Donald Trump asked over the holiday weekend why neither the FBI nor the Justice Department contacted him during the 2016 campaign to alert him to the “Russia problem.” Those who haven’t paid close attention to this story might’ve seen the president’s point as having merit.
Indeed, former White House Press Secretary Ari Fleischer declared, “This is a good question that deserves an answer.”
The trouble is, the question was already answered months ago. NBC News had this report in December 2017:
In the weeks after he became the Republican nominee on July 19, 2016, Donald Trump was warned that foreign adversaries, including Russia, would probably try to spy on and infiltrate his campaign, according to multiple government officials familiar with the matter.
The warning came in the form of a high-level counterintelligence briefing by senior FBI officials, the officials said. A similar briefing was given to Hillary Clinton, they added. They said the briefings, which are commonly provided to presidential nominees, were designed to educate the candidates and their top aides about potential threats from foreign spies.
The candidates were urged to alert the FBI about any suspicious overtures to their campaigns, the officials said.
There are a couple of angles to this to keep in mind. The first is that Trump’s latest complaint — federal law enforcement should’ve given him a heads-up about the “Russia problem” during Russia’s attack on our political system — is difficult to take seriously given the counterintelligence briefing he received in 2016.
But for the president to remind us of this is especially unwise since Trump did more than just ignore the warning — the Republican and his team also failed to volunteer information that would’ve mattered to the FBI at the time.
As regular readers may recall, Rachel explained on the show that we’ve kept track of the large roster of Russians connected to Putin’s government who were in contact with the Trump campaign or the Trump transition before the president’s inauguration. It’s not a short list.









