Obama's Intelligence Coup
Bombshell New Documents Show the Oval Office Plotted with Intelligence to Delegitimize Trump and Mislead the Nation.
POLITICS: By Walter Curt:
Director of National Intelligence Tulsi Gabbard has detonated the Russia‑gate narrative with the release of a long‑buried December 8, 2016 Presidential Daily Brief—now unredacted—showing that, months after the FBI’s July 31, 2016 Crossfire Hurricane counter‑intelligence probe began, senior analysts concluded “foreign adversaries do not have and will probably not obtain the capabilities to successfully execute widespread and undetected cyber‑attacks” on America’s decentralized voting system. Translation: by the time the “Russian Collusion” hoax was in full swing, the Intelligence Community had already judged that Russia couldn’t flip a single state, yet the Obama White House pressed forward, green‑lighting the very narrative it knew to be false.
The timeline is damning. Within twenty‑four hours of that quiet PDB, Obama summoned his intelligence triumvirate to draft a brand‑new assessment—one that jettisoned months of data and conveniently amplified Christopher Steele’s unverified opposition research. On January 6, 2017, mere days before Inauguration, the Intelligence Community Assessment dropped, alleging that Vladimir Putin had personally orchestrated a digital coup to install Donald Trump. Corporate media gasped on cue, pundits donned trench coats, and the republic was plunged into a fever dream in which every dissenting meme was Kremlin code. Meanwhile the original finding—that Russia lacked both intent and capability—was sealed in a vault deeper than Fort Knox.
What followed was a masterclass in bureaucratic insurgency. Leaked FISA warrants, selective transcripts, and breathless headlines churned public opinion, all while Mueller’s searchlights swept across D.C. for evidence that never existed. Careers were ruined, friendships torched, markets rattled, and America’s standing abroad dinged—all for a conspiracy theory the outgoing Commander‑in‑Chief had already been warned was baseless. If that isn’t a textbook attempt to subvert the will of the people, the phrase has no meaning.
Let us speak plainly:
Our Founders fought a shooting war over lesser abuses.
Washington feared factions that would, in his words, “usurp the reins of government for themselves.” Adams warned that liberty once surrendered is rarely recovered. Jefferson reminded future generations that “the price of freedom is eternal vigilance.” Today’s revelation is precisely the sort of elite mischief those gentlemen cautioned against. A sitting administration, armed with privileged intelligence, weaponized that access to hobble its successor under the guise of patriotic alarm. That is not a policy dispute; it is a dagger aimed at the heart of self‑government.
Some scoff that calling it “treason” overheats the skillet. Nonsense. Treason is not limited to aiding a foreign army in the field; it includes any deliberate attempt to overthrow the constitutional order. When senior officials fabricate a national‑security threat to cripple an incoming president, they are levying a paper coup every bit as menacing as muskets on the green. The Constitution offers no exemption for silk‑tie sedition.
So what now? Justice, not journalistic closure, is the end of this story. Every email chain, phone log, and after‑action memo tied to the December 9 directive and the January 6 assessment must be subpoenaed. Criminal referrals should follow where lies are proved. Congress must haul Brennan, Clapper, Comey, Rice, McCabe, and every mid‑level drafting hand before sworn committee.
Immunity deals? Forget it.
Let them testify under penalty of perjury so the public can weigh their candor against the newly freed documents. Analysts who resisted the rewrite deserve whistle‑blower protection and restored careers. Americans wrongly tagged as foreign stooges deserve restitution for reputational and financial harm.
Beyond individual accountability, structural reform is imperative. Intelligence cannot again be laundered into domestic politics behind opaque “sources and methods.” Declassification by default—redact names, not facts—should be the statute, not the exception. No dossier, however lurid, may underpin surveillance of U.S. citizens until its provenance is scrutinized in open court. The republic must never again rely on anonymous briefings whispered through cable‑news earpieces.
Critics will plead for “moving on.” That plea insults the millions who cast ballots in good faith, only to watch their choice smeared as a Kremlin asset. It insults the institutions hollowed by partisan trench warfare.
Most of all, it insults the Constitution, which vests sovereignty in the people alone—no footnotes. To shrug and stroll past this scandal is to invite the next cabal to try its luck. A nation unwilling to punish high‑level wrongdoing will soon discover it has codified the practice.
Patriots, therefore, must not merely denounce but demand. Demand indictments where lies were sworn. Demand hearings where sunlight disinfects. Demand vigilance in 2026 and beyond, so that no clique of self‑appointed guardians ever again contrives a narrative to annul your voice. The documents are public. The facts are settled. Courage, not complacency, is now the duty of every citizen who still believes the Declaration was more than parchment posturing.
In 1776 men pledged “our Lives, our Fortunes, and our sacred Honor” against a distant king. Today we are asked for far less: attention, indignation, and resolve. Yet the principle is unchanged. Government of, by, and for the people cannot survive officials who plot in shadows to override elections they dislike. This dossier drops the cloak, exposing raw intent. Either we act, or we concede that a cabal inside the executive branch may veto the electorate whenever it suits them.
That crossroads offers no moderate lane.
So steel your spine, spread the truth, and press every lever of lawful power until justice is done. The American experiment has weathered British redcoats, economic calamity, and foreign tyrants. It will survive this, too—if its citizens prove worthy of the legacy bequeathed by Washington, Adams, Jefferson, and every patriot who ever dared to place principle above power. The Republic stands or falls on what we do next. Choose wisely.
This is a great article! We need accountability on this, and I am so happy that Tulsi released this info.
I just saw this graphic on Fox News!! 🙂