While the media is obsessed with Wolff's sleazy palace intrigue novel, some people are keeping their eyes on the ball. And getting results.
The Department of Justice has agreed to turn over all documents related to the controversial dossier to the House Intelligence Committee after four months of wrangling and legal threats ended in a Wednesday night phone call and agreement.
House Intelligence Committee Chairman Devin Nunes, R-CA, and Deputy Attorney General Rod Rosenstein spoke at length Wednesday night, just hours before Nunes’ imposed midnight deadline on the Justice Department passed.
Rosenstein not only agreed to provide all the documents requested, which include unredacted FBI interviews with witnesses, as well as, access to eight key FBI and DOJ witnesses but information on Andrew Weissmann, whose now a senior member of the special counsel.
The dossier under discussion is the Steele dossier, funded by the Hillary Clinton campaign through Fusion GPS, a secret media smear firm, with connections in the FBI and the DOJ. The dossier may have been used as a basis for both Obama's Watergate, the illegal spying on Trump officials by Obama officials, including Susan Rice and Samantha Power, and Mueller witch hunt.
We know that Steele, the former British intel agent, who put his dossier together based on 'free' material from a Russian intel source, was at one point being funded by figures within the FBI. The document release should tell us a great deal more. And it can put us on the road to unraveling Obama's version of All the President's Men.