When you're on the back foot, thrust your fingers forward and tweet to distraction.
That seems to be President Donald Trump's policy on many occasions.
This comes after intelligence services investigated whether the
Russians hacked the Democratic National Committee with the goal of swinging the election toward Trump. Indeed, in January the intelligence services released a declassified version of a report (
PDF) in which they concluded Vladimir Putin actively attempted to influence the election and that Russia had "a clear preference for President-elect Trump."
On Saturday morning, the president stretched his digits and offered a tweetstorm of counterpoint to this ever-unfolding narrative.
"Terrible! Just found out that Obama had my 'wires tapped' in Trump Tower just before the victory," tweeted Trump. "Nothing found.
This is McCarthyism!"
Trump, though, went on to compare President Barack Obama with a somewhat tainted predecessor.
"How low has President Obama gone to tapp [sic] my phones during the very sacred election process.
This is Nixon/Watergate. Bad (or sick) guy!, he sniffed.
The "bad or sick" question is one that has dominated many a bar debate over the last year. There is usually, I suspect, little agreement.
Obama's office didn't immediately respond to a request for comment. The White House didn't immediately respond to a request for supporting evidence that might enlighten Trump's claims.
What, though, is this all about? What did Trump mean when he said he'd "just found out" his phones were tapped? And, if there could be any truth to it, what secrets might have been revealed?
There is speculation that the president might have been referring to an article on Breitbart that made brightly colored accusations, culled from radio host Mark Levin, that
Obama had been conducting a covert operation against Trump. The article suggested that the Obama administration applied twice to the Foreign Intelligence Surveillance Court (FISA) for permission to wiretap Trump Tower.
A former senior official with the Justice Department told CNN that no such investigation took place and that
Trump's phones weren't tapped. For a wiretap to have been authorized, there would have to have been serious evidence of either a crime or influence from a foreign power.
Former CIA officer Evan McMullin, a Republican who ran as an independent in the election,
offered a terser view: "This is a president unhinged."
The unhinged, however, merely behave erratically and unpredictably. The president, on the other hand, behaved entirely consistently and ended his morning Twitter hurricane with a swipe at Arnold Schwarzenegger.
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