The Trump-Putin-Bromance

basquebromance

Diamond Member
Nov 26, 2015
109,396
27,034
2,220
Mr Trump has surrounded himself with numerous Putin acolytes!

take a look, folks:

Carter Page, who runs the Moscow Merrill Lynch, and is an adviser to Russian energy titans GAZPROM.

Michael Flynn, a guy on the payroll of a Russian propaganda network, is Trump's national security adviser.

Michael Caputo, who helped Trump win the NY primary, was in charge of improving Putin's image in the US.

Richard Burt, who helps Trump with his anti-NATO policy.

and of course Paul Manafort!
 
  • Thread starter
  • Banned
  • #3
Will Haftawaite, A KGB spy, will become Secretary Of Defense if Mr Trump is elected.
 
Will Haftawaite, A KGB spy, will become Secretary Of Defense if Mr Trump is elected.

Willhaftawaite will stay retired, collecting on his 401k, his pension from the USNavy, and SS.

YOu, on the other hand, will be allowed an extra hour a week in the dayroom
 
  • Thread starter
  • Banned
  • #6
Putin's favorite congressman, Dana Rohrbacher, is a big candidate for Secretary Of State!

Putin’s favorite congressman

This summer, Rep. Dana Rohrabacher used information he received directly from the Russian government to promote one of President Vladimir Putin’s top priorities: removing the name of the martyred Russian lawyer Sergei Magnitsky from a global anti-corruption law.

Multiple independent investigations blamed Russian officials for the death in jail of Magnitsky, a whistle-blowing attorney who allegedly uncovered evidence of a $230 million theft by officials of the Putin regime.


In 2012, Congress banned officials allegedly involved in the Magnitsky murder from visiting the U.S. and from using its banking system. Now, lawmakers want to expand the act to hold officials in other countries accountable for human-rights atrocities.

Putin, however, considers the Magnitsky Act an international outrage and terminated U.S. adoptions of Russian children in retaliation. A Putin associate implicated in the case has also unleashed a furious lobbying campaign against the new bill, seeking to remove the Magnitsky name.

Putin’s top congressional ally is Rohrabacher, the 69-year-old chairman of the House subcommittee on Europe and Eurasia. A former Cold Warrior, Rohrabacher has since morphed into a supporter of better relations with Putin’s Russia, for reasons similar to those articulated by President-elect Donald Trump.

Indeed, Rohrabacher’s sympathy for Putin seems to have resonated with some of Trump’s aides, as the 14-term California congressman — an outspoken Trump enthusiast before the election — has been mentioned as a dark-horse candidate for secretary of state.

“Some people seem to be looking at me, that's all I know,” Rohrabacher said of the rumors.

But the story of the Russian government’s tireless efforts to co-opt Rohrabacher, and gain his support for removing the Magnitsky name from the global anti-corruption bill, illustrates just how deeply Putin’s influence is being felt in Washington on the cusp of the Trump era.

On a trip to Moscow, Rohrabacher met with a close Putin confidant and accepted documents from Russian prosecutors claiming Magnitsky wasn’t a whistleblower, but a thief. Back in Washington, Rohrabacher’s senior aide escorted anti-Magnitsky lobbyists to meet other lawmakers and entered testimony endorsing Russia’s version of events into the official congressional record.

Rohrabacher, for his part, says he was merely seeking to find the truth in an international dispute and to avoid gratuitously demonizing Russia.

“I get pushback whenever I’m asking for an honest assessment of a situation in which Russia is being vilified,” he told POLITICO. “I don’t know where this is all coming from but there’s clearly a herculean effort to push us back into a cold war.”

For Rohrabacher, who often boasts about having literally gone to Afghanistan and fought the Soviets alongside the Afghan mujahedeen, the role of pro-Russia congressman is a dramatic change. He was a White House speechwriter for President Ronald Reagan, and in the 1990s he famously arm-wrestled Putin, then a lowly deputy mayor, in a Washington dive bar.

Ever since, Rohrabacher’s transformation from Cold Warrior to Kremlin champion has puzzled colleagues. In Rohrabacher’s telling, Americans have gratuitously antagonized Russia instead of seeking common ground against greater threats from China and Islamic terrorism. That worldview has made him a fixture in Russian state media.

" 'Stupidity hurts us all': US decision makers ignorant about Russia -- Congressman Rohrabacher," blared a headline in RT, the state-controlled news outlet.

“Rohrabacher, who comes from this Reganite background, has totally been turned around,” Anders Aslund, a senior fellow at the Atlantic Council, a non-partisan think tank, said. “Rohrabacher has been on this soapbox for many years and it's considered outside the norm."

Last April, Rohrabacher traveled to Moscow on an official congressional trip with four other members of Congress and two staffers. Rohrabacher and his senior aide, Paul Behrends, met privately with Vladimir Yakunin, a Putin confidant whom the Treasury Department blacklisted in 2014 to punish Russia for invading Ukraine, according to an itinerary reviewed by POLITICO and confirmed by Rohrabacher.

There was nothing illegal about talking to Yakunin, but the rest of the delegation steered clear. At this meeting, one of the topics Yakunin, Rohrabacher and Behrends discussed, according to Rohrabacher, was the Magnitsky affair.

Later that day, Rohrabacher rejoined the rest of the delegation to meet with Konstantin Kosachev, chairman of the International Affairs Committee in the Federation Council (Russia’s counterpart to the Senate). At that meeting, Kosachev urged Rohrabacher to consult with Russian prosecutors about the Magnitsky affair. Rohrabacher did and received a document questioning Magnitsky’s story, Rohrabacher told POLITICO.

“[Kosachev was] the one who asked, would I accept information from the prosecutors and look at what they had to say on this particular case,” he said.

The document, which is marked “Confidential” and was obtained by POLITICO, blamed Magnitsky and his employer, an American-born investor named Bill Browder, for orchestrating the tax fraud. The letter proposed that if more members of Congress followed Rohrabacher’s lead in questioning the Magnitsky story, Russia would reconsider its ban on American adoptions, which Putin imposed in retaliation for the Magnitsky Act in 2012.

The document pointed Rohrabacher to supporting evidence in a New York court case. In 2013, federal prosecutors accused a Russian holding company of laundering $14 million stolen in the scheme that Magnitsky uncovered. The company’s owner, Denis Katsyv, is the son of a former transport minister and business associate of Yakunin’s.

In February, Katsyv and two other Russians formed a nonprofit organization in Delaware that purported to support restarting Russian adoptions and hired a lobbyist named Rinat Akhmetshin, lobbying and incorporation records show. Akhmetshin visited Rohrabacher’s office in May on the day before the House Foreign Affairs Committee was scheduled to consider the new global human-rights bill named for Magnitsky.

Akhmetshin recruited Ron Dellums, a former Democratic congressman from California, lobbying records show. Dellums, reached by phone, distanced himself from the campaign. “I’m not doing that any longer. You’re invading my privacy,” he said, and hung up.

Behrends, the Rohrabacher aide who traveled with him to Moscow, led Akhmetshin and Dellums around the House offices to seek out top committee Democrats Eliot Engel and Gregory Meeks, according to two people with direct knowledge of the interactions. It’s highly unusual for a staffer to shepherd around a lobbyist, especially one for foreign interests, current and former congressional staffers told POLITICO. Behrends declined to comment.

Staffers and Foreign Affairs Committee colleagues repeatedly tried to show Rohrabacher the contradictions and distortions in the case against Magnitsky, Rohrabacher acknowledged. But he remained skeptical.

Akhmetshin’s appearance caught the attention of Kyle Parker, a House Foreign Affairs Committee staffer who was a driving force behind the original Magnitsky Act. Parker blasted out an email to colleagues warning them that Akhmetshin used to spy for the Soviets and “specializes in active measures campaigns” (an old Cold War term for propaganda, disinformation and other dark ops), according to an e-mail obtained by POLITICO. Parker declined to comment on the email. Akhmetshin acknowledged having been a Soviet counterintelligence officer, but said he was drafted into the job.

“Just because I was born in Russia doesn't mean I am an agent of [the] Kremlin,” Akhmetshin told POLITICO.

At the markup of the Global Magnitsky bill, on May 18, Rohrabacher proposed an amendment to strike Magnitsky’s name. He cast doubt on Browder’s account of the Magnitsky story and offered up the Russian version he had received in Moscow.

“It is possible either one of those explanations could be true, but we don’t know enough,” he said at the meeting. “What we want to base this on is truth, not just some gratuitous slap at Russia.”

A procession of Rohrabacher’s colleagues spoke out against him.

“I felt listening to him like I was watching RT, Russian Television,” Gerald Connolly (D-Va.) said.

“There are really no doubts about the veracity of the case of Sergei Magnitsky,” David Cicilline (D-R.I.) said.

But Rohrabacher insisted. “This is a murky issue,” he said. “It is not cut and dry. And I know that over and over again it has been repeated that it is cut and dry and it is not."

“The downside of this, let me be very clear about this,” he continued, “the Russians feel it is a gratuitous slap just at them. And because of that, they have changed a law in Russia dealing with Americans’ ability to adopt children, Russian children.”

The committee voted down Rohrabacher’s amendment and approved the bill by voice vote. But the seed of doubt had been planted.

“That’s what the Russians want: It’s muddying the waters,” a Hill source said.

The lobbying campaign continued into June: Katsyv’s organization hired another reporter-turned-consultant named Chris Cooper to organize a Washington screening of a new documentary called “The Magnitsky Act — Behind the Scenes.” The director, Andrei Nekrasov, previously had a reputation as a Putin critic, but his latest film tells the story the Kremlin wants known, the same one described in the documents given to Rohrabacher. (Nekrasov told POLITICO the documentary was funded by Northern European film organizations and television networks. Cooper declined to comment.)

The day after the screening, the House Foreign Affairs Committee held a hearing on U.S.-Russian relations. Nekrasov told POLITICO that Behrends, the Rohrabacher staffer, asked him to testify but later withdrew the invitation.

After the hearing, Nekrasov and Akhmetshin dined with Rohrabacher and Behrends at the Capitol Hill Club.

Behrends asked Nekrasov to submit a polished statement, the filmmaker told POLITICO.

Nekrasov’s testimony appeared in the hearing’s official transcript, as submitted by Rohrabacher’s office. It read: “To the best of my professional abilities to investigate the documents and to interview the people with direct knowledge of those events I came to conclusion that Mr. Magnitsky was not a whistleblower: there is no evidence of him uncovering any fraud, or accusing the police of committing it.”

In Moscow, it was a propaganda coup trumpeted in state media. In Washington, it was a sign of pro-Russian interests becoming more assertive, in the same year that U.S. intelligence officials accused Russia of meddling in the presidential election. After Trump’s victory, Russian influence efforts will not be easily marginalized.

“The Russians never give up if something is really bothering them and clearly Magnitsky is really bothering them and they don’t want added attention to it,” said William Pomeranz, deputy director of the Kennan Institute for Advanced Russian Studies of the Woodrow Wilson Center. “We just don’t know yet the willingness of Republicans to oppose Trump’s Russia policy.”
 
  • Thread starter
  • Banned
  • #8
Congressman Adam Schiff of California just accused Tucker Carlson of "carrying water for the Kremlin"...Tucker responded by calling him and "weasel" and saying: "you can blather on all you want, man"

liberals keep showin their despicable face!
 
  • Thread starter
  • Banned
  • #9
from the Art Of the Deal:

"a prominent businessman who does a lot of business with the Soviet Union calls to keep me posted on a construction project I'm interested in undertaking in Moscow. the idea got off the ground after I sat next to the Soviet ambassador Yuri Dubinin at a luncheon. Dubinin's daughter had read about Trump Tower and knew all about it. One thing lead to another, and now I'm talking about building a large luxury hotel, across the street from the Kremlin, in partnership with the Soviet government."
 
this is where Trump will be spendin Christmas...IN RUSSIA WITH PUTIN!

CzPXVfsVQAAG9XF.jpg
 
'The Trump-Putin-Bromance'

:lmao: :lmao: :lmao:


Well, if people want to continue to 'go down this road', we can talk about the snowflake-imagined connection between Putin and Trump OR we could talk about the REAL connection between Hillary Clinton and Saul Alinsky and Hillary's infatuation with Saul Alinsky:


BREAKING: Newly Discovered Letters Between Hillary Clinton & Saul Alinsky (Marxist & Community Organizer)
BREAKING: Newly Discovered Letters Between Hillary Clinton & Saul Alinsky (Marxist & Community Organizer) - The Political Insider
 
'The Trump-Putin-Bromance'

:lmao: :lmao: :lmao:


Well, if people want to continue to 'go down this road', we can talk about the snowflake-imagined connection between Putin and Trump OR we could talk about the REAL connection between Hillary Clinton and Saul Alinsky and Hillary's infatuation with Saul Alinsky:


BREAKING: Newly Discovered Letters Between Hillary Clinton & Saul Alinsky (Marxist & Community Organizer)
BREAKING: Newly Discovered Letters Between Hillary Clinton & Saul Alinsky (Marxist & Community Organizer) - The Political Insider

Dana Rohrbacher, basically a Russian spy, is in the running for SOS. there's your proof.

also, it's not necessarily a bad thing for the US president to have a bromance with Putin. it could lead to good things.
 
"The Washington Free Beacon put together an excellent report about new letters between Hillary Clinton and Saul Alinsky, the infamous community organizer who wrote ‘Rules for Radicals.’ That book, which Alinsky dedicated to ‘Lucifer,’ became the handbook for racial agitators and left-wing political problem causers.


His efforts- which were just as evil as they were brilliant- were essential to the growth of the political left, including Marxism- as David Horowitz
explains:

[Alinsky was] the practical theorist for progressives who had supported the Communist cause to regroup after the fall of the Berlin Wall and mount a new assault on the capitalist system.

Clinton met with Alinsky several times in 1968 while writing a Wellesley college thesis about his theory of community organizing.


Clinton’s relationship with Alinsky, and her support for his philosophy, continued for several years after she entered Yale law school in 1969, two letters obtained by the Washington Free Beacon show.

The letters obtained by the Free Beacon are part of the archives for the Industrial Areas Foundation, a training center for community organizers founded by Alinsky, which are housed at the University of Texas at Austin.

The letters also suggest that Alinsky, who died in 1972, had a deeper influence on Clinton’s early political views than previously known."

"On July 8, 1971, Clinton reached out to Alinsky, then 62, in a letter sent via airmail, paid for with stamps featuring Franklin Delano Roosevelt, and marked “Personal.”
 
Mr Trump has surrounded himself with numerous Putin acolytes!

take a look, folks:

Carter Page, who runs the Moscow Merrill Lynch, and is an adviser to Russian energy titans GAZPROM.

Michael Flynn, a guy on the payroll of a Russian propaganda network, is Trump's national security adviser.

Michael Caputo, who helped Trump win the NY primary, was in charge of improving Putin's image in the US.

Richard Burt, who helps Trump with his anti-NATO policy.

and of course Paul Manafort!



Good. Cold War is over. Let's step back from conflict with a nation on the other side of the planet.
 
So Barry had his own Islamist advisor / operative.
Hillary had her own Islamist Aide / operative.
And Trump has a 'bro-mance' with Putin.

It seems our entire government has been infiltrated by spies and handlers, and our leaders are easily manipulated. We're all doomed.
 
Good. Cold War is over. Let's step back from conflict with a nation on the other side of the planet.

Not so fast....

Vladimir Putin, just a couple of years ago, stated the biggest mistake of his life he had seen regarding Russia was watching the USSR dissolve, that it should never have happened, and then he opined that HE WANTED TO CHANGE THAT. This was before Russia began getting aggressive again, before Crimea, etc.... I don't think he was 'kidding'.

He is old-school soviet, ex-KGB, and he remembers the 'old days' fondly. Like it or not, agree or not, Mitt Romney's warning proved to be correct. Vlad has annexed Crimea, strengthened his ties with Syria, and is 'getting the band back together' (Russia, Syria, China, etc...).

The cold war is over, but it doesn't mean Vlad is our buddy.
 
"he’s much more than a business executive. I mean, he’s a world-class player. He’s in charge of, I guess the largest company in the world. He’s in charge of a- an oil company that’s pretty much double the size of his next serious competitor. It’s been a company that’s been unbelievably managed. And to me, a great advantage is he knows many of the players, and he knows them well. He does massive deals in Russia. He does massive deals for the company -- not for himself -- for the company." - President Trump on his next Secretary of State, Rex Tillerson
 
"if i wanted in 1 day I could have Russian troops not only in Kiev, but also in Riga, Vilnius, Tallinn, Warsaw, and Bucharest" - Putin
 
Vladimir Putin is a lot of things:

KGB officer
master politician
multibillionaire
ruthless autocrat

but above all HE IS A MAN WITH A PLAN!

his plan is to unmake the world order that has stood since the end of the Cold War and replace it with 1 where the Soviet Union has the power, influence, and military strength to get its way on any issue!
 
Putin's plan includes seeding an endless series of global crises that drain the West's ability to influence global affairs while promoting the interests of Russia.
 

Forum List

Back
Top