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Tovarisc

Member
Oct 25, 2017
24,504
FIN
George Nader, a Lebanese-American businessman, has hovered on the fringes of international diplomacy for three decades. He was a back-channel negotiator with Syria during the Clinton administration, reinvented himself as an adviser to the de facto ruler of the United Arab Emirates, and last year was a frequent visitor to President Trump's White House.

Mr. Nader is now a focus of the investigation by Robert S. Mueller III, the special counsel. In recent weeks, Mr. Mueller's investigators have questioned Mr. Nader and have pressed witnesses for information about any possible attempts by the Emiratis to buy political influence by directing money to support Mr. Trump during the presidential campaign, according to people with knowledge of the discussions.

The investigators have also asked about Mr. Nader's role in White House policymaking, those people said, suggesting that the special counsel investigation has broadened beyond Russian election meddling to include Emirati influence on the Trump administration. The focus on Mr. Nader could also prompt an examination of how money from multiple countries has flowed through and influenced Washington during the Trump era.
How much this line of inquiry is connected to Mr. Mueller's original task of investigating contacts between Mr. Trump's campaign and Russia is unclear. The examination of the U.A.E. comes amid a flurry of recent activity by Mr. Mueller.
In one example of Mr. Nader's influential connections, which has not been previously reported, last fall he received a detailed report from a top Trump fund-raiser, Elliott Broidy, about a private meeting with the president in the Oval Office.

Mr. Broidy owns a private security company with hundreds of millions of dollars in contracts with the United Arab Emirates, and he extolled to Mr. Trump a paramilitary force that his company was developing for the country. He also lobbied the president to meet privately "in an informal setting" with the Emirates' military commander and de facto ruler, Crown Prince Mohammed bin Zayed al-Nahyan; to back the U.A.E.'s hawkish policies in the region; and to fire Secretary of State Rex W. Tillerson.

A copy of Mr. Broidy's memorandum about the meeting was provided to The New York Times by someone critical of the Emirati influence in Washington.
Mr. Nader, 58, made frequent trips to the White House during the early months of the Trump administration, meeting with Stephen K. Bannon and Jared Kushner to discuss American policy toward the Persian Gulf states in advance of Mr. Trump's trip to Saudi Arabia in May 2017, according to people familiar with the meetings. By some accounts, it was Mr. Bannon who pushed for him to gain access to White House policymakers. Others said Mr. Kushner backed him.
Mr. Trump also asked about Mr. Tillerson — who had publicly criticized the isolation of Qatar — and Mr. Broidy said that the secretary of state should be fired. "Rex was performing poorly," Mr. Broidy said, according to the memorandum.

In between the discussions of diplomacy, business and statecraft, Mr. Broidy wrote, he and the president "spoke for several minutes about politics and the fund-raising efforts for the midterm elections as well as the state of affairs at the R.N.C.," or the Republican National Committee.
https://www.nytimes.com/2018/03/03/...ation-united-arab-emirates.html?smid=pl-share

Source link has a lot information about Naders history in Washingtons and in political circles, way before Trump came into power and after that. Also what is happening to Mueller probe? It really is mutating into the plague over whole Washington establishment, spreading to every direction.

Also this has been weird news week. Very front loaded Kush smoking, empty Friday and now more shells between Saturday and Sunday.
 

stew

Member
Dec 2, 2017
4,189
I think Mueller is just following the money. Now everybody know that if you lie to him or the FBI, you will end up being indicted. It's easier for him to get informations.
Also Gates can corroborate Flynn's testimony, he can advance further on some tracks.

We know is that if Mueller follows this track, he must have a very good reason. Either he will use this as leverage, or there's something big.
 

nib95

Contains No Misinformation on Philly Cheesesteaks
Banned
Oct 28, 2017
18,498
UAE funding Trump 2016? Wasn't Trump basically twitter fighting with the Prince of Saud, and essentially critising the UAE non stop during his campaigning?



Unless there was some internal shenanigans at play in the UAE. They did have a dramatic switch of leadership lately, and the guy Trump was feuding with was arrested.

https://www.cbsnews.com/news/trump-prince-alwaleed-long-feud/
 

tsampikos

Banned
Oct 27, 2017
2,613
How many minutes until the right turns this into a UEA deflection and how do you think they will do it?

Will they say it was UAE all allong or will they use this as a "see you don't know what you're talking about" oppurtunity.
 

M.Bluth

Member
Oct 25, 2017
4,318
UAE funding Trump 2016? Wasn't Trump basically twitter fighting with the Prince of Saud, and essentially critising the UAE non stop during his campaigning?



Unless there was some internal shenanigans at play in the UAE. They did have a dramatic switch of leadership lately, and the guy Trump was feuding with was arrested.

https://www.cbsnews.com/news/trump-prince-alwaleed-long-feud/

Alwaleed Bin Talal was one of the several Saudi princes who were arrested for corruption a few months ago by the current Crown Prince's orders. The Crown Prince is pretty cozy with AL-Nahayan in Abu Dhabi.
 
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