Pushing QAnon and Stolen Election Lies, Flynn
Re-emerges
Recast by President Trump’s most ardent supporters as
a MAGA martyr, Michael T. Flynn has embraced his role as the man who spent four years
unjustly ensnared in the Russian investigation.
Matthew
Rosenberg
By Matthew
Rosenberg
Feb. 6,
2021
Updated
11:48 a.m. ET
https://www.nytimes.com/2021/02/06/us/politics/michael-flynn-qanon.html
In
Washington’s respectable circles, Michael T. Flynn, the former national
security adviser, is a discredited and dishonored ex-general, a once-esteemed
military intelligence officer who went off the rails ideologically and then was
fired a mere 24 days into the Trump administration for lying to the F.B.I.
about contacts with the Russian ambassador.
As if he
cared.
Where
others see disgrace, Mr. Flynn, 62, has found redemption. Recast by former
President Donald J. Trump’s most ardent supporters as a MAGA martyr, Mr. Flynn
has embraced his role as the man who spent four years unjustly ensnared in the
Russia investigation.
He was one
of the most extreme voices in Mr. Trump’s 77-day push to overturn the election,
a campaign that will be under scrutiny as the former president’s second impeachment
trial gets underway next week. Mr. Flynn went so far as to suggest using the
military to rerun the vote in crucial battleground states. At one point, Mr.
Trump even floated the idea of bringing Mr. Flynn back into the administration,
as chief of staff or possibly F.B.I. director, people familiar with the
conversations told The New York Times.
And now,
safely pardoned and free to speak his mind, Mr. Flynn has emerged from the
Trump presidency much as he entered it — as the angry outsider who pushes fringe
ideas, talks of shadowy conspiracies and is positioning himself as a voice of a
far right that, in the wake of the Capitol riot, appears newly, and violently,
emboldened.
All that
has changed for Mr. Flynn are the subjects at hand, and his apparent
willingness to cash in on his notoriety.
Mr. Flynn’s
dark view of Islam and eagerness to cultivate President Vladimir V. Putin of
Russia have given way to an embrace of QAnon, the pro-Trump conspiracy theory,
and a readiness to question the very fabric of American democracy. He has
swapped a government job and an obsessive focus on “radical Islamic terrorism”
for selling QAnon-branded T-shirts and a new media partnership with conspiracy
theorists called Digital Soldiers.
Yet his
underlying message remains much the same as it was back in 2016, when he was
leading chants of “lock her up” at Trump rallies: Washington’s establishment is
irredeemably corrupt, and real Americans — that is, supporters of himself and
Mr. Trump — are wise to it.
“This
country is awake,” he declared at the pro-Trump rally in Washington last month.
“We will not stand for a lie.”
It was the
night before a mob attacked the Capitol, and the crowd on hand in Washington’s
Freedom Plaza — some of whom would take part in the coming violence — left
little doubt about where Mr. Flynn stood.
“We love
you, we love you, we love you,” they chanted. None of the other speakers at the
rally — a boldface-name collection of Trumpworld characters like Roger Stone
and Alex Jones — got as enthusiastic a reception.
With Mr.
Trump now in his post-presidency at Mar-a-Lago, a loose coalition that draws
together militia members and conspiracy theorists along with evangelical
Christians and suburban Trump supporters is searching for direction. Call it
the alt-truth movement, and if it is to coalesce into something more permanent,
it may well be, at least in part, because figures like Mr. Flynn continue to
push false claims of how a deep-state cabal stole the election.
“In order
for us to breathe the fresh air of liberty, we the people, we are the ones that
will decide our path forward, America’s future forward,” he said at the Jan. 5
rally. “It may not be a Republican Party, it may not be a Democratic Party, it
will be a people’s party.”
Martial Law
Mr. Flynn,
who did not respond to an interview request for this article, spent 33 years as
an Army intelligence officer, earning a reputation for being outspoken and
unconventional and, in the years that followed the Sept. 11 attacks, for being
unusually good at unwinding terrorist networks.
Much of
that work involved mapping out loose webs of ideological fellow travelers,
figuring out who gave voice to extremist ideas and who committed the violence —
two groups that were not always directly tied to each other. If a similar
attempt was made to map the network of people who spread Mr. Trump’s
stolen-election lie that led to the storming of the Capitol, Mr. Flynn himself
would probably appear as one of those leading voices for his part in riling up
Mr. Trump’s supporters without taking part in the attack.
Perhaps
most responsible for Mr. Flynn’s re-emergence is the conspiracy-theorizing
lawyer Sidney Powell. Ms. Powell took over his legal defense in the Russia
investigation after he had twice pleaded guilty in a deal to cooperate with
prosecutors, and charted a combative new path. She challenged the deal and,
marshaling a small army of like-minded Twitter users, recast Mr. Flynn from a
turncoat into a victim, a man who had taken the fall to save his son, who was
also under investigation.
It was the
story of the Russia investigation as a malevolent plot that first began priming
tens of millions of Americans to believe Mr. Trump’s conspiracy theories about
the deep state. As one of the heroes of that narrative, Mr. Flynn became an
ideal messenger when it was refashioned into the demonstrably false claim that
Democrats and their deep-state allies had rigged the election.
Within days
of being pardoned on Nov. 27, Mr. Flynn began sharing those views in the
right-wing media.
In some
appearances, he described himself as a marked man. “I gotta make sure I’m a
moving target, because these son-of-a-guns, they’re after me, in a literal and
a figurative sense,” he told listeners of “The Matrixxx Groove Show,” a QAnon
podcast.
In an
interview with Newsmax, the conservative channel, he suggested Mr. Trump could
impose martial law in swing states he had lost and rerun the elections.
“People out
there talk about martial law like it’s something that we’ve never done,” Mr.
Flynn said. He noted that the military had taken over for civilian authorities
dozens of times in American history, though he did not mention that it had
never done so to help decide an election.
The
suggestion horrified many of Mr. Flynn’s former compatriots in uniform. Even
discussing personal politics is frowned upon in the military, and most generals
see it as their duty to stay above the political fray after retirement, as
well. There have long been exceptions, of course, but to many who had served
with Mr. Flynn, a retired general calling for the military to help decide an
American election represented a new level of recklessness.
“Mike,
stop. Just stop. You are a former soldier,” Tony Thomas, a retired general who
headed the Joint Special Operations Command, wrote on Twitter.
Throughout
his military career, in fact, all most of Mr. Flynn’s fellow soldiers had known
about his politics was that he was a registered Democrat. Then came 2016, and
the sight of a retired general leading chants for the imprisonment of Hillary
Clinton, a former senator and secretary of state.
When a
number of generals privately and publicly urged him to dial back his support
for Mr. Trump, Mr. Flynn called them “disrespectful.” If they could use their
titles to get on corporate boards, he could use his to back Mr. Trump, he
countered in an interview at the time, saying, “I care deeply about this
country.”
In any
case, he said, he had never really been part of their club.
‘Flynn
Facts’
Mr. Flynn
has described his family as “definitely lower middle class,” and he joined the
military without the West Point pedigree of many of his peers. He graduated
instead from the Army’s Reserve Officer Training Program at the University of
Rhode Island, a short drive from the town where he was raised.
Yet he rose
to be a lieutenant general, among the most respected military officers of his
generation. He helped reshape the Joint Special Operations Command at the
height of the war in Iraq, and ran military intelligence in Afghanistan during
the Obama administration’s troop surge. In 2012, President Barack Obama named
him director of the Defense Intelligence Agency.
Then his
career unraveled. After only two years, he was forced out when his attempt to
reform the sprawling agency left subordinates squabbling and his superiors
alarmed.
Mr. Flynn,
though, claimed that he had been fired for refusing to toe the Obama
administration’s line that Islamist militants were in retreat. His position was
vindicated with the rise of the Islamic State, and Mr. Flynn quickly became
something of a cult figure among conservatives for what they saw as his brave
stand against the Obama administration’s perfidy.
As his relentless
focus on Islamist militancy intensified, his views veered hard to the right. He
argued that militants posed a threat to the very existence of the United
States, and at times crossed the line into outright Islamophobia, tweeting
“fear of Muslims is RATIONAL.”
In Mr.
Trump, he found a presidential candidate who shared his dark and conspiratorial
view of Islam.
The
similarities between the two men did not end there: Both shared a fondness for
Twitter and often exhibited a loose relationship with the truth. When Mr. Flynn
ran the D.I.A., his dubious assertions were so common that subordinates came up
with a name for them: “Flynn facts.” (In January, he was among those banned
from Twitter with Mr. Trump.)
So it was
no great stretch to see Mr. Flynn hurling conspiracy theories about an election
that federal election-security experts considered among the best run on record,
and for Mr. Trump to listen.
Last Dec.
18, Mr. Flynn participated in a raucous White House meeting in which Ms. Powell
proposed that the president appoint her as a special counsel investigating
voter fraud. Mr. Trump at one point also raised the idea of putting Mr. Flynn
in charge of the F.B.I., and later suggested making him chief of staff for the
final weeks of his administration, according to Trump and Flynn associates
familiar with the conversations, all of whom spoke on the condition of
anonymity to avoid angering either man.
Whether the
president was serious about either idea is an open question. But Mr. Flynn shot
them down, saying he needed to focus on paying off millions of dollars in legal
debts he had amassed fighting off the Russia investigation.
Joining the
Fringe
His plan
for paying those bills appears to rely on leveraging his public persona into
cold, hard cash. There are the T-shirts and other merchandise, which he is
selling through a company called Shirt Show USA. The website features shirts
emblazoned with #FightLikeAFlynn and camo trucker hats with the emblem
“WWG1WGA,” a reference to a popular QAnon motto, “Where we go one, we go all.”
Then there
is his new media venture, Digital Soldiers, which will publish reader-submitted
stories. Mr. Flynn is building it with UncoverDC, a website that has pushed
QAnon and conspiracy theories about the Covid-19 pandemic and President Biden.
The tenor
of Digital Soldiers is unmistakably QAnon, a movement centered on the claim that
Mr. Trump, secretly aided by the military, was elected to smash a cabal of
Democrats, international financiers and deep-state bureaucrats who worship
Satan and abuse children. The supposed dishonesty of the mainstream media is
central to QAnon, and Digital Soldiers — a phrase followers often use to
describe themselves — represents Mr. Flynn’s fullest embrace of the movement to
date.
“Digital
Soldiers from all over the world have stepped up to fill the void where real
journalism once stood,” the website says.
This past
summer, Mr. Flynn posted a video of himself taking QAnon’s “digital soldier”
oath. To many of the movement’s followers, Mr. Flynn ranks just below Mr.
Trump. Some have speculated that he is the mysterious figure known as “Q,” the
purported government insider with a high-level security clearance who began
posting cryptic messages in 2017 about the deep state trying to destroy the
president.
“They
really take his word as gospel,” said Travis View, a close observer of the
movement who hosts the podcast “QAnon Anonymous.” “In the mythology, they often
say that he knows where the bodies are buried, and that’s why they tried to
railroad him over Russia.”
The phrase
“digital soldiers” is drawn from a speech Mr. Flynn gave shortly after the 2016
election during which he inadvertently laid the groundwork for the conspiracy
theory. He compared the Trump campaign to an insurgency — a theme that QAnon
adherents would later adopt for themselves — with “an army of digital
soldiers.”
“This was
irregular warfare at its finest — in politics,” he said.
Among QAnon
faithful, who believe that Mr. Trump and others use public statements to send
secret signals, Mr. Flynn’s speech is considered something of a foundational
text. And now, in naming his new media outlet Digital Soldiers, many believe he
is sending them a message to carry on, even though Mr. Trump left office before
the predicted apocalyptic showdown with his enemies — know as “the storm” —
could come to pass.
As one
QAnon devotee noted in an IRC channel, a relatively dated online chat room
technology favored by those particularly suspicious of possible surveillance,
“If they kill or capture Trump, Flynn can still carry out the mission.”
“The troops
march to the beat of his drum,” wrote the user, who went by the screen name
“specialist.”
The plan,
the user added, was “masterful.”
Ken Vogel
and Maggie Haberman contributed reporting.
Matthew
Rosenberg, a Washington-based correspondent, was part of a team that won a
Pulitzer Prize in 2018 for reporting on Donald Trump and Russia. He previously
spent 15 years as a foreign correspondent in Asia, Africa and the Middle East. @AllMattNYT
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