What emerged from that fragile piece of paper was Arctic Frost, a “sensitive” national security probe that treated alternate electors and Trump‑aligned activists as if they were part of a coordinated conspiracy. Unlike past election disputes, this one was not left to courts and politics; it was routed through counterintelligence channels, signed off by the highest levels of the Biden Justice Department and then placed in the hands of Special Counsel Jack Smith.
For critics like Jim Jordan, the pattern felt like déjà vu: expansive surveillance tools, thinly sourced allegations, and a bureaucracy that seemed more suspicious of one political faction than of foreign adversaries. Supporters argue the stakes after January 6 justified aggressive scrutiny. Yet the subpoenas, the secrecy, and the reliance on partisan media reports leave a lingering fear: once national security becomes a domestic weapon, the line between justice and power doesn’t just blur — it vanishes.
