Former KGB Intelligence Officer Claims KGB Recruited Trump

To people who can see who Trump is.


Who is he, besides being YOUR PRESIDENT, loser?


iu
 
Certainly not to you. But to people who can see who Trump is.
During his first horrible term, Trump threw American translators out of discussions with Putin. He also disallowed scribes. I am sure you love it, but most of us were aghast why such a thing would be done.
I am sure if Biden did that, you would be taking up arms. But you will not be upset by anything Trump does.
I have been asking the right wingers / MAGA on here on here a very simple question for some time now and that is how do we know FOR SURE that Trump didn't give or sell the 12 Russians he had in the W H WITHOUT another American in the room . or at his meeting with Putin OR the Chinese he met at MAR .
Trump did not want another American let alone a Russian / Chinese speaking American in those meetings.
Why is that did he know he was going to give or sell them of our secrets?
And it seems funny that not long after he had that meeting in the W H with those 12 Russians there was an unexplained increase in our deep cover agents being found and some were even killed causing us to have a hard time recruiting new agents.
YES Trump may have given them some of our secrets there is no way of knowing unless one of those Russians / Chinese come forward with proof and tells us so.
 

Who Is Alnur Mussayev? Ex-USSR KGB Chief Behind Claim Of Recruiting Trump As Russian Spy​

Alnur Mussayev, a former Soviet and Kazakh security official, began his career in 1979. He conducted counterintelligence missions in Iraq (1980–1986) and later held a leadership role in Moscow. Mussayev claims that the KGB recruited Donald Trump, then a 40-year-old American businessman, under the codename "Krasnov."

 
“Alexander Dugin, who is a very famous inside of Russia philosopher, he wrote a piece which I sent to you… he basically said that Lavrov is running Trump—Lavrov will be briefing Trump on what to do here to establish this new world order, which is a post-Soviet, but pro-Russian—Russia controls the Eastern European Theater,” said Scaramucci.

In the article, Dugin simply wrote: “It is worth noting the very serious, high level of our delegation [at talks between U.S. and Russian officials in Saudi Arabia]. These are Yuri Ushakov and Sergey Lavrov, Putin’s closest associates in international politics and completely, totally in agreement with [Trump]. And therefore, it is they who will help our president prepare for this meeting.”

In another piece, Dugin wrote that Lavrov had “for the first time objectively, calmly, and with reasoned arguments conveyed the Russian position to the Americans,” adding that such a feat was “a novelty, as there had been no negotiations previously, and Russia’s position in the U.S. was conveyed in a completely distorted form. Therefore, this is not just a breakthrough but a monumental one.”

 
A former Soviet intelligence officer has alleged that Donald Trump was recruited by the KGB in 1987 and given the codename “Krasnov.”

Alnur Mussayev, 71, a former head of intelligence in Kazakhstan and before that a Soviet KGB officer, made the explosive claim in a Facebook post on Thursday. He claimed that he served in the 6th Directorate of the KGB in Moscow, which was responsible for counter-intelligence support within the economy. One of its key objectives, he claimed, was “recruiting businessmen from capitalist countries.”

King Krasnov has a nice ring to it. :thup:
 

Trump’s NATO hostility and Russia relations trace back to 1987​

Yet before September 1987, Trump’s only reported comments about U.S. foreign policy described his desire to negotiate a nuclear disarmament deal with the Soviet Union. The ad had nothing to do with disarmament. The theme had changed entirely. What happened?

Surprisingly few people are aware that Trump took his first of four trips to Russia less than two months before placing this infamous full-page ad. Traveling to Moscow at the invitation of Soviet ambassador Yuri Dubinin, in a private jet accompanied by “two Russian colonels” (his words), Trump claimed he would meet with the general secretary of the Communist Party, Mikhail Gorbachev. That hoped-for meeting did not take place, but others did.


In the barrage of talk shows and speaking appearances that followed for the next two years, Trump took advantage of every opportunity to return to the same theme. In a typical statement, Trump proclaimed to the 1988 Lehigh University graduating class: “Forget about our enemies — Russia, we don’t deal with them that much … Our friends are making billions of dollars and stripping us of our dignity.”

The message aligned perfectly with the KGB’s talking points at the time. My father, Paul Auerswald, led the U.S. Department of State’s Office of Public Communication during the 1980s. His office published a pair of reports on “active measures,” as Soviet influence operations were known, as did congressional investigators and the CIA in that era. In the United States and Western Europe, such activities had a priority objective: to weaken public support for our defensive alliances, particularly NATO. A second, co-equal objective was to denigrate American institutions.


 
Back
Top