Jared Kushner now under FBI scrutiny

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it a witch hunt in every sense

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The Post has not been told that Kushner is a target — or the central focus — of the investigation, and he has not been accused of any wrongdoing
 

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919

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Strange, I don't hear about 919's "tweets" anywhere else. Even the fake news networks don't report them.

Now THAT's fake news. :thumbsup:
Change the channel off of Fox...I'm posting the links for the articles...read
 

Conservatives, Patriots & Huskies return to glory
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read what? WP stories or NYT stories that lose credibility before the ink is dry?

all their major revelations have been debunked within hours, why would any reasonable mind trust them?

rhetorical question, because you want them to be true and so they're all true to you no matter where the "evidence" leads
 

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read what? WP stories or NYT stories that lose credibility before the ink is dry?

all their major revelations have been debunked within hours, why would any reasonable mind trust them?

rhetorical question, because you want them to be true and so they're all true to you no matter where the "evidence" leads


Confirmation bias, also known as Observational selection or The enumeration of favorable circumstances is the tendency for people to (consciously or unconsciously) seek out information that conforms to their pre-existing view points, and subsequently ignore information that goes against them, both positive and negative.

Why even waste time reading his nonsense? He spends every waking hour seeking out this stuff.
 

919

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Natasha Bertrand
@NatashaBertrand
·1h





Another CIA vet: If you do what Kushner reportedly did, "you are, in the eyes of the FBI and CIA, a traitor."




'This is serious': Jared Kushner reportedly tried to set up a secret Trump-Russia backchannelbusinessinsider.com





POLITICS
[h=1]'This is serious': Jared Kushner reportedly tried to set up a secret Trump-Russia backchannel[/h]
5928bd3579474cab0e8b4bc9-640-480.png
Getty Images
Jared KushnerJared Kushner, President Donald Trump's son-in-law and top White House adviser, was willing to go extraordinary lengths to establish a secret line of communication between the Trump administration and Russian government officials, The Washington Post reported on Friday.


During the presidential transition period leading up to Trump's inauguration, Kushner held a series of meetings with the Russian ambassador to the US, Sergey Kislyak, and the head of a Moscow bank that was under US sanctions.


In talks with Kislyak in December, Kushner floated the possibility of setting up a secure line of communication between the Trump transition team and Russia - and having those talks take place in Russian diplomatic facilities in the US, essentally concealing their interactions from US government scrutiny, The Post wrote, citing US intelligence officials briefed on the matter.


Kislyak reportedly passed along that request to Moscow. The Post's Ellen Nakashima, Adam Entous, and Greg Miller reported that the Russian ambassador was "taken aback" by Kushner's request, because it posed significant risks for both the Trump team and the Kremlin.


Kushner, who did not disclose the meeting on his security clearance form, is now a subject in the FBI's investigation of Russia's election interference, and whether the Trump campaign colluded with Moscow to undermine Hillary Clinton. He also had 2 previously undisclosed contacts with Kislyak between April-November of last year, according to Reuters.


"GOOD GRIEF. This is serious," said Bob Deitz, a veteran of the NSA and the CIA who worked under the Clinton and Bush administrations.





"This raises a bunch of problematic issues. First, of course, is the Logan Act, which prohibits private individuals conducting negotiations on behalf of the US government with foreign governments," Deitz said. "Second, it tends to reinforce the notion that Trump's various actions about Comey do constitute obstruction."


"In other words, there is now motive added to conduct," Deitz noted. "This is a big problem for the President."

Kushner did not previously disclose the December meetings to US officials during his background check, and the White House only acknowleged them after news outlets reported on it. It follows a pattern among key Trump advisers that unfolded during and after the 2016 election.


"If you are in a position of public trust, and you talk to, meet, or collude with a foreign power" while trying to subvert normal state channels, "you are, in the eyes of the FBI and CIA, a traitor," said Glenn Carle, a former top counterterrorism official at the CIA. "That is what I spent my life getting foreigners to do with me, for the US government."


Carle noted that, if the Kushner-Kislyak meeting and reported discussion were an isolated incident, then it could be spun as "normal back-channel communication arrangements among states."


"If Jared Kushner was trying to set up a backchannel with the Russians, doesn't that mean he wasn't colluding with them?" a White House official said in response to the story, according to CNN.


But Kislyak and the Trump campaign interacted extensively, and Trump associates either kept those interactions secret from US officials or misrepresented them, as was the case with Michael Flynn, who was forced to resign in February for similar reasons.


Reuters reported
earlier this month that Flynn and Kislyak also spoke about setting up a secret backchannel during the transition between Trump and Russian President Vladimir Putin "that could bypass the US national security bureaucracy."


"We know about the multiple meetings of Trump entourage members with Russian intel-related individuals," Carle said. "There will be many others that we do not know about." He noted that while this reported backchannel is "explosive," it is worth questioning who planted the story - the Post reportedly received an anonymous letter in December tipping them off to the Kushner-Kislyak meeting.

59134bc173f2f32b008b53ea-960-667.jpg
Russian Embassy
President Donald Trump meets with Russian Ambassador Sergei Kislyak.
Additionally, as a longtime diplomat, Kislyak would have known that his communications were being monitored. So the possibility remains, Carle said, that the Russians used the meeting with Kushner to distract the intelligence community and the public from potentially more incriminating relationships between the campaign and Moscow.


Indeed, Kushner also met with the CEO of Russia's state-owned Vnesheconombank, Sergey Gorkov, in December 2016, The New York Times reported in late March. The meeting - which had not previously been disclosed and came on the heels of Kushner's meeting with Kislyak at Trump Tower - caught the eye of the Senate Intelligence Committee, which is investigating Russia's interference in the 2016 election and whether any members of Trump's campaign were complicit.



Kislyak reportedly orchestrated the meeting between Kushner and Gorkov, who was appointed by Russian President Vladimir Putin in January 2016 as part of a restructuring of the bank's management team, Bloomberg reported last year.


The Kremlin and the White House have provided conflicting explanations for why Kushner met with Gorkov.


Former CIA Director John Brennan, in testimony Tuesday before the House Intelligence Committee, said that he was concerned by some of the "interactions" between Russian officials and members of the Trump campaign that took place during the election last year.


Republican Rep. Tom Rooney asked Brennan if he ever found "any direct evidence of collusion between the Trump campaign and Putin in Moscow" while he was the CIA director.


Brennan replied that "there was intelligence that the Russian intelligence services were actively involved in this effort ... to try to get individuals to act on their behalf either wittingly or unwittingly." He added that he was "was worried by the contacts that the Russians were having with US persons" and "had unresolved questions" by the time he left office about whether" the Russians had succeeded in getting Americans to do their bidding.


Pressed further, Brennan said that "the information and intelligence revealed contacts and interactions between Russian officials and US persons involved in the Trump campaign that I was concerned about because of known Russian efforts to suborn such individuals. It raised questions in my mind about whether the Russians were able to gain the cooperation of such individuals."

582cad27e02ba738018b4a5d-1136-639.png
 

919

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Confirmation bias, also known as Observational selection or The enumeration of favorable circumstances is the tendency for people to (consciously or unconsciously) seek out information that conforms to their pre-existing view points, and subsequently ignore information that goes against them, both positive and negative.

Why even waste time reading his nonsense?
Irony
 

919

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read what? WP stories or NYT stories that lose credibility before the ink is dry?

all their major revelations have been debunked within hours, why would any reasonable mind trust them?

rhetorical question, because you want them to be true and so they're all true to you no matter where the "evidence" leads
ignorance is bliss...enjoy yours
 

919

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read what? WP stories or NYT stories that lose credibility before the ink is dry?

all their major revelations have been debunked within hours, why would any reasonable mind trust them?

rhetorical question, because you want them to be true and so they're all true to you no matter where the "evidence" leads

NYT, Washington Post, Reuters, The WSJ, The National Review, Time, Fox...I've posted from all of these...I'm sorry you can't get past your hatred of "liberal media" and think every single major news org is in cahoots and out to get Trump.
 

Rx Normal
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If I didn't know better, I'd say 919 worked for these rogue intel agencies spreading disinformation across the Internet. :ohno:
 

Rx Normal
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POLITICS
'This is serious': Jared Kushner reportedly tried to set up a secret Trump-Russia backchannel


5928bd3579474cab0e8b4bc9-640-480.png
Getty Images
Jared KushnerJared Kushner, President Donald Trump's son-in-law and top White House adviser, was willing to go extraordinary lengths to establish a secret line of communication between the Trump administration and Russian government officials, The Washington Post reported on Friday.


During the presidential transition period leading up to Trump's inauguration, Kushner held a series of meetings with the Russian ambassador to the US, Sergey Kislyak, and the head of a Moscow bank that was under US sanctions.


In talks with Kislyak in December, Kushner floated the possibility of setting up a secure line of communication between the Trump transition team and Russia - and having those talks take place in Russian diplomatic facilities in the US, essentally concealing their interactions from US government scrutiny,
The Post wrote, citing US intelligence officials briefed on the matter.


Kislyak reportedly passed along that request to Moscow.
The Post's Ellen Nakashima, Adam Entous, and Greg Miller reported thatthe Russian ambassador was "taken aback" by Kushner's request, because it posed significant risks for both the Trump team and the Kremlin.


Kushner, who did not disclose the meeting on his security clearance form, is now a subject in the FBI's investigation of Russia's election interference, and whether the Trump campaign colluded with Moscow to undermine Hillary Clinton. He also had 2 previously undisclosed contacts with Kislyak between April-November of last year,
according to Reuters.


"GOOD GRIEF. This is serious," said Bob Deitz, a veteran of the NSA and the CIA who worked under the Clinton and Bush administrations.





"This raises a bunch of problematic issues. First, of course, is the Logan Act, which prohibits private individuals conducting negotiations on behalf of the US government with foreign governments," Deitz said. "Second, it tends to reinforce the notion that Trump's various actions about Comey do constitute obstruction."


"In other words, there is now motive added to conduct," Deitz noted. "This is a big problem for the President."

Kushner did not previously disclose the December meetings to US officials during his background check, and the White House only acknowleged them after news outlets reported on it. It follows a pattern among key Trump advisers that unfolded during and after the 2016 election.

"If you are in a position of public trust, and you talk to, meet, or collude with a foreign power" while trying to subvert normal state channels, "you are, in the eyes of the FBI and CIA, a traitor," said Glenn Carle, a former top counterterrorism official at the CIA. "That is what I spent my life getting foreigners to do with me, for the US government."


Carle noted that, if the Kushner-Kislyak meeting and reported discussion were an isolated incident, then it could be spun as "normal back-channel communication arrangements among states."

"If Jared Kushner was trying to set up a backchannel with the Russians, doesn't that mean he wasn't colluding with them?" a White House official said in response to the story, according to CNN.

But Kislyak and the Trump campaign interacted extensively, and Trump associates either kept those interactions secret from US officials or misrepresented them, as was the case with Michael Flynn, who was forced to resign in February for similar reasons.

Reuters reported
earlier this month that Flynn and Kislyak also spoke about setting up a secret backchannel during the transition between Trump and Russian President Vladimir Putin "that could bypass the US national security bureaucracy."

"We know about the multiple meetings of Trump entourage members with Russian intel-related individuals," Carle said. "There will be many others that we do not know about." He noted that while this reported backchannel is "explosive,"
it is worth questioning who planted the story - the Post reportedly received an anonymous letter in December tipping them off to the Kushner-Kislyak meeting.
59134bc173f2f32b008b53ea-960-667.jpg
Russian Embassy
President Donald Trump meets with Russian Ambassador Sergei Kislyak.
Additionally, as a longtime diplomat, Kislyak would have known that his communications were being monitored. So the possibility remains, Carle said, that the Russians used the meeting with Kushner to distract the intelligence community and the public from potentially more incriminating relationships between the campaign and Moscow.

Indeed, Kushner
also met with the CEO of Russia's state-owned Vnesheconombank, Sergey Gorkov, in December 2016, The New York Times reported in late March. The meeting - which had not previously been disclosed and came on the heels of Kushner's meeting with Kislyak at Trump Tower - caught the eye of the Senate Intelligence Committee, which is investigating Russia's interference in the 2016 election and whether any members of Trump's campaign were complicit.



Kislyak reportedly orchestrated the meeting between Kushner and Gorkov, who was appointed by Russian President Vladimir Putin in January 2016 as part of a restructuring of the bank's management team,
Bloomberg reported last year.

The Kremlin and the White House have provided conflicting explanations for why Kushner met with Gorkov.

Former CIA Director John Brennan, in testimony Tuesday before the House Intelligence Committee,
said that he was concerned by some of the "interactions" between Russian officials and members of the Trump campaign that took place during the election last year.

Republican Rep. Tom Rooney asked Brennan if he ever found "any direct evidence of collusion between the Trump campaign and Putin in Moscow" while he was the CIA director.

Brennan replied that "there was intelligence that the Russian intelligence services were actively involved in this effort ... to try to get individuals to act on their behalf either wittingly or unwittingly." He added that he was "was worried by the contacts that the Russians were having with US persons" and "had unresolved questions" by the time he left office about whether" the Russians had succeeded in getting Americans to do their bidding.

Pressed further, Brennan said that "the information and intelligence revealed contacts and interactions between Russian officials and US persons involved in the Trump campaign that I was concerned about because of known Russian efforts to suborn such individuals. It raised questions in my mind about whether the Russians were able to gain the cooperation of such individuals."
582cad27e02ba738018b4a5d-1136-639.png


700_ff90c324f9f3087a8a3aee602751c242.jpg
 

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