Why Are So Many In Washington And In The Media Against The Declassifying Of Documents That Eventually Led To The Mueller Counsel To Probe Rusian Collusion?

Attorney General William Barr speaks at a news conference to discuss Special Counsel Robert Mueller’s report, in Washington, D.C., April 18, 2019. (Jonathan Ernst/Reuters)

Byron York, Washington Examiner: As Barr mulls declassification, a familiar tune from critics

In February 2018, the House Intelligence Committee released the so-called Nunes memo. In four pages, the document, from the committee's then-chairman Rep. Devin Nunes, revealed much of what the public knows today about the FBI's reliance on the Steele dossier in pursuing since-discredited allegations that the Trump campaign and Russia conspired to fix the 2016 election. Specifically, it revealed that the FBI included unverified material from the dossier in applications to a secret spy court to win a warrant to wiretap Trump foreign policy volunteer adviser Carter Page.

All that was classified. To release it, the committee appealed to President Trump, who made a declassification order. That is the only way Americans know about the Page warrant. From that knowledge came later revelations about the FBI's use of confidential informants and undercover agents to get information on Trump campaign figures.

Read more ....

Update: Bill Barr’s Declassification Kerfuffle (Andrew C. McCarthy, NRO)

WNU Editor: The impression that I am getting is that many in Washington who were responsible for this mess are more worried about their own security rather than national security if these documents are declassified.  As to what is my take. I am with the people .... CNN Poll: Overwhelming Majority Of Americans Want Congress To Investigate The Origins On Obama DOJ Spying On Trump (May 3, 2019), and President Trump should declassify all pertinent documents.

Subscribe to receive free email updates: