Tag: Donald Trump

  • Kushner, Trump’s adviser sought bug-proof line to Moscow

    President Donald Trump’s son-in-law, Jared Kushner, made a pre-inauguration proposal to the Russian ambassador to set up a secret, bug-proof communications line with the Kremlin, the Washington Post reported Friday evening.

    ImageFile: Kushner, Trump’s adviser sought bug-proof line to Moscow
    Jared Kushner. Trump’s son-in-law and adviser in the web of Trump-Russia probe

    Kushner, then and now a close adviser to Trump, went so far as to suggest using Russian diplomatic facilities in the United States to protect such a channel from being monitored, the Post said, quoting US officials briefed on intelligence reports.

    The Post story is yet another sensational detail in the deluge of allegations raising questions about team Trump’s relationship with the Russians, whom US intelligence agencies say tried to sway the November election in Trump’s favor and thus deny Hillary Clinton the presidency.

    And it ensures that Trump will be thrust right back into the din of the Russia scandal upon his return to Washington this weekend, following his first foreign trip, a tour of the Middle East and Europe.

    The Washington Post said the secret comms proposal was made December 1 or 2 at Trump Tower in New York, according to intercepts of Russian communications that were reviewed by US officials.

    Michael Flynn, who would become Trump’s national security adviser before being fired 24 days into the job for not telling the truth about meetings he held with the Russian ambassador, was also at the meeting, the Post said.

    The Russian ambassador, Sergei Kislyak, was surprised by Kushner’s idea of the secret channel and passed it on to the Kremlin, the Post said. It did not specify what came of Kushner’s alleged pitch, if anything.

    The White House did not immediately comment on the Post report.

    Besides the Kushner developments, which strikes at Trump’s core by drawing his family into the crisis, the White House also faces a cascade of other worries in the coming week.

    Fired former FBI director James Comey has promised to testify at a yet unscheduled open session before the Senate Intelligence Committee, sometime after Monday’s Memorial Day holiday.

    And the White House staff itself could be facing upheaval. CBS News reported that Trump is expected to consider plans for a shakeup of his communications operation upon his return.

    But Kushner, the 36-year-old real estate developer who is married to Trump’s daughter Ivanka, is likely to take center stage in the coming days.

    Reserved in public, he was on prominent view during Trump’s first presidential trip, as befits a trusted behind-the-scenes adviser involved in everything from Middle East peace to an initiative to streamline the US bureaucracy.

    The Post reported earlier that investigators are focusing on meetings he held in December with Moscow’s ambassador and the head of a Russian bank that has been under US sanctions since 2014.

    Kushner has offered to talk to Congress about these meetings, according to his lawyer Jamie Gorelick.

    The Post and other media have been careful to note that their sources did not say Kushner was a “target” of the investigation, nor that he was accused of any wrongdoing.

    If he were a “target,” it would suggest Kushner was a main suspect of the investigation.

    The Post reported last week that the Russia investigation had been extended to a top White House official as a “significant person of interest.”

    Kushner is the only person currently in the White House known to be under investigation.

    – Russia contacts –

    At least four other former campaign aides or advisers have been reported to be under FBI scrutiny as well — Flynn, former campaign manager Paul Manafort, sometime Trump adviser Roger Stone, and ex-campaign adviser Carter Page.

    The FBI investigation is now being overseen by Robert Mueller, a respected former FBI director who was given broad powers to pursue the case as a special counsel after Trump abruptly fired Comey on May 9.

    The key question before the FBI is whether the Trump campaign colluded with Russia in its effort to tilt the 2016 US election in the Republican’s favor, which included a damaging hack of Democratic campaign emails.

    Trump has denied any collusion, calling the probe “the greatest witch hunt” in American political history.

    Former CIA director John Brennan revealed this week that intelligence chiefs had been looking into suspicious contacts between Trump campaign associates and Russian officials since mid-2016.

    The Senate and House Intelligence Committees also are investigating, but not with an eye to bringing criminal charges.

    In early December, after Trump had won the elections, Kushner and Flynn met in New York with Kislyak.

    Kushner also met that month with Sergei Gorkov, chairman of VneshEconomBank, the state bank under US sanctions since July 2014.

    Both those meetings have since been publicly acknowledged by the White House, but Kushner initially failed to declare them on forms submitted to obtain a security clearance.

    His lawyer later said it was a mistake, telling the FBI that he would amend the forms.

  • Snub of the year: France President, Macron swerves past Trump to embrace Merkel – [Video included]

    France President, Emmanuel Macron swerved to avoid the President of the United States, Donald Trump and embraced German Chancellor, Angela Merkel instead, in what seems to be Snub of the Year, in Brussels.

    The newly elected French President tweeted the video of himself walking up the red carpet towards the group of NATO leaders, seemingly headed straight towards the US President. But at the last second President Macron ducks to the right and shares a warm embrace with Angela Merkel, leaving Trump to lower his hands awkwardly back down to his sides.

    Macron then proceeds to greet other leaders including Trump, who grabs his French counterpart’s hand with a characteristic fiery action.

    The not-so-subtle power play may be read as a show of support for Merkel, after Trump previously refused to shake hands with her when they first met, according to The Telegraph.

    The incident also comes after Macron and Trump shared another power handshake on Thursday morning at the pair’s first face-to-face meeting in Brussels.

    “Each president gripped the other’s hand with considerable intensity, their knuckles turning white and their jaws clenching and faces tightening,” according to a report by the White House correspondents’ pool.

    Philip Rucker of the Washington Post said: “Trump tried twice to release and Macron held on tight… It was quite a handshake, two alphas.”

    Trump is known for his habit of pumping people’s hands and then yanking them forcefully towards him in a gesture that psychologists believe is intended to demonstrate dominance. Quite literally, Trump likes to have the upper hand.

    Macron, who at 39 is France’s youngest leader, may have been well-prepared for his American counterpart’s strong-arm handshake and simply held on tighter than Trump, 70.

     

    President Donald Trump is never far from controversy; watch him shove fellow NATO leader, Dusko Markovic aside to take front spot in a photo shoot.

     

  • Watch President Trump shove fellow NATO leader, Dusko Markovic aside

    While walking with the NATO leaders during his visit to the alliance’s headquarters Thursday, President Donald Trump pushed aside Dusko Markovic, the prime minister of Montenegro, as he moved to the front of a group of the leaders.

    Trump is at the brand-new NATO headquarters in Brussels for a summit with world leaders. It’s his first NATO summit alongside the 27 other members of the military alliance.

    He’s already had a couple of awkward encounters since arriving — including a fiery handshake with newly-elected French president Emmanuel Macron.

    Here’s the whole encounter with Markovic:

     

    Trump’s visit was highly anticipated after he repeatedly criticized the NATO military alliance as a candidate.

  • Video included: Trump and Macron – tale of a fiery handshake that made world headlines

    The United States President, Donald Trump is known for so many things he claims he does better than anyone else in the world.

    One of those things is that when he locks your hand in a handshake, you may end up seeing your physiotherapist.

    He grabs the hand so hard, that many people he encountered have had to yell out.

    Today, however he met his match in Brussels.

    He is the new leader of France, Emmanuel Macron. He is 39 years old, about 31 years younger to Trump.

    Macron appeared to have been forewarned about Trump’s grip-handshake, some say, death-grip handshake, which I have tagged ‘a fiery handshake’. Macron was ready for the American leader, who today shoved a fellow NATO leader aside to take front space.

    According to reports, when the two leaders met, they got seemingly stuck in the handshake – possibly the most awkward in history – for almost 10 seconds.

    Watch the video here:

    Trump betrayed an intense alpha-male grimace. His French counterpart shot back a scowl of his own.

    “They shook hands furiously – with Trump trying to pull his hand away and Macron holding onto it. Trump’s knuckles turned whiter. It was ‘Screw You’ in handshake form,” according to one BBC journalist.

    It is not the first Donald Trump handshake to recommend itself as a collectors’ item.

    Earlier this year he managed to grip Japanese Prime Minister Shinzo Abe for an astonishing 19 seconds in front of cameras at the White House.

  • Venezuela needs helping hand, not a hammer blow

     

    By Jesse Jackson

     

    If you have a hammer, everything looks like a nail. The United States has a big hammer: the military, plus the intelligence community’s covert intervention forces. So we are dropping bombs from drones in seven countries.

    Donald Trump goes to Saudi Arabia peddling arms and urging military cooperation. When North Korea acts up, he dispatches an aircraft carrier flotilla as a “show of force.” When Syria’s government is accused of using chemical weapons, he unleashes a barrage of cruise missiles.

    Now as Venezuela descends toward chaos, much of the hemisphere fears the United States will reach for its covert hammer to help get rid of a regime it doesn’t like.

    The people in Venezuela are suffering horribly in the midst of a deepening recession. A recent study reported that nearly three-fourths of the people have lost weight amid a spreading food shortage. In 2016 inflation soared to 800 percent while the economy lost nearly 20 percent of its GDP. More than 40 percent of the population lives in extreme poverty. Violent death is now a daily feature of a country with one of the highest homicide rates in the world. Shortages of food and medicine are growing, hospitals are increasingly dysfunctional, and prisons are scarred by riots and massacres. Violent mass protests and rising state repression threaten to spiral out of control.

    The causes of this are many. Venezuela has the largest oil reserves in the world. Oil constitutes about 90 percent of Venezuela’s exports and is vital for a country that imports many necessities. When oil prices plummeted in the 1990s, Venezuelans suffered. When oil prices recovered in 2000, the popularly elected populist government of Hugo Chavez used the new resources to reduce poverty and extend health care and education. When oil prices plummeted again, Venezuela descended back into misery.

    The country is deeply polarized politically. The rapacious elite families that ran the country for decades never accepted the Chavez “Bolivarian Revolution,” and organized mass protests and attempted a coup. The impoverished rallied to Chavez, but his successor, Nicholas Maduro, has neither his political skills nor his good fortune on oil prices. In bitterly contested elections, the opposition captured the national assembly in 2016. Maduro has used the Supreme Court to overturn the assembly’s legislation while postponing state elections. Opposition demonstrations have grown larger and more violent.

    But before the U.S. reaches for the hammer once more, it should think again. Venezuela is our neighbor. It has a highly literate and urbanized people. Bordering Colombia, it has some of the greatest biodiversity in the world. Its forests are a global treasure, threatened by deforestation. In its current miseries, it is an increasing source of the drug traffic from Colombia.

    We should care about Venezuela’s agonies as a good neighbor. Given our history in the hemisphere, providing assistance to the country’s people is tricky. The U.S. is widely seen as an adversary of the government, eager to destabilize it. U.S. efforts to mobilize the Organization of American States to isolate Venezuela are seen as part of that effort. Ralph Gonsalves, prime minister of St. Vincent and Grenadines, an island nation in the Southern Caribbean, recently wrote to the heads of the 14 Caribbean nations to warn of “insidious developments” by “a small group of powerful nations” to “achieve regime change in Venezuela by using the OAS as a weapon of destruction.” In the bitter struggle between the Venezuelan government and the opposition, the U.S. is viewed as siding with the opposition.

    The U.S. should not employ the hammer of military or covert intervention but rather creative diplomacy and humanitarian assistance. We should be building a multilateral effort to deliver food and medicine to Venezuelans in a time of need. We should join in urging the government to hold the postponed state elections and encourage leaders in the hemisphere to mediate some kind of a negotiated resolution between the parties.

    Venezuela under Chavez was part of the “Latin America Spring,” a reaction to the failure of U.S.- and IMF-dictated economic policies that generated greater inequality and deepening poverty. Now that spring has faltered — partly from the Great Recession, the fall in the price of oil, incapacity and bitter political division. The U.S. made itself the adversary of the Latin America Spring from its earliest days. But we have no model to impose on the rest of the hemisphere, and we should not seek to tilt the scales in the political struggles within the countries.

    These are our neighbors. We do have a stake in limiting the violence, in supporting democratic processes and in aiding the people in the midst of economic turmoil. The long history of military and covert intervention into the hemisphere has increasingly isolated the U.S. from its neighbors. Now, in Venezuela, we can begin to find a better way by not intervening on one side or the other but by standing with our neighbors in a time of desperate need.

     

  • We are sorry for enthroning Trump President, Twitter co-founder apologises

    We are sorry for enthroning Trump President, Twitter co-founder apologises

    The co-founder of Twitter, Evan Williams, on Saturday apologised for the social media platform’s role in Donald Trump’s victory in the last United State’s presidential election.

    Williams made this known in an interview with the New York Times on Saturday, saying he recently learned that President Trump said he believed Twitter put him in the White house.

    Williams said, “It’s a very bad thing, Twitter’s role in that,” he said. “If it’s true that he wouldn’t be president if it weren’t for Twitter, then yeah, I’m sorry.”

    The White House did not respond to a request for a comment on Williams’ statement, reports said.

    The 45-year-old entrepreneur criticised the internet for rewarding extremes calling it, “broken”.

    Trump has often used Twitter to dispute reports seen in the news.

    Recently, Trump took to the social media platform to deny that he or his campaign had any involvement with Russia in influencing the results of the presidential election.

    Again, the story that there was collusion between the Russians and Trump campaign was fabricated by Dems as an excuse for losing the election,” he tweeted on May 12.

    In another tweet this week, the U.S president described the media’s reporting of the matter the “single greatest witch hunt of a politician in American history.”

    But Williams said he was wrong for thinking that the world would be a better place if there was a platform for everyone to freely speak and exchange ideas.

    Some would say that’s what we deserve for giving the power of tweets to Donald Trump,” he said in a speech at the University of Nebraska this month.

     

  • Saudi Arabia to sign trade, political deals with U.S. during Trump’s visit

    Saudi Arabia to sign trade, political deals with U.S. during Trump’s visit

    Saudi Arabia confirmed on Thursday that it would sign commercial and political deals with the U.S. during President Donald Trump’s visit to Riyadh next week, Al Arabiya local news reported.

    Saudi Foreign Minister, Adel Jubeir, told a news conference in Riyadh that an Arab-Islamic-American Summit, to be attended by 37 world leaders, would focus on combating terrorism, bolstering trade, investment, youth and technology.

    Jubeir said the summit with U.S. would “open a new page” in terms of western countries’ dialogue with Muslim countries.”

    He added that Saudi Arabia wanted to send a message to the West that Muslim countries were “not enemies’’.

    He noted that Saudi Arabia was second after the U.S. in the fight against IS militant group.

    He noted that “at the end of the summit, leaders will launch global counter-extremism centre in Riyadh, which will fight an “ideological battle.

    We will work with our allies, particularly U.S., to see that Iran is made to act like a normal country.

    As long as Iran threatens with terrorism, it is impossible to have normal relations with that country.”

     

     

    NAN

     

  • ‘I heard voices telling me to shoot Donald Trump’ – 21 year old man confesses

    ‘I heard voices telling me to shoot Donald Trump’ – 21 year old man confesses

    A 21-year-old British man, Michael Sandford who was arrested and jailed after trying to assassinate the president of United States, Donald Trump has revealed on Tuesday that screaming voices in his head instructed him to get a policeman’s gun and kill the President.

    The 21-year-old, who has a history of mental issues, told The Sun UK how he feared being shot dead after being flattened by officers, six metres (20 feet) away from Trump who was campaigning to become US president.

    Sandford, who is back at his family home in Dorking, Southern London, after being released a week ago, further revealed that he decided to take the action after feeling angry about Trump.

    He said, “I was hearing voices telling me to kill Donald Trump.

    “They’d been coming on for a while and getting stronger and more frequent. At one point, they were screaming at me.

    “My friends had said Trump needed to be stopped. They said he was going to destroy the country — but it was the voices in my head which were telling me to kill him.

    “Then one day, I saw he was speaking in Las Vegas and I decided to drive there and do something myself.”

    Recall that the incident happened on June 18 last year as the Republican candidate was campaigning in the Nevada gambling city.

    Before that day, Sandford, who was in the United States to be reunited with his US girlfriend and overstayed his visa, went to a shooting range and practised firing pistols.

    He added, “Deep down, I knew there was something wrong but I tried to convince myself it was OK.”

    However, at the rally, when he tried to pull an officer’s gun from its holster, it got stuck and Sandford was bundled to the ground.

    He was jailed in December for a year and a day. Much of his sentence was spent on remand and he was released early.

    “I’m disgusted by what I did but I’m so glad no-one was hurt,” he said.

     

  • Trump signs executive order to nudge up US govt info tech

    Trump signs executive order to nudge up US govt info tech

    President Donald Trump announced on Monday he has signed an executive order creating a new technology council to “transfer and modernise” the US government’s information technology systems.

    A White House official confirmed Monday that about 20 technology chief executives will attend meetings at the White House in early June to talk about improving government information technology.

    “Americans deserve better digital services from their Government. To effectuate this policy, the federal government must transform and modernise its information technology and how it uses and delivers digital services,” Trump’s executive order dated April 28 said.

    Trump has held a number of meetings with top tech executives since becoming president, including Apple, Facebook, Alphabet Inc, IBM, Microsoft, and Tesla.

    In March, Trump signed a separate order to overhaul the federal government. Trump tapped Jared Kushner in March to lead a White House Office of American Innovation to leverage business ideas and potentially privatise some government functions as the White House pushes to shrink government, cut federal employees and eliminate regulations.

    Officially called the American Technology Council, Chris Liddell will be its director. He is the White House director of strategic initiatives, and former Microsoft and General Motors co chief financial officer.

    A 2016 US Government Accountability Office report publicly estimated the US government spends more than $80 billion in IT annually, but said spending has fallen by $7.3 billion since 2010. In 2015, there were at least 7,000 separate IT investments by the US government, the report said.

    The $80 billion figure does not include Defense Department classified IT systems; and 58 independent executive branch agencies, including the Central Intelligence Agency, the report said.

    The GAO report said US government IT investments “are becoming increasingly obsolete: many use outdated software languages and hardware parts that are unsupported”.

    The report found some agencies are using systems that have components that are at least 50 years old. “The Department of Defense uses 8-inch floppy disks in a legacy system that coordinates the operational functions of the nation’s nuclear forces,” the report said.

    The report said the Defense Department plans to update the system by the end of September.

    The Treasury Department’s business master file of tax data pertaining to individual business income taxpayers dates back to the 1950s and using an antiquated computer language “and operates on an IBM mainframe”.

    The council is chaired by Trump and includes the defense secretary, homeland security secretary, budget director and director of national intelligence.

  • Trump 100 days in office: 10 tweets that have defined his Presidency

    Trump 100 days in office: 10 tweets that have defined his Presidency

    Since entering office, President Donald Trump has used Twitter to issue declarations on everything from America’s geopolitical rivals to his personal feuds with the likes of Arnold Schwarzenegger.

    As Trump prepares to mark 100 days in office this weekend, AFP looks back at 10 Tweets that have characterized the opening phase of his presidency:

    “We will follow two simple rules: BUY AMERICAN & HIRE AMERICAN” — setting out his governing mantra on January 20 after his inauguration.

    “We must keep ‘evil’ out of our country!” — justifying his ban on travellers from a group of mainly Muslim countries, on February 3.

    “What is our country coming to when a judge can halt a Homeland Security travel ban and anyone, even with bad intentions, can come into U.S.?” — reacting after the ban was subsequently blocked.

    Friend or foe?

    “North Korea is behaving very badly. They have been ‘playing’ the United States for years. China has done little to help!” — voicing frustration with both Pyongyang and Beijing over North Korea’s nuclear program on March 17.

    “Why would I call China a currency manipulator when they are working with us on the North Korean problem? We will see what happens!” — Trump has an apparent change of heart towards Beijing on April 16.

    “Germany owes vast sums of money to NATO & the United States must be paid more for the powerful, and very expensive, defense it provides to Germany!” — Trump takes aim at German leader Angela Merkel, a traditional US ally, after a frosty summit in Washington on March 18.

    The other guy

    “Terrible! Just found out that Obama had my ‘wires tapped’ in Trump Tower just before the victory. Nothing found. This is McCarthyism!” – Trump accuses his predecessor Barack Obama on March 4 of wiretapping his Manhattan skyscraper during the elections.

    “Don’t believe the main stream (fake news) media. The White House is running VERY WELL. I inherited a MESS and am in the process of fixing it” — defending his performance on February 18 after his first four weeks in office

    Enemies of the people

    “The FAKE NEWS media (@nytimes, @NBCNews, @ABC, @CBS, @CNN) is not my enemy, it is the enemy of the American People!” — letting rip at some of the biggest names in the US media landscape on February 17.

    Hasta la Vista

    “Arnold Schwarzenegger isn’t voluntarily leaving the Apprentice, he was fired by his bad (pathetic) ratings, not by me. Sad end to great show” –– Trump reacts on March 4 to the departure of the “Terminator” star, an outspoken critic of the president and his successor as host of the former reality TV show.

     

     

    AFP