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| Meta Title | Is Donald Trump a Russian agent? |
| Meta Description | Donald Trumpâs unshakeable admiration for Vladimir Putin continues to raise eyebrows. Does Putin have a hold over Trump? |
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| Boilerpipe Text | Images of an adrenaline-pumped, red-faced Donald Trump, egged on by Vice President JD Vance, bellowing at Ukrainian President Volodymyr Zelenskyy during an acrimonious White House press conference last week, have shocked friends and allies of the United States around the world.
The question that triggered the outburst is front and centre of the Ukraine peace process and is one that has dogged Trump for decades. Why does he display such high regard and respect for a bloodied tyrant in the Kremlin; why is he best buddies with Russia?
No world leader uses social media like Trump. He casually baits, attacks and belittles fellow world leaders almost daily. Dozens of his closest allies have been criticised and their heads of state rebuked sharply. Apart from those too insignificant to even appear on Trumpâs radar. Vladimir Putin is the indisputable exception. But why?
The 64-trillion-dollar question
Towards the end of the press conference, a Polish journalist said that, as a child, he saw the USA as not only the richest and most powerful country in the world, but also as a force for good. But now, he ended, âMy friends in Poland are worried you align yourself too much with Putin. Whatâs your message for them?â It was the 64-trillion-dollar question.
The president struggled to provide a plausible answer for the journalistâs puzzled friends in Warsaw or, indeed, for anybody. His straw man response only revealed more bias.
âIf I didnât align myself with both of them, youâd never have a deal. You want me to say really terrible things about Putin and then say, âHi Vladimir how are we doing on the deal?â It doesnât work that way. Iâm not aligned with Putin. Iâm not aligned with anybody, Iâm aligned with the United States of America. And for the good of the world. Iâm aligned with the world.â
He ignored the fact that he had already said plenty of âterrible thingsâ about Zelenskyy on multiple occasions, even accusing him of being a dictator, yet he still expected the Ukrainian president to sign a deal. The glaring inconsistency seemed to escape him. It was a typical Trump word salad, devoid of meaning. In a split second, he had gone from not being aligned with âanybodyâ to apparently being aligned with everybody, even with Europe.
Trump finished by saying: âYou want me to be tough? I can be tougher than any human being youâve ever seen. Iâd be so tough, but youâre never going to get a deal that way.â
Five minutes later he was verbally battering Zelenskyy into submission.
JD Vanceâs role in the controversy
On occasions such as this, when two presidents are in the room together, vice presidents are usually just window dressing. They remain silent unless called upon to speak. Both Vance and Secretary of State Marco Rubio had sat impassively up to that point. Perhaps sensing that Trumpâs response to an extremely valid point was weak, Vance intervened â disastrously, as it turned out â by needlessly injecting domestic partisan politics into an international situation:
âFor four years in the United States of America, we had a president who stood up at press conferences and talked tough about Vladimir Putin, and then Putin invaded Ukraine and destroyed a significant chunk of the country. The path to peace and the path to prosperity is maybe engaging in diplomacy.
âWe tried the pathway of Joe Biden, of thumping our chest and pretending that the President of the United Statesâ words meant more than the President of the United Statesâ actions. What makes America a good country is engaging in diplomacy. Thatâs what President Trump is doing.â
He sat back with a self-satisfied smile, as if he had justified the leader of the free worldâs love-fest with a murderous, indicted war criminal. Clearly, he had not.
The suggestion that Ukraine hadnât previously engaged in diplomacy â a demonstrable falsehood â seemed to get under Zelenskyyâs skin, and he attempted, perhaps a little clumsily in his third language, to explain to Vance how Putin had already broken 25 ceasefire agreements, including a âfull and comprehensiveâ one
signed in 2019
with President Macron and Chancellor Merkel.
It all went downhill from there, quickly descending into a shouting match to see which of the two most powerful men in America was better at berating Zelenskyy. Vance has now
told
Fox News
that he had been trying to âdefuse the situation a little bitâ.
So much for the US âengaging in diplomacyâ.
Why does Trump favour Russia?
Governments around the world are struggling to understand how Trump hopes to benefit from a rapprochement with Russia. Political commentators are as baffled as members of his party. Even appointees in his first administration donât know the answer. Trump himself never gives a coherent explanation for his strategy.
Professor Timothy Snyder, an American historian, says
in a Substack post
that the main way Russia engages the USA is through constant attempts to destabilise American society, through âunceasing cyberwarâ, while Russian state-controlled TV is âfull of fantasies of the destruction of the United Statesâ.
He asks: âWhy would one turn friends into rivals and pretend that a rival is a friend?â
Nor is it about trade: âThe economies of Americanâs present allies are at least 20 times larger than the Russian economy,â says Snyder. And he adds: âRussian trade was never very important to the United States. Why would one fight trade wars with the prosperous friends in exchange for access to an essentially irrelevant market? The answer might be that the alliance with Russia is preferred for reasons that have nothing to do with American interests.â
Beyond that obvious truth, Snyder canât help us.
Michael Wolff, Trumpâs unofficial biographer, recently told BBC viewers that this US foreign policy pivot is âto keep Vladimir Putin happyâ. When asked why, he said: âWhy is the question.â
Wolff sat with long-time Trump adviser Steve Bannon watching Trump in Helsinki in 2018 as the president told an incredulous gathering of the worldâs media that when it came to the allegations of meddling in the elections, he believed Putin over his own intelligence agencies. Bannon turned to Wolff: â[Putin] has something on Trump, what is it?â
Bannon didnât know and neither did Wolff.
What could Putin have on Trump?
To answer that question, we need to go back nearly 40 years. We know from a book by
Guardian
foreign correspondent Luke Harding:
Collusion: Secret Meetings, Dirty Money, and How Russia Helped Donald Trump Win
, that Trump was possibly identified as a âconfidential contactâ by the KGB in the spring of 1986.
In Trumpâs own book:
The Art of the Deal,
he says that in September of that year, he found himself seated next to Soviet ambassador Yuri Dubinin at a luncheon hosted by Leonard Lauder, EstĂ©e Lauderâs businessman son. Trump wrote that Dubininâs daughter Natalia âhad read about Trump Tower and knew all about itâ.
Trump admitted: âOne thing led to another, and now Iâm talking about building a large luxury hotel, across the street from the Kremlin, in partnership with the Soviet government.â It was at this luncheon that his first trip to Russia was discussed.
The seating arrangement might not have been accidental. Dubinin had arrived six months earlier and, incredibly, his daughter took him directly from the airport â on his very first day in America â to Trump Tower on Fifth Avenue. The newly appointed Soviet ambassador to the UN was apparently âso excitedâ that he decided to go up and meet Trump.
Dubinin, fluent in English and a brilliant negotiator, immediately stroked Trumpâs already inflated ego, telling him: âThe first thing I saw in the city was your tower!â
Natalia said later: âTrump melted at once. He is an emotional person, somewhat impulsive. He needs recognition. And, of course, when he gets it he likes it. My fatherâs visit worked on him like nectar to a bee.â
Within weeks of this meeting, Dubinin was rapidly appointed ambassador to the United States. Was this all a coincidence, or a KGB plot to recruit Trump?
Trumpâs first Moscow visit in 1987
Early in July 1987, Trump and his then-wife Ivana flew to Moscow for the first time, a visit Trump later described as âan extraordinary experienceâ. The couple stayed in the Lenin suite at the National Hotel, on Tverskaya Street, across from the Kremlin.
On his return, Trump, who until then had just been a real estate developer in New York City, suddenly discovered a profound interest in foreign affairs. In September, he paid $94,801 to run a
full-page advert in
T
he
New York Times
in which he harshly criticised US foreign policy under both Republican and Democrat presidents.
The article asserted: âThereâs nothing wrong with Americaâs Foreign Defense Policy that a little backbone canât cureâ, followed by an open letter from Trump âTo The American Peopleâ detailing âwhy America should stop paying to defend countries that can afford to defend themselvesâ. From the Kremlinâs perspective, it was a rather helpful seed that has now grown into Republican Party doctrine.
That same day,
The New York Times
reported that Trump had given âvague hintsâ that he might run as a Republican candidate in the 1988 presidential election. In the event, he didnât.
In a recent Facebook post, a former Soviet intelligence officer, Alnur Mussayev, has also claimed Trump was
recruited by the KGB
in 1987 and given the codename âKrasnovâ.
The Guardian
reported
similar claims
in 2021, at that time from Yuri Shvets, another former KGB spy. Shvets compared Trump to Burgess, Maclean, Philby, and Blunt who passed secrets to Moscow before and during the Cold War.
The Steele dossier
The infamous
dossier
produced by Christopher Steele, a former MI6 officer, contains salacious allegations about events that took place sometime in 2013 in the presidential suite of the Ritz Carlton hotel, also on Moscowâs Tverskaya Street. You can search online yourself to discover what is alleged to have happened there.
A senior Russian Federal Security (FSB) agent told Steele in June 2016: âTrumpâs unorthodox behaviour in Russia over the years had provided the authorities there with enough embarrassing material [kompromat] on the now-Republican presidential candidate to be able to blackmail him if they wished.â
How much credence can be given to the dossier is hard to say. Some allegations were found to be untrue or there is little evidence to support them. Others, however, have been corroborated.
Wikipedia
confirms that US intelligence agencies and the 2019 Mueller report have backed up some of Steeleâs claims, such as âthat the Russian government was working to get Mr. Trump electedâ; that Russia sought âto cultivate people in Trumpâs orbitâ, and that many Trump campaign officials and associates had numerous secret contacts with Russian officials and agents.
Other corroborated claims were that Putin favoured Trump over Hillary Clinton and that he personally ordered an âinfluence campaignâ to harm Clintonâs election efforts and to âundermine public faith in the US democratic processâ.
Again, this begs the question: why did Putin favour Trump?
A Russian analyst who worked on the Steele dossier was found
not guilty of lying
to the FBI by a jury in New York in 2022. Later, Trump filed a lawsuit against Steele, but the case was
thrown out
by a British High Court after the judge ruled that the six-year limitation period had expired.
Trump and Russian money
In the early 1990s, Trump was in deep financial trouble. His Trump Taj Mahal Casino in Atlantic City and the Plaza Hotel in New York both declared bankruptcy, and his airline, Trump Shuttle, closed down altogether in 1992.
His reputation as a failure made him
persona non grata
to most major business lenders, but with the help of foreign lenders, particularly wealthy Russians, he was apparently able to mount a Lazarus-like comeback.
A
New York Times
investigation in 2018 found that Trump
relied heavily on foreign money,
including from âwealthy individuals from Russia and elsewhere with questionable, and even criminal, backgroundsâ that flowed through offshore shell companies and various entities often used to disguise beneficial ownership. Other news organisations uncovered similar findings.
In one example, Trump-branded condominiums in Sunny Isles Beach, Florida, were sold to 60 individuals with Russian passports or addresses who bought nearly $100mn worth of units in an area known as Little Moscow. Among them were Russian government officials and a Ukrainian owner of two units who later pleaded guilty to receipt of stolen property as part of a money-laundering scheme involving a former Ukrainian prime minister.
Donald Trump Jr, Trumpâs eldest son, appeared to confirm that the family business relied heavily on Russian money when he said in 2008, âRussians make up a pretty disproportionate cross-section of a lot of our assetsâ. However, it remains unproven whether there is direct political influence from Russia, and in 2018 Trump expelled 60 Russian diplomats from the US.
The Ukraine war
The Ukraine war has served to reignite speculation about Trumpâs ties to Putin and his apparent subservience to him. These links pre-date the Russian dictatorâs rise to power, but have nonetheless grown stronger and more inexplicable over time.
Does the Kremlin have kompromat on Trump? We may never know.
The US Senate Intelligence Committee recently questioned Trumpâs nominees as Nato representatives and asked outright if President Trump was a Russian asset. If not, Senator Jeff Merkley (Democrat, Oregon) wanted to know what a Russian asset embedded as POTUS would do, other than what Trump is already doing. They struggled to answer, as this YouTube video shows:
Newsweek also reported that Elon Muskâs AI Chatbot Grok
concludes that Trump
is â85% likely to be a Russian assetâ based on publicly available information.
Nobody seems to believe heâs a Russian agent, but he is certainly an asset, although Trump has always denied it. Itâs not beyond the realms of possibility that the famously incurious and narcissistic 47th president of the USA is too stupid to realise he is being used by the Kremlin.
Now that really would be a story. |
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# Is Donald Trump a Russian agent?
## Donald Trumpâs unshakeable admiration for Vladimir Putin continues to raise eyebrows. Does Putin have a hold over Trump?
by[Anthony Robinson](https://yorkshirebylines.co.uk/author/anthonyrobinson/)
[06-03-2025 17:18 - Updated on 08-09-2025 12:36](https://yorkshirebylines.co.uk/news/world/is-donald-trump-a-russian-agent/)
in [Politics](https://yorkshirebylines.co.uk/category/politics/), [World](https://yorkshirebylines.co.uk/category/news/world/)
Reading Time: 14 mins read
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[](https://yorkshirebylines.co.uk/wp-content/uploads/2025/03/Vladimir_Putin__Donald_Trump_in_Helsinki_16_July_2018.jpg)
Putin and Trump in Helsinki, 16 July 2018 [image by www.kremlin.ru. Creative Commons Attribution 4.0](https://shorturl.at/lNyoW)
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**Images of an adrenaline-pumped, red-faced Donald Trump, egged on by Vice President JD Vance, bellowing at Ukrainian President Volodymyr Zelenskyy during an acrimonious White House press conference last week, have shocked friends and allies of the United States around the world.**
The question that triggered the outburst is front and centre of the Ukraine peace process and is one that has dogged Trump for decades. Why does he display such high regard and respect for a bloodied tyrant in the Kremlin; why is he best buddies with Russia?
No world leader uses social media like Trump. He casually baits, attacks and belittles fellow world leaders almost daily. Dozens of his closest allies have been criticised and their heads of state rebuked sharply. Apart from those too insignificant to even appear on Trumpâs radar. Vladimir Putin is the indisputable exception. But why?
## The 64-trillion-dollar question
Towards the end of the press conference, a Polish journalist said that, as a child, he saw the USA as not only the richest and most powerful country in the world, but also as a force for good. But now, he ended, âMy friends in Poland are worried you align yourself too much with Putin. Whatâs your message for them?â It was the 64-trillion-dollar question.
The president struggled to provide a plausible answer for the journalistâs puzzled friends in Warsaw or, indeed, for anybody. His straw man response only revealed more bias.
âIf I didnât align myself with both of them, youâd never have a deal. You want me to say really terrible things about Putin and then say, âHi Vladimir how are we doing on the deal?â It doesnât work that way. Iâm not aligned with Putin. Iâm not aligned with anybody, Iâm aligned with the United States of America. And for the good of the world. Iâm aligned with the world.â
He ignored the fact that he had already said plenty of âterrible thingsâ about Zelenskyy on multiple occasions, even accusing him of being a dictator, yet he still expected the Ukrainian president to sign a deal. The glaring inconsistency seemed to escape him. It was a typical Trump word salad, devoid of meaning. In a split second, he had gone from not being aligned with âanybodyâ to apparently being aligned with everybody, even with Europe.
Trump finished by saying: âYou want me to be tough? I can be tougher than any human being youâve ever seen. Iâd be so tough, but youâre never going to get a deal that way.â
Five minutes later he was verbally battering Zelenskyy into submission.
## JD Vanceâs role in the controversy
On occasions such as this, when two presidents are in the room together, vice presidents are usually just window dressing. They remain silent unless called upon to speak. Both Vance and Secretary of State Marco Rubio had sat impassively up to that point. Perhaps sensing that Trumpâs response to an extremely valid point was weak, Vance intervened â disastrously, as it turned out â by needlessly injecting domestic partisan politics into an international situation:
âFor four years in the United States of America, we had a president who stood up at press conferences and talked tough about Vladimir Putin, and then Putin invaded Ukraine and destroyed a significant chunk of the country. The path to peace and the path to prosperity is maybe engaging in diplomacy.
âWe tried the pathway of Joe Biden, of thumping our chest and pretending that the President of the United Statesâ words meant more than the President of the United Statesâ actions. What makes America a good country is engaging in diplomacy. Thatâs what President Trump is doing.â
He sat back with a self-satisfied smile, as if he had justified the leader of the free worldâs love-fest with a murderous, indicted war criminal. Clearly, he had not.
The suggestion that Ukraine hadnât previously engaged in diplomacy â a demonstrable falsehood â seemed to get under Zelenskyyâs skin, and he attempted, perhaps a little clumsily in his third language, to explain to Vance how Putin had already broken 25 ceasefire agreements, including a âfull and comprehensiveâ one [**signed in 2019**](https://www.bbc.co.uk/news/world-europe-50713647)with President Macron and Chancellor Merkel.
It all went downhill from there, quickly descending into a shouting match to see which of the two most powerful men in America was better at berating Zelenskyy. Vance has now [**told**](https://www.mediaite.com/tv/jd-vance-claims-he-tried-to-defuse-tense-meeting-where-he-and-trump-berated-zelensky/) [***Fox News***](https://www.mediaite.com/tv/jd-vance-claims-he-tried-to-defuse-tense-meeting-where-he-and-trump-berated-zelensky/)that he had been trying to âdefuse the situation a little bitâ.
So much for the US âengaging in diplomacyâ.
## Why does Trump favour Russia?
Governments around the world are struggling to understand how Trump hopes to benefit from a rapprochement with Russia. Political commentators are as baffled as members of his party. Even appointees in his first administration donât know the answer. Trump himself never gives a coherent explanation for his strategy.
Professor Timothy Snyder, an American historian, says [**in a Substack post**](https://snyder.substack.com/p/the-war-trump-chooses)that the main way Russia engages the USA is through constant attempts to destabilise American society, through âunceasing cyberwarâ, while Russian state-controlled TV is âfull of fantasies of the destruction of the United Statesâ.
He asks: âWhy would one turn friends into rivals and pretend that a rival is a friend?â
Nor is it about trade: âThe economies of Americanâs present allies are at least 20 times larger than the Russian economy,â says Snyder. And he adds: âRussian trade was never very important to the United States. Why would one fight trade wars with the prosperous friends in exchange for access to an essentially irrelevant market? The answer might be that the alliance with Russia is preferred for reasons that have nothing to do with American interests.â
Beyond that obvious truth, Snyder canât help us.
Michael Wolff, Trumpâs unofficial biographer, recently told BBC viewers that this US foreign policy pivot is âto keep Vladimir Putin happyâ. When asked why, he said: âWhy is the question.â
Wolff sat with long-time Trump adviser Steve Bannon watching Trump in Helsinki in 2018 as the president told an incredulous gathering of the worldâs media that when it came to the allegations of meddling in the elections, he believed Putin over his own intelligence agencies. Bannon turned to Wolff: â\[Putin\] has something on Trump, what is it?â
Bannon didnât know and neither did Wolff.
## What could Putin have on Trump?
To answer that question, we need to go back nearly 40 years. We know from a book by *Guardian* foreign correspondent Luke Harding: *Collusion: Secret Meetings, Dirty Money, and How Russia Helped Donald Trump Win*, that Trump was possibly identified as a âconfidential contactâ by the KGB in the spring of 1986.
In Trumpâs own book: *The Art of the Deal,* he says that in September of that year, he found himself seated next to Soviet ambassador Yuri Dubinin at a luncheon hosted by Leonard Lauder, EstĂ©e Lauderâs businessman son. Trump wrote that Dubininâs daughter Natalia âhad read about Trump Tower and knew all about itâ.
Trump admitted: âOne thing led to another, and now Iâm talking about building a large luxury hotel, across the street from the Kremlin, in partnership with the Soviet government.â It was at this luncheon that his first trip to Russia was discussed.
The seating arrangement might not have been accidental. Dubinin had arrived six months earlier and, incredibly, his daughter took him directly from the airport â on his very first day in America â to Trump Tower on Fifth Avenue. The newly appointed Soviet ambassador to the UN was apparently âso excitedâ that he decided to go up and meet Trump.
Dubinin, fluent in English and a brilliant negotiator, immediately stroked Trumpâs already inflated ego, telling him: âThe first thing I saw in the city was your tower!â
Natalia said later: âTrump melted at once. He is an emotional person, somewhat impulsive. He needs recognition. And, of course, when he gets it he likes it. My fatherâs visit worked on him like nectar to a bee.â
Within weeks of this meeting, Dubinin was rapidly appointed ambassador to the United States. Was this all a coincidence, or a KGB plot to recruit Trump?
## Trumpâs first Moscow visit in 1987
Early in July 1987, Trump and his then-wife Ivana flew to Moscow for the first time, a visit Trump later described as âan extraordinary experienceâ. The couple stayed in the Lenin suite at the National Hotel, on Tverskaya Street, across from the Kremlin.
On his return, Trump, who until then had just been a real estate developer in New York City, suddenly discovered a profound interest in foreign affairs. In September, he paid \$94,801 to run a [**full-page advert in** ***T******he*** ***New York Times***](https://www.buzzfeednews.com/article/ilanbenmeir/that-time-trump-spent-nearly-100000-on-an-ad-criticizing-us) in which he harshly criticised US foreign policy under both Republican and Democrat presidents.
The article asserted: âThereâs nothing wrong with Americaâs Foreign Defense Policy that a little backbone canât cureâ, followed by an open letter from Trump âTo The American Peopleâ detailing âwhy America should stop paying to defend countries that can afford to defend themselvesâ. From the Kremlinâs perspective, it was a rather helpful seed that has now grown into Republican Party doctrine.
That same day, *The New York Times* reported that Trump had given âvague hintsâ that he might run as a Republican candidate in the 1988 presidential election. In the event, he didnât.
In a recent Facebook post, a former Soviet intelligence officer, Alnur Mussayev, has also claimed Trump was [**recruited by the KGB**](https://www.irishstar.com/news/us-news/breaking-donald-trump-recruited-kgb-34727079?utm_source=whatsapp&utm_medium=social&utm_campaign=sharebar) in 1987 and given the codename âKrasnovâ. *The Guardian* reported [**similar claims**](https://www.theguardian.com/us-news/2021/jan/29/trump-russia-asset-claims-former-kgb-spy-new-book?utm_source=chatgpt.com)in 2021, at that time from Yuri Shvets, another former KGB spy. Shvets compared Trump to Burgess, Maclean, Philby, and Blunt who passed secrets to Moscow before and during the Cold War.
[](https://yorkshirebylines.co.uk/news/world/the-us-is-talking-about-mass-sterilisation-again/)
[World](https://yorkshirebylines.co.uk/category/news/world/)
### [The US is talking about mass sterilisation â again](https://yorkshirebylines.co.uk/news/world/the-us-is-talking-about-mass-sterilisation-again/)
by[Jennie Kermode](https://yorkshirebylines.co.uk/author/jenniekermode/)
[25 February 2025](https://yorkshirebylines.co.uk/news/world/the-us-is-talking-about-mass-sterilisation-again/)
## The Steele dossier
The infamous [**dossier**](https://regmedia.co.uk/2018/02/02/steele-dossier-trump.pdf) produced by Christopher Steele, a former MI6 officer, contains salacious allegations about events that took place sometime in 2013 in the presidential suite of the Ritz Carlton hotel, also on Moscowâs Tverskaya Street. You can search online yourself to discover what is alleged to have happened there.
A senior Russian Federal Security (FSB) agent told Steele in June 2016: âTrumpâs unorthodox behaviour in Russia over the years had provided the authorities there with enough embarrassing material \[kompromat\] on the now-Republican presidential candidate to be able to blackmail him if they wished.â
How much credence can be given to the dossier is hard to say. Some allegations were found to be untrue or there is little evidence to support them. Others, however, have been corroborated.
[**Wikipedia**](https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Steele_dossier)confirms that US intelligence agencies and the 2019 Mueller report have backed up some of Steeleâs claims, such as âthat the Russian government was working to get Mr. Trump electedâ; that Russia sought âto cultivate people in Trumpâs orbitâ, and that many Trump campaign officials and associates had numerous secret contacts with Russian officials and agents.
Other corroborated claims were that Putin favoured Trump over Hillary Clinton and that he personally ordered an âinfluence campaignâ to harm Clintonâs election efforts and to âundermine public faith in the US democratic processâ.
Again, this begs the question: why did Putin favour Trump?
A Russian analyst who worked on the Steele dossier was found [**not guilty of lying**](https://www.bbc.co.uk/news/world-us-canada-63305382) to the FBI by a jury in New York in 2022. Later, Trump filed a lawsuit against Steele, but the case was [**thrown out**](https://www.bbc.co.uk/news/uk-68166050) by a British High Court after the judge ruled that the six-year limitation period had expired.
## Trump and Russian money
In the early 1990s, Trump was in deep financial trouble. His Trump Taj Mahal Casino in Atlantic City and the Plaza Hotel in New York both declared bankruptcy, and his airline, Trump Shuttle, closed down altogether in 1992.
His reputation as a failure made him *persona non grata* to most major business lenders, but with the help of foreign lenders, particularly wealthy Russians, he was apparently able to mount a Lazarus-like comeback.
A *New York Times* investigation in 2018 found that Trump [**relied heavily on foreign money,**](https://www.nytimes.com/2018/04/21/opinion/sunday/trump-business-mueller-money-laundering.html) including from âwealthy individuals from Russia and elsewhere with questionable, and even criminal, backgroundsâ that flowed through offshore shell companies and various entities often used to disguise beneficial ownership. Other news organisations uncovered similar findings.
In one example, Trump-branded condominiums in Sunny Isles Beach, Florida, were sold to 60 individuals with Russian passports or addresses who bought nearly \$100mn worth of units in an area known as Little Moscow. Among them were Russian government officials and a Ukrainian owner of two units who later pleaded guilty to receipt of stolen property as part of a money-laundering scheme involving a former Ukrainian prime minister.
Donald Trump Jr, Trumpâs eldest son, appeared to confirm that the family business relied heavily on Russian money when he said in 2008, âRussians make up a pretty disproportionate cross-section of a lot of our assetsâ. However, it remains unproven whether there is direct political influence from Russia, and in 2018 Trump expelled 60 Russian diplomats from the US.
## The Ukraine war
The Ukraine war has served to reignite speculation about Trumpâs ties to Putin and his apparent subservience to him. These links pre-date the Russian dictatorâs rise to power, but have nonetheless grown stronger and more inexplicable over time.
Does the Kremlin have kompromat on Trump? We may never know.
The US Senate Intelligence Committee recently questioned Trumpâs nominees as Nato representatives and asked outright if President Trump was a Russian asset. If not, Senator Jeff Merkley (Democrat, Oregon) wanted to know what a Russian asset embedded as POTUS would do, other than what Trump is already doing. They struggled to answer, as this YouTube video shows:
Newsweek also reported that Elon Muskâs AI Chatbot Grok [concludes that Trump](https://www.newsweek.com/elon-musks-chatbot-says-theres-strong-chance-trump-russian-asset-2040338) is â85% likely to be a Russian assetâ based on publicly available information.
Nobody seems to believe heâs a Russian agent, but he is certainly an asset, although Trump has always denied it. Itâs not beyond the realms of possibility that the famously incurious and narcissistic 47th president of the USA is too stupid to realise he is being used by the Kremlin.
Now that really would be a story.
[**Superb piece.** It deserves a coffeeâŠ](https://bylinesnetwork.co.uk/coffee)
Tags: [Donald Trump](https://yorkshirebylines.co.uk/tag/donald-trump/)[USA](https://yorkshirebylines.co.uk/tag/usa/)

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| Readable Markdown | **Images of an adrenaline-pumped, red-faced Donald Trump, egged on by Vice President JD Vance, bellowing at Ukrainian President Volodymyr Zelenskyy during an acrimonious White House press conference last week, have shocked friends and allies of the United States around the world.**
The question that triggered the outburst is front and centre of the Ukraine peace process and is one that has dogged Trump for decades. Why does he display such high regard and respect for a bloodied tyrant in the Kremlin; why is he best buddies with Russia?
No world leader uses social media like Trump. He casually baits, attacks and belittles fellow world leaders almost daily. Dozens of his closest allies have been criticised and their heads of state rebuked sharply. Apart from those too insignificant to even appear on Trumpâs radar. Vladimir Putin is the indisputable exception. But why?
## The 64-trillion-dollar question
Towards the end of the press conference, a Polish journalist said that, as a child, he saw the USA as not only the richest and most powerful country in the world, but also as a force for good. But now, he ended, âMy friends in Poland are worried you align yourself too much with Putin. Whatâs your message for them?â It was the 64-trillion-dollar question.
The president struggled to provide a plausible answer for the journalistâs puzzled friends in Warsaw or, indeed, for anybody. His straw man response only revealed more bias.
âIf I didnât align myself with both of them, youâd never have a deal. You want me to say really terrible things about Putin and then say, âHi Vladimir how are we doing on the deal?â It doesnât work that way. Iâm not aligned with Putin. Iâm not aligned with anybody, Iâm aligned with the United States of America. And for the good of the world. Iâm aligned with the world.â
He ignored the fact that he had already said plenty of âterrible thingsâ about Zelenskyy on multiple occasions, even accusing him of being a dictator, yet he still expected the Ukrainian president to sign a deal. The glaring inconsistency seemed to escape him. It was a typical Trump word salad, devoid of meaning. In a split second, he had gone from not being aligned with âanybodyâ to apparently being aligned with everybody, even with Europe.
Trump finished by saying: âYou want me to be tough? I can be tougher than any human being youâve ever seen. Iâd be so tough, but youâre never going to get a deal that way.â
Five minutes later he was verbally battering Zelenskyy into submission.
## JD Vanceâs role in the controversy
On occasions such as this, when two presidents are in the room together, vice presidents are usually just window dressing. They remain silent unless called upon to speak. Both Vance and Secretary of State Marco Rubio had sat impassively up to that point. Perhaps sensing that Trumpâs response to an extremely valid point was weak, Vance intervened â disastrously, as it turned out â by needlessly injecting domestic partisan politics into an international situation:
âFor four years in the United States of America, we had a president who stood up at press conferences and talked tough about Vladimir Putin, and then Putin invaded Ukraine and destroyed a significant chunk of the country. The path to peace and the path to prosperity is maybe engaging in diplomacy.
âWe tried the pathway of Joe Biden, of thumping our chest and pretending that the President of the United Statesâ words meant more than the President of the United Statesâ actions. What makes America a good country is engaging in diplomacy. Thatâs what President Trump is doing.â
He sat back with a self-satisfied smile, as if he had justified the leader of the free worldâs love-fest with a murderous, indicted war criminal. Clearly, he had not.
The suggestion that Ukraine hadnât previously engaged in diplomacy â a demonstrable falsehood â seemed to get under Zelenskyyâs skin, and he attempted, perhaps a little clumsily in his third language, to explain to Vance how Putin had already broken 25 ceasefire agreements, including a âfull and comprehensiveâ one [**signed in 2019**](https://www.bbc.co.uk/news/world-europe-50713647)with President Macron and Chancellor Merkel.
It all went downhill from there, quickly descending into a shouting match to see which of the two most powerful men in America was better at berating Zelenskyy. Vance has now [**told**](https://www.mediaite.com/tv/jd-vance-claims-he-tried-to-defuse-tense-meeting-where-he-and-trump-berated-zelensky/) [***Fox News***](https://www.mediaite.com/tv/jd-vance-claims-he-tried-to-defuse-tense-meeting-where-he-and-trump-berated-zelensky/)that he had been trying to âdefuse the situation a little bitâ.
So much for the US âengaging in diplomacyâ.
## Why does Trump favour Russia?
Governments around the world are struggling to understand how Trump hopes to benefit from a rapprochement with Russia. Political commentators are as baffled as members of his party. Even appointees in his first administration donât know the answer. Trump himself never gives a coherent explanation for his strategy.
Professor Timothy Snyder, an American historian, says [**in a Substack post**](https://snyder.substack.com/p/the-war-trump-chooses)that the main way Russia engages the USA is through constant attempts to destabilise American society, through âunceasing cyberwarâ, while Russian state-controlled TV is âfull of fantasies of the destruction of the United Statesâ.
He asks: âWhy would one turn friends into rivals and pretend that a rival is a friend?â
Nor is it about trade: âThe economies of Americanâs present allies are at least 20 times larger than the Russian economy,â says Snyder. And he adds: âRussian trade was never very important to the United States. Why would one fight trade wars with the prosperous friends in exchange for access to an essentially irrelevant market? The answer might be that the alliance with Russia is preferred for reasons that have nothing to do with American interests.â
Beyond that obvious truth, Snyder canât help us.
Michael Wolff, Trumpâs unofficial biographer, recently told BBC viewers that this US foreign policy pivot is âto keep Vladimir Putin happyâ. When asked why, he said: âWhy is the question.â
Wolff sat with long-time Trump adviser Steve Bannon watching Trump in Helsinki in 2018 as the president told an incredulous gathering of the worldâs media that when it came to the allegations of meddling in the elections, he believed Putin over his own intelligence agencies. Bannon turned to Wolff: â\[Putin\] has something on Trump, what is it?â
Bannon didnât know and neither did Wolff.
## What could Putin have on Trump?
To answer that question, we need to go back nearly 40 years. We know from a book by *Guardian* foreign correspondent Luke Harding: *Collusion: Secret Meetings, Dirty Money, and How Russia Helped Donald Trump Win*, that Trump was possibly identified as a âconfidential contactâ by the KGB in the spring of 1986.
In Trumpâs own book: *The Art of the Deal,* he says that in September of that year, he found himself seated next to Soviet ambassador Yuri Dubinin at a luncheon hosted by Leonard Lauder, EstĂ©e Lauderâs businessman son. Trump wrote that Dubininâs daughter Natalia âhad read about Trump Tower and knew all about itâ.
Trump admitted: âOne thing led to another, and now Iâm talking about building a large luxury hotel, across the street from the Kremlin, in partnership with the Soviet government.â It was at this luncheon that his first trip to Russia was discussed.
The seating arrangement might not have been accidental. Dubinin had arrived six months earlier and, incredibly, his daughter took him directly from the airport â on his very first day in America â to Trump Tower on Fifth Avenue. The newly appointed Soviet ambassador to the UN was apparently âso excitedâ that he decided to go up and meet Trump.
Dubinin, fluent in English and a brilliant negotiator, immediately stroked Trumpâs already inflated ego, telling him: âThe first thing I saw in the city was your tower!â
Natalia said later: âTrump melted at once. He is an emotional person, somewhat impulsive. He needs recognition. And, of course, when he gets it he likes it. My fatherâs visit worked on him like nectar to a bee.â
Within weeks of this meeting, Dubinin was rapidly appointed ambassador to the United States. Was this all a coincidence, or a KGB plot to recruit Trump?
## Trumpâs first Moscow visit in 1987
Early in July 1987, Trump and his then-wife Ivana flew to Moscow for the first time, a visit Trump later described as âan extraordinary experienceâ. The couple stayed in the Lenin suite at the National Hotel, on Tverskaya Street, across from the Kremlin.
On his return, Trump, who until then had just been a real estate developer in New York City, suddenly discovered a profound interest in foreign affairs. In September, he paid \$94,801 to run a [**full-page advert in** ***T******he*** ***New York Times***](https://www.buzzfeednews.com/article/ilanbenmeir/that-time-trump-spent-nearly-100000-on-an-ad-criticizing-us) in which he harshly criticised US foreign policy under both Republican and Democrat presidents.
The article asserted: âThereâs nothing wrong with Americaâs Foreign Defense Policy that a little backbone canât cureâ, followed by an open letter from Trump âTo The American Peopleâ detailing âwhy America should stop paying to defend countries that can afford to defend themselvesâ. From the Kremlinâs perspective, it was a rather helpful seed that has now grown into Republican Party doctrine.
That same day, *The New York Times* reported that Trump had given âvague hintsâ that he might run as a Republican candidate in the 1988 presidential election. In the event, he didnât.
In a recent Facebook post, a former Soviet intelligence officer, Alnur Mussayev, has also claimed Trump was [**recruited by the KGB**](https://www.irishstar.com/news/us-news/breaking-donald-trump-recruited-kgb-34727079?utm_source=whatsapp&utm_medium=social&utm_campaign=sharebar) in 1987 and given the codename âKrasnovâ. *The Guardian* reported [**similar claims**](https://www.theguardian.com/us-news/2021/jan/29/trump-russia-asset-claims-former-kgb-spy-new-book?utm_source=chatgpt.com)in 2021, at that time from Yuri Shvets, another former KGB spy. Shvets compared Trump to Burgess, Maclean, Philby, and Blunt who passed secrets to Moscow before and during the Cold War.
## The Steele dossier
The infamous [**dossier**](https://regmedia.co.uk/2018/02/02/steele-dossier-trump.pdf) produced by Christopher Steele, a former MI6 officer, contains salacious allegations about events that took place sometime in 2013 in the presidential suite of the Ritz Carlton hotel, also on Moscowâs Tverskaya Street. You can search online yourself to discover what is alleged to have happened there.
A senior Russian Federal Security (FSB) agent told Steele in June 2016: âTrumpâs unorthodox behaviour in Russia over the years had provided the authorities there with enough embarrassing material \[kompromat\] on the now-Republican presidential candidate to be able to blackmail him if they wished.â
How much credence can be given to the dossier is hard to say. Some allegations were found to be untrue or there is little evidence to support them. Others, however, have been corroborated.
[**Wikipedia**](https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Steele_dossier)confirms that US intelligence agencies and the 2019 Mueller report have backed up some of Steeleâs claims, such as âthat the Russian government was working to get Mr. Trump electedâ; that Russia sought âto cultivate people in Trumpâs orbitâ, and that many Trump campaign officials and associates had numerous secret contacts with Russian officials and agents.
Other corroborated claims were that Putin favoured Trump over Hillary Clinton and that he personally ordered an âinfluence campaignâ to harm Clintonâs election efforts and to âundermine public faith in the US democratic processâ.
Again, this begs the question: why did Putin favour Trump?
A Russian analyst who worked on the Steele dossier was found [**not guilty of lying**](https://www.bbc.co.uk/news/world-us-canada-63305382) to the FBI by a jury in New York in 2022. Later, Trump filed a lawsuit against Steele, but the case was [**thrown out**](https://www.bbc.co.uk/news/uk-68166050) by a British High Court after the judge ruled that the six-year limitation period had expired.
## Trump and Russian money
In the early 1990s, Trump was in deep financial trouble. His Trump Taj Mahal Casino in Atlantic City and the Plaza Hotel in New York both declared bankruptcy, and his airline, Trump Shuttle, closed down altogether in 1992.
His reputation as a failure made him *persona non grata* to most major business lenders, but with the help of foreign lenders, particularly wealthy Russians, he was apparently able to mount a Lazarus-like comeback.
A *New York Times* investigation in 2018 found that Trump [**relied heavily on foreign money,**](https://www.nytimes.com/2018/04/21/opinion/sunday/trump-business-mueller-money-laundering.html) including from âwealthy individuals from Russia and elsewhere with questionable, and even criminal, backgroundsâ that flowed through offshore shell companies and various entities often used to disguise beneficial ownership. Other news organisations uncovered similar findings.
In one example, Trump-branded condominiums in Sunny Isles Beach, Florida, were sold to 60 individuals with Russian passports or addresses who bought nearly \$100mn worth of units in an area known as Little Moscow. Among them were Russian government officials and a Ukrainian owner of two units who later pleaded guilty to receipt of stolen property as part of a money-laundering scheme involving a former Ukrainian prime minister.
Donald Trump Jr, Trumpâs eldest son, appeared to confirm that the family business relied heavily on Russian money when he said in 2008, âRussians make up a pretty disproportionate cross-section of a lot of our assetsâ. However, it remains unproven whether there is direct political influence from Russia, and in 2018 Trump expelled 60 Russian diplomats from the US.
## The Ukraine war
The Ukraine war has served to reignite speculation about Trumpâs ties to Putin and his apparent subservience to him. These links pre-date the Russian dictatorâs rise to power, but have nonetheless grown stronger and more inexplicable over time.
Does the Kremlin have kompromat on Trump? We may never know.
The US Senate Intelligence Committee recently questioned Trumpâs nominees as Nato representatives and asked outright if President Trump was a Russian asset. If not, Senator Jeff Merkley (Democrat, Oregon) wanted to know what a Russian asset embedded as POTUS would do, other than what Trump is already doing. They struggled to answer, as this YouTube video shows:
Newsweek also reported that Elon Muskâs AI Chatbot Grok [concludes that Trump](https://www.newsweek.com/elon-musks-chatbot-says-theres-strong-chance-trump-russian-asset-2040338) is â85% likely to be a Russian assetâ based on publicly available information.
Nobody seems to believe heâs a Russian agent, but he is certainly an asset, although Trump has always denied it. Itâs not beyond the realms of possibility that the famously incurious and narcissistic 47th president of the USA is too stupid to realise he is being used by the Kremlin.
Now that really would be a story. |
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