The Justice Department has decided to appoint a special
counsel to investigate possible coordination between Trump associates and
Russian officials seeking to meddle in last year’s election, according to
Deputy Attorney General Rod Rosenstein.
The Washington Post reported, Robert Mueller, a former prosecutor who served as the FBI
director from 2001 to 2013, has agreed to serve in the role, Rosenstein said.
The move marks a concession by the Trump administration to Democratic demands
for the investigation to be run independently of the Justice Department. Calls
for a special counsel have increased since Trump fired FBI Director James B.
Comey last week.
Jennifer Rubin of The Post wrote, this move became inevitable once Rosenstein was embroiled in
the Comey firing. Indeed, the appointment of a special counsel may be seen as
recognition that those events — in which Rosenstein is both a witness and a
participant — must be examined. Rosenstein’s letter is certainly broad enough
to cover possible obstruction-of-justice charges against the president,
attorney general and other White House aides. (Mueller will look at “any links
and/or coordination between the Russian government and individuals associated
with the campaign of President Donald Trump’’ as well as “any matters that
arose or may arise directly from the investigation’’ and, as The Post reported,
“any other matters that fall under the scope of the Justice Department
regulation covering special counsel appointments.'”)
Rosenstein could not have picked a better choice. As a
former FBI chief, Mueller knows precisely what to look for and how to conduct
an exhaustive investigation. Rosenstein therefore will be lauded for stepping
aside and deemed to have recovered his reputation, sullied by involvement in
Comey’s firing.
In one sense, this is a tremendous boost for Democrats who
have been imploring Rosenstein to appoint a special prosecutor. They rightly
argue that the Justice Department itself is now implicated in potential
wrongdoing, as is the president of the United States. However, Republicans in
Congress also should breathe a sigh of relief. They will still be hounded to
appoint a select committee to oversee the entire matter, if not an
independent commission, but they no longer have to resist the demands
for a special prosecutor.
Frankly, the White House has every reason to panic. No one
will intimidate or throw Mueller off course. The seriousness of the probe could
not be more clear. A pall will soon fall over the White House as every member
of the staff, the vice president and the president will brace themselves for
interrogation, production of potentially damaging documents and, incidentally,
big legal bills.
Coming just as the president prepares to leave on a foreign
trip, appointment of a special prosecutor comes as one more huge blow to his
standing and ego. He now goes overseas — something the homebody Trump
reportedly dreaded — as a wounded president with an uncertain future. Nothing
could be more disconcerting to allies than dealing with an impulsive, ignorant
president — one whose future is far from certain. Trump can whine about the
unfair press, as he did at the Coast Guard commencement Wednesday, but he
has no one but himself to blame for his predicament.
The 100-day mark was the end of the beginning of Trump’s
term. The appointment of a special prosecutor just four months into his
presidency might be seen as the beginning of the end.
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