Jerry Dunleavy)