LONG AND BORING! READS LIKE TRUTH! DELETE NOW. MarkKohut shared a link: Trump, Putin and the Hidden History of How Russia Interfered in the U.S. Presidential Election
Mark Kohut
mark.kohut at gmail.com
Wed Jan 11 07:05:05 CST 2017
As the so-smart Laura wrote the other day, I can hold both of these
well-researched articles in my mind at the same time as probably true
analyses of history, one still unfolding. (Eichenwald has been working "the
story" for over a year; prejudging it is its own reward).
I'll add this below suggesting maybe Pynchon, maybe Joyce, Hegel, I hear,
maybe Spengler were he to write less Overall Civilizationlly, Kondriateff (
wit, if works) and a couple--three historians I don't know might spin a
'philosophy of history' out of the conjunction:
"And what did Boris Yeltsin himself know about his soon-to-be-anointed
successor. He knew this man was one of the few men who had remained loyal
to him"..."he was of the younger generation and had not come up thru the
ranks of the Communist Party"....
On August 9, 1999, boris Yeltsin named Vladimair Putin prime minister of
Russia. A week later he was confirmed in that position by a wide majority
of the Duma"---p.22 The Man Without a Face: The Unlikely Rise of Vladimir
Putin by Masha Gessen.
And then, like others, he.....seems to have changed. Or bloomed. A lot.
On Tue, Jan 10, 2017 at 10:58 PM, <kelber at mindspring.com> wrote:
> The not so hidden history of how the U.S> interfered in the Russian
> election (no allegations or third-party reports):
>
> http://content.time.com/time/covers/0,16641,19960715,00.html
>
> Time Magazine, July 15th, 1996
>
> Full text of the article:
>
> In the end the Russian people chose--and chose decisively--to reject the
> past. Voting in the final round of the presidential election last week,
> they preferred Boris Yeltsin to his Communist rival Gennadi Zyuganov by a
> margin of 13 percentage points. He is far from the ideal democrat or
> reformer, and his lieutenants Victor Chernomyrdin and Alexander Lebed are
> already squabbling over power, but Yeltsin is arguably the best hope Russia
> has for moving toward pluralism and an open economy. By re-electing him,
> the Russians defied predictions that they might willingly resubmit
> themselves to communist rule.
>
> The outcome was by no means inevitable. Last winter Yeltsin's approval
> ratings were in the single digits. There are many reasons for his change in
> fortune, but a crucial one has remained a secret. For four months, a group
> of American political consultants clandestinely participated in guiding
> Yeltsin's campaign. Here is the inside story of how these advisers helped
> Yeltsin achieve the victory that will keep reform in Russia alive.
>
> All during the long evening of Dec. 17, 1995, Felix Braynin sat transfixed
> before a television set in the living room of a government guest house in
> Moscow. He didn't like what he saw. Returns from the elections for the
> Duma, the lower house of Russia's parliament, represented a devastating
> setback for reform-minded parties, including the one linked to Boris
> Yeltsin. The Communists and their allies were on their way to controlling
> the body, a disturbing development because in six months Russians would
> vote for President. Yeltsin's standing in the polls was abysmal, a
> reflection of his brutal misadventure in Chechnya; his increasing
> authoritarianism; and his economic reform program, which has brought about
> corruption and widespread suffering. Considering the country's deep dislike
> of Yeltsin and the Communists' surge, Braynin, a close friend of some of
> Yeltsin's top aides, thought that something radical had to be done.
>
> A compact, powerfully built former professional hockey and soccer player
> in his native Belarus, Braynin, 48, had immigrated to San Francisco in
> 1979. With $200 in his pocket, he began painting houses. He is now a
> wealthy management consultant who advises Americans interested in investing
> in Russia.
>
> Most of Yeltsin's confidants believed the President would be magically
> re-elected despite the Duma catastrophe, but Braynin thought otherwise. The
> President, he reasoned, could lose without the same kind of professional
> assistance U.S. office seekers employ as a matter of course. Braynin began
> a series of confidential discussions with Yeltsin's aides, including one
> with First Deputy Prime Minister Oleg Soskovets, who at the time was in
> charge of the President's nascent re-election effort. Finally, in early
> February, Braynin was instructed to "find some Americans" but to proceed
> discreetly. "Secrecy was paramount," says Braynin. "Everyone realized that
> if the Communists knew about this before the election, they would attack
> Yeltsin as an American tool. We badly needed the team, but having them was
> a big risk."
>
> To "find some Americans," Braynin worked through Fred Lowell, a San
> Francisco lawyer with close ties to California's Republican Party. On Feb.
> 14, Lowell called Joe Shumate, a G.O.P. expert in political data analysis
> who had served as deputy chief of staff to California Governor Pete Wilson.
> Since Wilson's drive for the 1996 Republican presidential nomination had
> ended almost before it began, Lowell thought Shumate and George Gorton,
> Wilson's longtime top strategist, might be available to help Yeltsin. They
> were--and they immediately enlisted Richard Dresner, a New York-based
> consultant who had worked with them on many of Wilson's campaigns.
>
> Dresner had another connection that would prove useful later on. In the
> late 1970s and early '80s, he had joined with Dick Morris to help Bill
> Clinton get elected Governor of Arkansas. As Clinton's current political
> guru, Morris became the middleman on those few occasions when the Americans
> sought the Administration's help in Yeltsin's re-election drive. So while
> Clinton was uninvolved with Yeltsin's recruitment of the American advisers,
> the Administration knew of their existence--and although Dresner denies
> dealing with Morris, three other sources have told Time that on at least
> two occasions the team's contacts with Morris were "helpful."
>
> A week after the Valentine's Day call from Lowell, Dresner was in Moscow.
> The Yeltsin campaign was at sea. Five candidates, led by Communist Gennadi
> Zyuganov, were ahead of Yeltsin in some polls. The President was favored by
> only 6% of the electorate and was "trusted" as a competent leader by an
> even smaller proportion. "In the U.S.," says Dresner, "you'd advise a pol
> with those kinds of numbers to get another occupation."
>
> For two days the supersecretive Yeltsin high command avoided Dresner, and
> none of the team ever actually met the President. "There are too many
> factions and too many leaks to risk your dealing with him directly,"
> Braynin explained to Dresner. "You are our biggest secret."
>
> Then, at 3 p.m. on Feb. 27, Dresner met with Soskovets. In English, the
> First Deputy Prime Minister asked, "How's our friend Bill doing?" Most of
> the hour-long session was spent discussing Clinton's re-election prospects.
> Dresner had prepared a five-page proposal that called for the Americans to
> "introduce your campaign staff to sophisticated methods of message
> development, polling, voter contact and campaign organization."
>
> Soskovets had already read Dresner's paper and pointed to a calendar on
> his desk. The days remaining before the presidential election's first round
> on June 16 were highlighted in large, bold numbers. "There's not much
> time," he said. "You are hired. I will tell the President that we have the
> Americans." And then Soskovets ominously added a thought that would
> reverberate in early May. Alluding to Yeltsin's poor standing and the
> reluctance of his aides ever to yield power to the Communists, Soskovets
> told Dresner, "One of your tasks is to advise us, a month from the
> election, about whether we should call it off if you determine that we're
> going to lose."
>
> To preserve security, a contract was drawn between the International
> Industrial Bancorp Inc. of San Francisco (a company Braynin managed for its
> Moscow parent) and Dresner-Wickers (Dresner's consulting firm in Bedford
> Hills, New York). The Americans would work for four months, beginning March
> 1. They would be paid $250,000 plus all expenses and have an unlimited
> budget for polling, focus groups and other research. A week later, they
> were working full time, but the boss was not Soskovets.
>
> Over the past few months, the Russian and Western press have identified
> six different people as Yeltsin's campaign manager. In fact, the person
> really in charge was Yeltsin's daughter Tatiana Dyachenko, 36, a computer
> engineer with no previous political experience. While those in the
> campaign's upper reaches have always known that Dyachenko was the key cog
> in the apparatus--if only because she alone saw the man she routinely calls
> "Papa" on a daily basis--her role has been widely misunderstood. After
> dodging the media for months, Dyachenko last week described her job to the
> Russian press: "I'm kind of involved in everything. I'm
> everywhere--everywhere there's a weak link."
>
> The history of "Tatiana's emergence is really quite simple," explains
> Valentin Yumachev, Yeltsin's close friend and ghostwriter. "The President
> decided in February that the campaign Soskovets was running was going
> nowhere. He needed someone he could trust completely, and she was it." None
> of Yeltsin's other senior campaign officials was "what you would call
> pleased with Tatiana's placement," adds Pavel Borodin, Yeltsin's Minister
> of the Presidency, the government's general-services manager. "But because
> she had no personal agenda they couldn't plot against her. Her power
> obviously derived from that, but also from her native intelligence and the
> knowledge she gained from the Americans, who brought us a professionalism
> and dispassion none of us was really used to."
>
> The American team hired two young men, Braynin's son Alan and Steven
> Moore, a public relations specialist from Washington, to assist them, and
> promptly established its office in a two-room suite at the President Hotel.
> The Americans lived elsewhere in the hotel and were provided with a car, a
> former KGB agent as a driver, and two bodyguards. They were told they
> should assume that their phones and rooms were bugged, that they should
> leave the hotel only infrequently, and that they should avoid the
> campaign's other staff members.
>
> The Americans managed to hide their identity for many months. In
> interviewing various polling and focus-group companies before hiring three,
> they described themselves as representing Americans eager to sell
> thin-screen televisions in Russia. "That story held for far longer than it
> ever should have," says Shumate. The Americans carried multiple-entry visas
> identifying them as working for the "Administration of the President of the
> Russian Federation," a bit of obviousness that constantly threatened to
> undermine all the supposed secrecy surrounding their real work.
>
> The President is not a normal hotel. It is owned by the office of the
> President, and residence is by invitation only. A fence surrounds the
> property, which is patrolled by police armed with machine guns and wearing
> bulletproof vests. When Dyachenko moved her own office to the hotel to be
> near the Americans, the rest of the campaign took three floors of offices
> there as well. Yeltsin's badly split Russian advisers quickly set up
> separate fiefdoms on the eighth, ninth and 10th floors. Dyachenko worked
> almost exclusively on the 11th in Room 1119, directly across the hall from
> the Americans in 1120. She and they shared two secretaries, a translator,
> and fax, copying and computer-printing machines.
>
> By the end, the team's office resembled a typical American campaign
> headquarters. Soda bottles and old food shared space with computer
> printouts. Graphs charting Yeltsin's progress in the polls hung on the
> walls, and the entire scene was dominated by a color-coded map of Russia
> with Post-it notes describing the vote expected in the nation's various
> regions. A safe stood unused, and documents intended for a shredder
> remained intact, in plain view.
>
> Gorton followed Dresner to Moscow and encountered in Dyachenko a shy,
> intelligent and idealistic young woman who for some time recoiled at even
> the most mild American-style dirty trick. "But it wouldn't be fair," Gorton
> recalls her saying when he advised that Zyuganov be trailed by heckling
> "truth squads" designed to goad him into losing his temper. At their first
> meeting across a long table covered in green felt, Dyachenko confided, "I
> don't know this business. I don't know what to ask." For a few weeks, says
> Gorton, "the task was simple education, Campaigning 101, stuff like the
> proper uses of polling and the need to test via focus groups just about
> everything the campaign was doing, or thinking of doing."
>
> Yeltsin's staff brought a set of potentially disastrous biases to the
> campaign. They thought the polls they read in the papers were good enough
> to determine strategy, and because so many of their allies had failed
> miserably in the Duma elections despite spending huge sums on television
> commercials, they believed political advertising was useless in Russia.
>
> But the polling was inaccurate and unsophisticated and thus virtually
> useless in determining how thematically to guide the effort. "The pollsters
> asked mostly horse-race questions," explains Dresner. "The focus-group
> operators were in love with indirection and literally asked people to
> answer questions like, 'If Yeltsin were a tree, what kind of tree would he
> be?' We needed to know whether voters would move to Yeltsin if he adopted a
> particular policy, but for that crucial purpose the research in hand was
> totally uninformative. As for the TV spots used in the Duma elections, they
> were creative and pretty, but they were far from hard-hitting. "All of
> that," says Shumate, "had to be explained to a group of people who, no
> matter their professed commitment to democracy, were trapped in a classic
> Soviet mind-set. They thought they could win simply by telling big shots
> like the directors of factories to instruct their employees how to vote."
>
> Starting from scratch, Gorton calmly explained to Dyachenko that she and
> her colleagues must suspend their beliefs. "You live in Moscow and travel
> in the most elite circles," he said. "Because you're smart, you are used to
> trusting your instincts. You can't do that in this kind of work. You have
> to know what the people you don't know are thinking."
>
> And then the team went to work. A great deal of their communication with
> Dyachenko and Yeltsin's other aides was conducted by written memorandums.
> "Translation was a constant problem," says Dresner. "We spent a full day
> trying to convey what we meant by having Yeltsin stay 'on message.'"
> Minister Borodin says, "Having the memos let the President consider them
> calmly. We had many discussions about the recommendations and in the end
> adopted most everything the Americans advised."
>
> One of the team's first memos, designed to buy time for the Americans as
> they gave themselves a crash course on Russia, was titled "Why Bush Lost."
> Actually, the parallels were eerie. George Bush's complacency almost
> exactly resembled Yeltsin's. Like Bush's, the Yeltsin team thought the
> nation's economy was improving and that the President would receive credit
> for it; in fact, only a small segment of the population enjoys whatever
> progress there has been. Like Bush, Yeltsin simply refused to believe that
> the voters would elect his opponent. Like Bush's, the Yeltsin campaign was
> in disarray as factions fought for control. And also as with Bush, there
> was no clearly focused Yeltsin message, just a melange of ideas--and even
> then, no disciplined plan for their delivery or appreciation of the need
> for such a plan.
>
> Even a cursory reading of the Russian press quickly convinced the
> Americans that virtually the entire nation was furious about the salaries
> government workers had been owed for months on end. When Yeltsin's aides
> explained that the President had already promised to correct the back-pay
> problem, the droopy-eyed Dresner shook his head in disbelief. "You can't
> just promise these things," he told Dyachenko. "You have to do them. And
> then you have to make sure the people know what you've done."
>
> That remark presaged a campaign-long insistence on a standard American
> campaign practice--repetition. "Whatever it is that we're going to say and
> do," Gorton explained to Yeltsin's aides, "we have to repeat it between
> eight and 12 times." Those numbers were invented. "The Russians believe
> that anything that's worthwhile is scientifically based," says Shumate.
> "This gave us a leg up when we started to seriously use focus groups to
> guide campaign policy, but right at the start it let us pretend that we
> knew more than we really did. There's no data supporting how many times
> something needs to be repeated, but the Russians bought it as gospel."
>
> With back pay identified as among the most irksome issues, the team
> advised that Yeltsin haul officials on the carpet for failing to distribute
> the cash as he'd directed. The President embraced that suggestion with
> relish, and the press eagerly reported the boss's taking his subordinates
> to task.
>
> Clever as they may have been, that and similar tactical strokes were small
> beer. Yeltsin's problems were too big to be solved simply by delivering
> what people knew was due them in the first place. Even before their polling
> confirmed their suspicions, the Americans intuited that Yeltsin would lose
> and lose badly if the election were a referendum on his stewardship. Most
> Russians, the polls and focus groups found, perceived Yeltsin as a friend
> who had betrayed them, a populist who had become imperial. "Stalin had
> higher positives and lower negatives than Yeltsin," says Dresner. "We
> actually tested the two in polls and focus groups. More than 60% of the
> electorate believed Yeltsin was corrupt; more than 65% believed he had
> wrecked the economy. We were in a deep, deep hole."
>
> In one of the team's early memos, a 10-page document dated March 2, the
> Americans summed up the situation: "Voters don't approve of the job Yeltsin
> is doing, don't think things will ever get any better and prefer the
> Communists' approach. There exists only one very simple strategy for
> winning: first, becoming the only alternative to the Communists; and
> second, making the people see that the Communists must be stopped at all
> costs."
>
> In hindsight, the need for an anticommunist emphasis by the Yeltsin
> campaign--the need to "go negative"--seems self-evident. But when the
> Americans first harped on anticommunism as the "only" route to victory,
> many in the campaign resisted. And despite their status and patronage, the
> Americans had to fight long and hard before that core strategy was
> accepted. As Dyachenko told the team after reading the memo, "We have many
> factions and each has its own view, but most everyone agrees that with
> communism coming back all over Eastern Europe and with Stalin's reputation
> rising here, a campaign based on anticommunism is wrong for us."
>
> The argument over the campaign's central message raged all through March.
> Matters finally came to a head in early April as Yeltsin prepared to give a
> speech unveiling his campaign program. That address was expected to signal
> the campaign's substance and tone, and it became a major battleground for
> control of the campaign. In a nine-point memo dated April 2 that covered
> content, theme and staging, the team wrote that the "overall goal of the
> kickoff speech [should be] to demonstrate to the average Russian that
> Yeltsin understands the suffering the country has been going through...The
> President will be talking to people in their homes through their TV sets.
> These average people are the true audience. The people in the hall are
> props. If this event is successful, it will show that Yeltsin the
> politician is guided by personal concerns that are in tune with those of
> most other Russians."
>
> The Americans wanted a diverse audience, "not just middle-aged guys in
> suits," as the memo put it. They wanted women and students and popular
> officials like the mayor of Moscow to stand by the President's side. "Too
> many Russians believe Yeltsin is an isolated man who can't be trusted, a
> man surrounded by a handful of advisers who have their own agenda," the
> Americans explained. They also wanted a brief speech that television
> viewers might actually sit through. "No more than 15 minutes," they
> advised. And they wanted Yeltsin to enter the hall through a large and
> boisterous crowd that would mob him.
>
> They got none of it. Yeltsin spoke for almost an hour. Without so much as
> a pat on the back, he strode to the stage to the unenthusiastic, rhythmic
> clapping of middle-aged guys in suits. More popular leaders did not stand
> beside him because his Russian aides feared his being overshadowed. He
> wandered across themes and left no one with a sense of confidence. He was
> terrible. "The factions won," his daughter told the team afterward. "They
> were scared of the kind of things you recommended."
>
> Angry about losing the battle over the speech, and certain it represented
> a disastrous trend in the campaign, the Americans set out to prove their
> point after the fact. They replayed excerpts of the address--and some other
> film footage and still photographs of Yeltsin--for an audience of 40
> Russians wired to a "perception analyzer," an instrument often used in the
> U.S. Audiences have their hands on dials and are asked to move them in
> different directions to indicate their degree of interest and approval of
> what they are seeing and hearing. An electronically produced chart records
> their reactions.
>
> The results shocked Yeltsin's Russian assistants. Each time cameras panned
> the stiff, unsmiling audience, the dials turned down--as they also did when
> the President pledged to improve people's lives. "The analyzer taught us
> that Yeltsin should avoid promising anything," says Shumate. "The country
> just didn't believe him."
>
> Science "won the day again," says Dresner. "We showed we'd been right from
> the start." From then on, the American team's influence grew--and
> anticommunism became the central and repeated focus of the campaign and the
> candidate.
>
> Having helped establish the campaign's major theme, the Americans then set
> out to modify it. The Americans used their focus-group coordinator, Alexei
> Levinson, to determine what exactly Russians most feared about the
> Communists. Long lines, scarce food and renationalization of property were
> frequently cited, but mostly people worried about civil war. "That allowed
> us to move beyond simple Red bashing," says Shumate. "That's why Yeltsin
> and his surrogates and our advertising all highlighted the possibility of
> unrest if Yeltsin lost. Many people felt some nostalgia for what the
> communists had done for Russia and no one liked the President--but they
> liked the possibility of riots and class warfare even less." "'Stick with
> Yeltsin and at least you'll have calm'--that was the line we wanted to
> convey," says Dresner. "So the drumbeat about unrest kept pounding right
> till the end of the run-off round, when the final TV spots were all about
> the Soviets' repressive rule."
>
> In Video International, the advertising firm hired before the Americans
> arrived, Yeltsin had a first-rate team. The series of 15 one-minute spots
> produced for airing before the first-round balloting on June 16 was "at
> least as good as most anything you could get in the West," says Dresner.
> "Showing average Russians grudgingly coming to the realization that they
> had to support Yeltsin was the only way to move people who essentially
> wished the President was out of their lives."
>
> The Americans were "vital," says Mikhail Margolev, who coordinated the
> Yeltsin account at Video International. Margolev had worked for five years
> in two American advertising agencies but freely acknowledges that his
> methods are still influenced by his earlier tenure as a propaganda
> specialist for the Soviet Communist Party and as an undercover KGB agent
> masquerading as a journalist for TASS, the Russian news agency. "The
> Americans helped teach us Western political-advertising techniques," says
> Margolev, "and most important, they caused our work to be accepted because
> they were the only ones really close to Tatiana. She was the key. The
> others in the campaign were like snakes, and snakes, you know, often eat
> each other. Putting his daughter in to get things done was Yeltsin's
> smartest move, and she was clearly leaning on the Americans."
>
> The TV ad the Americans most wanted was the one the campaign made last,
> which had Yeltsin himself speaking. "We actually wanted him in every spot,"
> says Gorton. "After all those great ads with average folks talking about
> their lives and then about Yeltsin, we wanted the President to come on and
> say that he understood what they were talking about, that he heard their
> complaints, that he felt their pain." But Yeltsin resisted--and that caused
> the team to reach out to Bill Clinton's all-purpose political aide, Dick
> Morris.
>
> Communicating in code--Clinton was called the Governor of California,
> Yeltsin the Governor of Texas--the Americans sought Morris' help. They had
> earlier worked together to script Clinton's summit meeting with Yeltsin in
> mid-April. The main goal then was to have Clinton swallow hard and say
> nothing as Yeltsin lectured him about Russia's great-power prerogatives.
> "The idea was to have Yeltsin stand up to the West, just like the
> Communists insisted they would do if Zyuganov won," says a Clinton
> Administration official. "By having Yeltsin posture during that summit
> without Clinton's getting bent out of shape, Yeltsin portrayed himself as a
> leader to be reckoned with. That helped Yeltsin in Russia, and we were for
> Yeltsin."
>
> The American team wanted Clinton to call Yeltsin to urge that he appear in
> his ads. The request reached Clinton--that much is known--but no one will
> say whether the call was made. Yet it was not long before Yeltsin finally
> appeared on the tube. That was the good news--the bad news was that the
> spot was awful. With all three of the American principals out of the
> country (the only time that happened during their employment), Video
> International dealt with Yeltsin on its own. Gorton had written several
> memos detailing how the shoot should proceed. Yeltsin, he said, should be
> filmed for at least four hours over several days, with the best 15 or 30
> seconds culled for airing. "Even a former actor like Ronald Reagan would
> never attempt so important a task with less time and preparation devoted to
> the job," Gorton advised.
>
> But it was not to be. "You'd have to say we were a bit reluctant to push
> the President," says Margolev. So at 6 one morning, after Yeltsin had slept
> barely three hours, Video International taped him for about 40 minutes. The
> finished commercial had Yeltsin speaking for more than two minutes. He
> looked exhausted. "It was ridiculous," says Shumate. "Here you have a guy
> whose health is a major issue, and his fitness to serve is called into
> question by his very own television spot."
>
> Yeltsin also had problems with his regular TV coverage, even though he
> essentially controlled the state-run networks. As late as March, the news
> shows continued to criticize the President mercilessly, a favorite target
> being the war in Chechnya. "It was ludicrous to control the two major
> nationwide television stations and not have them bend to your will," says
> Dresner. In writing, the team adopted a more diplomatic tone. "Wherever an
> event is held," they wrote, "care should be taken to notify the state-run
> TV and radio stations to explain directly the event's significance and how
> we want it covered." Beginning in April, Russia's television became a
> virtual arm of the Yeltsin campaign, a crucial change that actually came
> fairly easily. With none of the more democratic candidates breaking through
> in the polls, most Russian journalists came to regard Yeltsin as the only
> effective bulwark against the Communists--and thus the best guarantor of
> their own careers.
>
> What really caused surprise was the public's reaction to the biased
> reporting. "We focus-grouped the issue several times," says Shumate. The
> results were contained in a June 7 wrap-up memo on TV coverage. Only 28% of
> respondents said the media were very biased in Yeltsin's favor--a group
> that consisted mostly of Zyuganov's partisans. Twenty-nine percent said the
> media were "somewhat biased," but they broke in Yeltsin's favor. Amazingly,
> 27% said they thought the media were biased against Yeltsin.
>
> Each day brought decisions on details that required careful thought and
> management. The Americans advised on staging crowds (and government
> employees were regularly instructed to attend Yeltsin's rallies). They
> conceived Russia's first-ever serious direct-mail effort (a letter from
> Yeltsin to Russian veterans thanking them for their service). They designed
> a campaign to use Yeltsin's wife Naina on the stump, where she was
> regularly well received. And they fought continuously all suggestions that
> Yeltsin debate Zyuganov. "He would have lost," Gorton says simply.
>
> While the team dreaded the possibility of Yeltsin's being lured into
> debating Zyuganov, two greater threats loomed in early May. The Americans
> had been hoping to ignore Soskovets' instructions to signal a possible loss
> so that the elections could be canceled or delayed, but the issue was
> forced on May 5 when Yeltsin's closest aide, General Alexander Korzhakov,
> suggested a postponement.
>
> Gorton had felt it coming and "for the first time ever," he says, "I wrote
> that an election was in the bag. No caveats, nothing about the trend
> looking good. I just flat out said you could take it to the bank. Actually,
> at that point, we had Yeltsin up by about 10 points. It certainly wasn't in
> the bag, but we didn't want the balloting disrupted. We might have fudged a
> bit if our numbers were close, but we didn't have to. Back then, we really
> thought we'd win comfortably."
>
> Yeltsin scolded Korzhakov and said the election would be held on schedule.
> At the same time, he suggested that others besides Korzhakov believed a
> communist victory could provoke a civil war. That comment was widely
> interpreted as signaling that Yeltsin might indeed be planning to follow
> Korzhakov's advice later on. In fact, it was part of the strategy to make
> re-electing the President look like the best way for Russians to avoid
> chaos.
>
> The only drawback of the team's encouraging analysis was that Yeltsin took
> it too much to heart. "When he said he was confident that he'd win the
> election outright in the first round by capturing 50% of the vote, it told
> us again that you can only lead politicians so far," says Dresner. "The
> only real threat to victory was a low turnout, and Yeltsin helped depress
> it by giving voters a reason to take the day off. If they thought Yeltsin's
> victory was a done deal, as he himself had indicated, why bother voting?"
>
> The other crisis had been percolating for some time. The President's three
> democratic opponents had long talked of coalescing behind one or the other
> of them, and the speculation reached a fever pitch at the beginning of May.
> Had "they managed that," says Gorton, "it could really have killed us." A
> good deal of time was devoted to strategizing about how Yeltsin could stop
> the so-called "third force" from emerging. The two key third-force players
> were Grigori Yavlinsky, the leading democrat in the race, and the war hero
> Alexander Lebed. The team advised Yeltsin to woo his opponents publicly in
> order to boost their already inflated egos. "We thought that once they
> enjoyed the limelight, neither would be willing to drop out in favor of the
> other," Shumate explains. "Having them all in the race prevented the rise
> of a single, democratic alternative to Yeltsin."
>
> Keeping Lebed as an independent candidate was considered especially
> critical--unless he dropped out of the first round in favor of Yeltsin,
> which seemed highly unlikely. "All the data suggested that if Lebed
> withdrew to join a third-force coalition, his supporters would defect to
> Zyuganov," says Gorton. Thus on May 5, the Americans wrote that "Lebed
> would be the strongest third-force threat, and we believe paying a
> significant price for his support would be well worth it." The Americans
> didn't know that other Yeltsin aides were already reportedly aiding Lebed
> financially and logistically. "All we did advise," says Dresner, "is that
> if and when Lebed joined with Yeltsin, he not be given a government
> position until after the election was decided. Our polling showed that
> about 2% of voters would shy away from Yeltsin if that happened. On that
> point, we were ignored." Lebed won a startling 15% of the first-round vote,
> and in a dramatic move, Yeltsin almost immediately thereafter appointed him
> his national security adviser. According to an exit poll, 56% of those who
> voted for Lebed in the first round voted for Yeltsin in the runoff."
>
> June 16 was a horrific day. As the first-round vote approached, Yeltsin's
> support softened. It had been built up, virtually a point at a time, over
> three months. It was eroding now as Lebed gained. The Americans' private
> polls indicated only a 5-point lead for Yeltsin over Zyuganov. The two
> candidates who received the most votes in the first round would go to the
> runoff, and Yeltsin was almost certain to make the cut. Finishing second to
> Zyuganov would be a stunning blow to his momentum. A low turnout could
> produce exactly that result, and the first indications signaled a turnout
> below expectations.
>
> The team members paced nervously in Room 1120. Gorton damned Yeltsin for
> ever predicting outright victory in the first round. Braynin wondered if
> the low turnout was owing to Russians' watching the Germany-Russia soccer
> match, and the four argued about whether Russia's defeat would cause voters
> to hit the vodka bottle rather than vote during the two hours remaining
> before the polls closed in the country's western region. "We peaked too
> soon," Dresner screamed. Only Shumate seemed cool. He had long before
> concluded that Zyuganov would never get more than 32% of the vote in the
> first round--the combined total the Communists and their ideological soul
> mates had reached in the December 1995 Duma election. "This stinks,"
> Dresner repeated every few minutes as he checked the turnout around the
> nation. "It won't fall below 65%, and our model shows we win with that,"
> answered Shumate, who then left with his wife Joyce to attend a production
> of La Traviata at the Bolshoi Theatre.
>
> A bit of relief came when a CNN correspondent reported that "the only
> thing voters we've spoken with like less than Yeltsin is the prospect of
> upheaval." Dresner howled. "It worked," he shouted. "The whole strategy
> worked. They're scared to death!" After months being cooped up in the
> President Hotel wearing blue jeans, sneakers and PETE WILSON FOR PRESIDENT
> T shirts, the Americans headed for the building where Russia's central
> election commission would be announcing the results as they came in. "The
> hell with security," Dresner said. "I want to see this." And there they sat
> near the back of the auditorium, six guys in suits with computer
> projections in their hands and a lap-top computer. The place was overrun
> with reporters, but Yeltsin's secret American advisers were never
> recognized.
>
> The final tally for the first round showed that Yeltsin had edged out
> Zyuganov 35% to 32% (the Communists had indeed been held to the level they
> reached in December). Gorton began drafting a memo designed to guide
> Yeltsin's remarks, and Dresner began plotting 20 emergency focus groups to
> determine what voters were thinking. In less than an hour, another memo was
> written urging the quickest possible runoff date. "We've got to try and
> keep Zyuganov from capitalizing" on the first round's surprise tightness,
> Shumate said. "July 3 would be good," said Gorton. "That's about as soon as
> possible, and it's in the middle of the week so that people will be in town
> rather than at their dachas." "We need turnout," Dresner said over and
> over. "We've got to have turnout."
>
> Why, with unlimited funds, expert advice and the media in his pocket, did
> Yeltsin win the first round by only three points? The Americans identify
> several points:
>
> --The continuing underlying hostility toward Yeltsin. "He never overcame
> the fact that most Russians can't stand him," says Dresner. "Anyone but a
> communist would probably have beaten him."
>
> --Zyuganov succeeded in softening his image despite numerous
> self-inflicted mistakes. "He said some really scary things to appease his
> hard-core backers and ensure that they voted," says Gorton. "If he had
> moved more astutely to broaden his base and if he'd aped Clinton and said,
> 'It's the economy, stupid,' he might have pulled it off."
>
> --A slackening of the Yeltsin campaign's anticommunist message in the last
> 10 days. The Americans had advised "that you cannot hit hard enough, or
> long enough, the idea of the communists' bringing civil unrest if they
> win." In the first round, says Shumate, "the repetition lesson never took
> completely."
>
> --Yeltsin's attendance at rock concerts and other frivolous events. "We
> needed to reach young voters," Dresner says, "but our photo-op lectures
> were taken to an extreme. A disturbing dissonance was created. You
> shouldn't have the President out there dancing and prancing if your main
> message is that the country is going to dissolve into chaos if the other
> guy wins. Either you run a serious-business campaign seriously, or you
> don't."
>
> --Yeltsin's prediction of a first-round victory so huge that a runoff
> wouldn't be necessary. "Believe what you want," says Dresner, "but there is
> never any justification for hype like that unless you're out to depress the
> turnout, which is the exact opposite of what we were trying to do."
>
> The first round's closeness guaranteed that the two-week runoff campaign
> would be conducted with care, regardless of the predictions that Yeltsin
> couldn't lose. The Americans' insistence on the anticommunist message was
> pursued with a vengeance. At the end, Yeltsin's television advertising was
> almost exclusively a nonstop diet of past Soviet horrors. Lebed's
> law-and-order theme dovetailed nicely with the pre-existing Yeltsin
> emphasis on preserving stability. Several bogus poll predictions were put
> forth to make the race seem close and thus increase turnout. Everything
> clicked except for Yeltsin's health, which naturally was barely covered by
> the pro-Yeltsin media. The press resumed its criticism of the President
> following his victory last Wednesday, but until then the media had been
> positively slavish about following the campaign's injunction: "Not a word
> about bad things."
>
> The Americans claim no special knowledge about the President's illness or
> its severity and are unconcerned about the course of Yeltsin's second term
> and whoever will finally emerge as its key players. "We were brought in to
> help win," says Gorton, "and that's what we did. The Russians are prideful
> and say that people like us won't be necessary in the future because
> they've learned what to do. You hear that everywhere after the hired guns
> have done their work--and it may be true. All I know is that for every guy
> who thinks he can go it alone, there will always be another guy who knows
> he can't."
>
> Last week Russia took a historic step away from its totalitarian past.
> Democracy triumphed--and along with it came the tools of modern campaigns,
> including the trickery and slickery Americans know so well. If those tools
> are not always admirable, the result they helped achieve in Russia surely
> is. But just as in America, the consultants can only take Yeltsin so far.
>
> -----Original Message-----
> From: Mark Kohut
> Sent: Jan 10, 2017 10:45 PM
> To: pynchon -l
> Subject: LONG AND BORING! READS LIKE TRUTH! DELETE NOW. MarkKohut shared a
> link: Trump, Putin and the Hidden History of How Russia Interfered in the
> U.S. Presidential Election
>
> Trump, Putin and the Hidden History of How Russia Interfered in the U.S.
> Presidential Election
> <http://www.newsweek.com/trump-putin-russia-cia-clinton-2016-presidential-election-hacking-541302>
> from Kurt Eichenwald’s Tweet
> <https://twitter.com/kurteichenwald/status/819021827649445889?refsrc=email&s=11>
>
> Download <https://twitter.com/download?ref_src=MailTweet-iOS> the Twitter
> app
>
>
> Sent from my iPad
>
>
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