Pentagon Papers whistleblower: Trump is a ‘domestic enemy of the Constitution’

AlterNet logoThe word “whistleblower” is all too familiar to 88-year-old Daniel Ellsberg: it was Ellsberg who, in 1971, released the Pentagon Papers — a Pentagon study of U.S. government decisions made during the Vietnam War. And Ellsberg was highly critical of President Donald Trump when he appeared on MSNBC’s “The Beat” on Tuesday and discussed the Ukraine scandal and House impeachment inquiry against the president.

Ellsberg told host Ari Melber that Trump has shown himself to be a “domestic enemy of the Constitution,” asserting that Trump has encouraged violence against the Ukraine whistleblower who made a formal complaint about Trump’s July 25 phone conversation with Ukrainian President Volodymyr Zelensky. A partial transcript shows that during that conversation, Trump tried to pressure Zelensky into digging up dirt on former Vice President Joe Biden and his son Hunter Biden — an act that House Speaker Nancy Pelosi considers an impeachable offense.

Ellsberg said of Trump’s whistleblower-related comments, “He is calling for (a) physical attack, I would say. I think that’s an impeachable offense or a criminal offense in itself.” And Ellsberg told Melber he wanted to “congratulate” the whistleblower “on the success they have had so far in getting that information out and on the courage that she showed or he showed in taking this on.”

View the complete October 9 article by Alex Henderson on the AlterNet website here.