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MAHATMA GANDHI ~ Truth never damages a cause that is just.
Tuesday, 25 July 2017
Jared Kushner's explanations on Russia reveal a man wholly unsuited to his job
Kushner’s statement raises new questions about how Donald Trump could
have entrusted someone with so little foreign policy experience with
such a powerful international portfolio Protester asks Jared Kushner to sign Russian flag
Jared Kushner,
Donald Trump’s son-in-law and senior adviser, who has been drawn into
the billowing inquiry into Russian interference in the 2016 election,
told congressional investigators on Monday that he hoped his appearance
before them would clear his name and “put these matters to rest”.
But in his presentation
to members of the Senate intelligence committee, the 36-year-old
husband of Ivanka Trump might have dug himself deeper into a hole by
leaning so heavily on personal ignorance as the core of his defense. By
doing so he raised a slew of new questions about how the US president
could have entrusted someone with such little foreign policy ballast
with a powerful international portfolio.
In an 11-page statement released before his closed-door Senate
appearance, Kushner essentially argued that he could not have been
involved in underhand relations with the Russian government because he
was so poorly versed in Russian affairs. Over the 3,700 words of the
statement, he mentions that he could not remember the name of the
Russian ambassador to Washington not once, but three times.
“I could not even remember the name of the Russian ambassador,” he
writes. He added that he had “limited knowledge about” Sergey Kislyak,
who stepped down
as ambassador on Saturday, even after Trump had won the presidential
election on 8 November 2016 and was headed for the White House.
In the wake of that election victory, Kushner was instructed by his
father-in-law to be the main contact point between the Trump transition
team and foreign government officials. Kushner says in his statement
that between election day and the inauguration on 20 January 2017, “I
recall having over 50 contacts with people from over 15 countries”.
In the run-up to the election, he was similarly charged with acting
as a point person on foreign affairs, but that was just one of a
jaw-dropping list of duties that Trump heaped on to him. He also
handled, as the statement makes clear, “finance, scheduling,
communications, speechwriting, polling, data and digital teams”,
conceding that “all of these were tasks that I had never performed on a
campaign previously”.
Kushner argues that a steep learning curve was a benefit for the
Trump campaign, calling it a “nimble culture” that allowed the team to
“adjust to the ever-changing circumstances and make changes on the fly”.
But it also led him, if his statement is to be believed, into some very
perilous situations.
Not knowing the ambassador’s name was a mild challenge compared with
his handling of the now notorious 9 June meeting with Natalia
Veselnitskaya. At that engagement, Trump’s eldest son Donald Jr invited
Kushner and then Trump campaign manager Paul Manafort to meet four
Russians including Veselnitskaya, a lawyer with ties to the Kremlin.
Kushner insists he didn’t read the email chain
in which Don Jr was offered dirt on Hillary Clinton as a pretext for
the meeting. When he walked into the meeting, he goes on to say that he
was confused by the topic of conversation that was under way – the
Russian ban on Americans adopting Russian children.
“I had no idea why that topic was being raised,” he said, apparently
unaware that the adoption ban is extensively used by Russian emissaries
as a euphemism for US sanctions imposed on Russia. The subject of
sanctions is central to modern diplomatic relations between the two
countries.
Substantially more serious than Kushner’s apparent lack of
understanding on sanctions was the similar naivety – if his statement is
taken at face value – that he showed in his dealings with Kislyak and a
prominent Russian banker. When the ambassador told him that senior
Russian generals wanted to talk to Kushner to discuss policy on Syria,
Trump’s son-in-law inquired about using an “existing communications
channel” at the Russian embassy.
The suggestion was made during the transition period when Trump and
all members of his inner circle were still ordinary citizens outside
government. Kushner appears to have been unaware that setting up such a
private line of contact with senior Russian military leaders could have
violated the Logan Act that prohibits private citizens from negotiating with foreign powers.
Kushner claims in his statement that his 13 December meeting with the
top Russian banker Sergey Gorkov had nothing to do with his business
interests, despite the fact that as a New York real estate tycoon his
business activities were intricately interwoven
with Russian money. “At no time was there any discussion about my
companies, business transactions, real estate projects, loans, banking
arrangements or private business of any kind.”
That directly contradicts
Gorkov’s own account of the meeting, which was convened, he said, to
discuss new business opportunities, with Kushner in attendance as head
of his family’s real estate entity, Kushner Companies. The president’s
son-in-law expresses no awareness in his statement that Gorkov was
trained by the Russian intelligence agency FSB or that his bank,
Vnesheconombank (VEB), is widely accepted to be the finance house of the
Kremlin.
“If the Kushner family has had zero financial dealings with the
Russians or Russian banks, and are willing to open up their books to
prove it, then maybe Jared Kushner will be able to put all this to
rest,” said Richard Painter, chief White House ethics lawyer under
George W Bush.
“But until that happens we have to assume there’s a strong likelihood
that when a prominent Russian banker goes to see a prominent member of
the Trump transition team, finances will have been part of their
discussion.”
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