Trump discussed allowing Putin to interrogate US ambassador

[SIZE=7]‘Absurd, crazy’: Trump discussed allowing Putin to interrogate US ambassador[/SIZE]
Proposal by Vladimir Putin that the US allow Russia to question Michael McFaul met by outrage in Washington

The White House has declined to rule out accepting a Russian proposal to question on US soil American people – including the former ambassador to Moscow Michael McFaul – sought by the Kremlin for “illegal activities”.

The proposal arose at Monday’s summit between the US president Donald Trump and the Russian president Vladimir Putin, and any decision by Washington to assist with an adversary’s prosecution of former government employees overseas would be a stunning shift in US policy, especially as it could violate the international legal principle of diplomatic immunity.

“The president is going to meet with his team and we’ll let you know when we have an announcement on that,” White House spokeswoman Sarah Sanders told a news briefing. Sanders added that Trump “said it was an interesting idea … He wants to work with his team and determine if there is any validity that would be helpful to the process”.

Sanders’s comments prompted outrage in the US, including from McFaul, a vocal Putin critic.

“When Trump says Russia is no longer targeting America, that’s not how this American feels,” McFaul wrote on Twitter.

“Putin is most certainly targeting and intimidating me. And I’m an American.”
[INDENT]Michael McFaul(@McFaul)
When Trump says Russia is no longer targeting America, that’s not how this American feels.Putin is most certainly targeting and intimidating me. And I’m an American.
July 19, 2018[/INDENT]
It comes after Putin suggested at the Helsinki summit that he would let US investigators be present for questioning of 12 Russian intelligence officers charged last Friday on allegations they carried out cyber attacks to interfere in the 2016 US election if Russians could do the same in America for people connected to money manager Bill Browder, a one-time investor in Russia. Browder has said he helped expose corruption in Russia.

Putin accused Browder of making campaign contributions to Trump’s election rival Hillary Clinton with money he earned in Russia on which he did not pay taxes. Putin said US intelligence officers helped Browder.

On Wednesday, the Russian prosecutor general’s office listed Americans it wants to question for “illegal activities”, including McFaul, who was US ambassador to Russia during the Obama administration and is now at Stanford University in California.

US State Department spokeswoman Heather Nauert called the Russian allegations “absolutely absurd”.

“The prosecutor general in Russia is well aware that the United States has rejected Russian allegations in this regard,” Nauert told a briefing.

McFaul told Reuters he has contacted Stanford lawyers. He denied Russia’s accusations and expressed deep concern that the White House failed to defend him.

“It’s crazy and should be called crazy and outrageous, not just by me, but by the US government,” McFaul said.

[INDENT]Michael McFaul(@McFaul)
I hope the White House corrects the record and denounces in categorical terms this ridiculous request from Putin. Not doing so creates moral equivalency between a legitimacy US indictment of Russian intelligence officers and a crazy, completely fabricated story invented by Putin https://t.co/K1ZvrNwTu3
July 18, 2018[/INDENT]
McFaul said the White House, by considering the request, was “assigning moral equivalence between a legitimate indictment of Russian intelligence officers … to a cockamamie fantasy (from Moscow) with no basis in reality”.

The suggestion that the US would hand over a former ambassador to Russia caused deep disquiet in Washington.

Senior Democrat Adam Schiff said McFaul’s freedom was “not up for negotiation”.

[INDENT]Adam Schiff(@RepAdamSchiff)
No “consultation” is needed to make clear that U.S. will never cooperate in Putin’s crusade against Bill Browder or former U.S. officials, like Ambassador McFaul.@McFaul served his country honorably. His freedom is not up for negotiation or to be offered up as a gift to Putin. https://t.co/B7mqBdpx8x
July 18, 2018[/INDENT]
Samantha Power, the former US ambassador to the UN, said Trump’s refusal to stand up to Putin was “a travesty”, while Democrat congressman Ted Lieu said it was “batshit crazy”.

Browder said on Fox Business Network that it was “just shocking” for Trump’s spokeswoman to say they were considering letting Russia question US officials.

Reuters contributed to this report

Si Trump akubali tu mcFaul achukuliwe na Putin for investigations :smiley:

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Unlike his predecessors, Trump is not keen on killing innocent women and children, that’s a plus for him.

Are you drunk?

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Bottomline: Drumpf was owned by Vladimir no matter what clarifications he Tweets after the outrage.

And now he wants him even closer…

[SIZE=7]DNI Dan Coats Has 3 Words After Learning Trump Invited Vladimir Putin To White House[/SIZE]
The director of national intelligence learned the president invited Putin to the White House during a Q&A discussion at the Aspen Security Forum.
By Rebecca Shapiro
07/19/2018 05:01 PM ET

Director of National Intelligence Dan Coats seemed stunned to learn during a live Q&A that President Donald Trump invited Russian leader Vladimir Putin to the White House.

During a discussion with MSNBC host Andrea Mitchell at the Aspen Security Forum in Aspen, Colorado, the reporter interrupted their chat to announce the breaking news from the Trump administration.

“The White House has announced on Twitter that Vladimir Putin is coming to the White House in the fall,” Mitchell said.

Coats paused, leaned in and asked, “Say that again?” as the audience erupted in laughter.
He continued, “Did I hear you … ?” After another pause, he said, “OK. That’s going to be special.”

Earlier in the discussion, Coats continued to defend the U.S. intelligence community’s finding on Russia’s interference in the 2016 presidential election, amid Trump’s multiple comments this week to the contrary. He also talked about his public rebuke of the president on Monday, shortly after Trump refused to hold Putin and the Kremlin responsible for the election interference at a joint news conference in Helsinki.

“I was just doing my job,” Coats told the audience of his statement that clearly said Russia’s meddling in the 2016 election occurred and the foreign actor’s “ongoing, pervasive efforts to undermine our democracy.”

On Wednesday, Trump answered “no” to a question from a reporter on whether Russia was still targeting the U.S. His press secretary later said that his “no” response was misinterpreted.

This Trump story reminds me of an episode I watched on the The Pretender, where communist children are raised up in the American society and mentored into strategic powerful positions later in life.