Trump accused of taking loan from Russia
LONDON • Donald Trump may have borrowed money from Russia in the wake of the 2008 financial crisis to keep his empire afloat, the former head of Britain’s MI6 intelligence service has suggested.
Sir Richard Dearlove said potential deals to keep Trump’s property holdings solvent may still “linger.”
The relationship between Trump’s presidential campaign team and Russia has been the subject of fierce scrutiny ever since he launched his bid to win the White House.
Trump has always rejected accusations of possible ties with Moscow but the latest claims from British security sources suggest that the matter has been on the radar of security services for a prolonged period of time.
Britain’s main intelligence agency, GCHQ, tipped off security services in the U.S. about alleged meetings between Trump’s presidential campaign team and potential Russian spies, it has been claimed.
A source close to U.K. intelligence said that the listening post had become aware at the end of 2015 of possible “interactions” and that this information was then sent across the Atlantic.
It has also been claimed that GCHQ was not alone in sharing information about possible interactions between figures associated with Trump and Russians. Sources told The Guardian that a number of countries — including Germany and Australia — also shared intelligence on the matter.
However, the information allegedly obtained by GCHQ was reportedly not the result of any targeted operation focusing on Trump or those associated with him but instead came from routine activity directed at Russian spies.
There has been fierce speculation over Trump’s potential links with Moscow, but the president has always denied having any business ties with Russia, saying there were “no deals, no loans, no nothing.” He wrote on Twitter before his inauguration in January: “Russia has never tried to use leverage over me.”
But Dearlove, who was Chief of the Secret Intelligence Service between 1999 and 2004, told Prospect magazine: “What lingers for Trump may be what deals — on what terms — he did after the financial crisis of 2008 to borrow Russian money when others in the West apparently would not lend to him.”
Trump has also dismissed allegations that members of his team had contact with Moscow before he was elected, claims Dearlove described as “unprecedented.”
Trump has described investigations into possible links between Russia and his presidential campaign as a political “witch hunt” instigated by his opponents.
The latest claims have the potential to reignite a fight that erupted after the White House accused GCHQ of helping Barack Obama spy on Trump in the run-up to the presidential election.
Sean Spicer, Trump’s press secretary, repeated claims made by an analyst on Fox News that the former president used the British listening post to spy on Trump Tower.
The comments prompted a furious and unusually strong response from GCHQ, which labelled the claims “nonsense.”