Brennan, Comey, and the Reckoning Long Overdue
Kevin McCullough
For years, patriotic Americans have known something smelled rotten in the deep-state narrative about Trump and Russia. We knew it when CNN breathlessly paraded James Clapper in front of cameras. We knew it when John Brennan tried to look solemn while peddling dossiers, and we definitely knew it when Jim Comey told Congress he just “doesn’t recall” half of anything that happened on his watch.
Now, the Department of Justice has officially confirmed that both former CIA Director John Brennan and ex-FBI Director James Comey are under criminal investigation. Let that sink in: the architects of the most dishonest intelligence operation in modern political history might finally have to answer for it.
According to DOJ sources, Brennan is being scrutinized for potential false statements to Congress. He reportedly told lawmakers one thing under oath in 2023—namely, that he opposed the use of the infamous Steele dossier in the 2017 Intelligence Community Assessment—but the CIA’s internal “lessons learned” report and written records directly contradict that. In fact, Brennan not only approved the inclusion of the unverified opposition research funded by Hillary Clinton’s campaign, he insisted on it—against the advice of multiple seasoned Russia analysts. He reportedly overrode protocol, pushed the report out the door under political pressure, and justified it later with a convenient case of congressional amnesia. That’s not a “whoops.” That’s perjury.
And Comey? Well, his hands have been all over this from day one. The man who feigned righteous independence while leaking memos to trigger a special counsel probe now finds himself under the microscope. The exact scope of the investigation into Comey isn’t fully public yet, but if he coordinated or knowingly misled lawmakers or the American people, the American people deserve justice. This entire mess began when the highest levels of our intelligence community decided that the will of the people in 2016 was simply unacceptable—and set out to undo it.
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https://townhall.com/columnists/kevinmccullough/2025/07/09/brennan-comey-and-the-reckoning-long-overdue-n2660096