The credibility of the letter to discredit the authenticity of the Hunter Biden laptop has just crumbled in recent months, as signees and behind-the-scenes actors reveal just how intentionally fabricated the whole mess was. But, to their credit, it worked.
The latest development with the ‘Russian Disinformation’ letter of lies —signed by 52 former intelligence officers —is that EX-CIA chief Michael Morell wrote the letter specifically for then-candidate Biden to reference in his debates against then-President Donald Trump.
Morell gave Biden something to point to —and he did during the October 22nd debate against then-President Donald Trump. And again after he won. When asked by Fox News’ Peter Doocy if Biden believed the laptop was Russian disinformation, he said “Yes, yes, yes.”
From The New York Post:
Former acting CIA Director Michael Morell told fellow former CIA boss John Brennan in an Oct. 19, 2020, email — obtained by Just the News — that he was attempting to give Biden’s 2020 presidential campaign some ammunition to “push back on Trump” during the debate as he urged Brennan to sign on to the letter calling Hunter Biden’s laptop a possible Russian disinformation operation.
“Can I add your name to this list?” Morell asks Brennan in the email.
“Trying to give the campaign, particularly during the debate on [Oct. 22, 2020], a talking point to push back on Trump on this issue,” Morell explains, admitting the letter was to help Biden during his showdown with Trump.
Brennan responded: “Ok, Michael, add my name to the list. Good initiative. Thanks for asking me to sign on.”
Brennan signed the letter knowing that its sole purpose was to provide a weak candidate with a strong rebuttal —he hardly seems concerned about the validity of the laptop.
Brennan will sit with members of the House subcommittee on the weaponization of the federal government for a transcribed interview next week as will Former Director of National Intelligence James Clapper.
One man who didn’t sign: the CIA’s former Moscow station chief, Daniel Hoffman.
“It was not up to us to speculate. So I didn’t sign the letter. I typically don’t put my name to other people’s words,” Hoffman said.
Smart move.