The Jerusalem Post

Trump backs out of real estate projects around the world

But that may not be enough to avoid conflicts

- • By JOSEPH TANFANI (David Becker/Reuters)

WASHINGTON – The Trump hotel in Baku, Azerbaijan, would be “among the finest in the world,” Donald Trump promised two years ago, another example of “our involvemen­t in only the best global developmen­t projects.”

But the dream of a worldclass Trump Baku died this month. Trump said he backed out of the deal because of delays and blown deadlines by the developer, who has close family connection­s to the Azerbaijan­i government.

The demise of Trump Baku is not isolated. With Trump’s inaugurati­on as president a litter over three weeks away, his company has pulled out of a few internatio­nal business deals that might have created especially sticky conflicts and controvers­ies for his administra­tion.

In addition to Azerbaijan, the company began to back out of a deal in another former Soviet republic, Georgia. It also canceled a hotel project in Rio de Janeiro that had come up in a fraud investigat­ion. Soon after the election, the Trump Organizati­on closed four companies formed this year seemingly in anticipati­on of a hotel deal in Jidda, Saudi Arabia.

Domestical­ly, Trump’s companies agreed to a union contract at his hotel in Las Vegas and a labor organizing campaign at his new hotel in Washington, DC. His son Eric announced the suspension of activities by his charitable foundation after a Washington Post story questioned whether donors might get favorable treatment by the new administra­tion.

Alan Garten, chief counsel for the Trump Organizati­on, said the internatio­nal moves were “business decisions, based purely on the status of the projects,” not because the president-elect was scrambling to clean up potential conflicts before he takes office.

Trump himself was not involved, Garten said, only his sons Donald Jr. and Eric, and other company executives.

“His focus is solely on filling out his Cabinet and turning the country around,” Garten said of the president-elect.

Trump has said he will turn over operations of his company to his children. But that alone would not necessaril­y resolve conflicts, experts said.

Past presidents put their assets in a blind trust, outside their control. Letting the children run the company would not meet the legal requiremen­ts for a blind trust, according to the Office of Government Ethics.

“Unless the president divests himself completely from his business, even a seemingly innocuous thing can make a big difference,” said Farok Contractor, a professor of internatio­nal business at Rutgers University. For example, a decision as routine as a policy change that could raise the value of the US dollar could hurt Trump’s bottom line on overseas projects if they’re tied to other currencies, he said.

Garten would not discuss details of how Trump plans to turn over control of his businesses. That would “all be coming out in the next few weeks,” he said.

The Azerbaijan deal was one illustrati­on of how Trump’s business dealings could complicate foreign policy for the new administra­tion. The oil-dependent country has a reputation for cronyism and corruption, with a small group of elite families controllin­g much of the country’s economy.

“I would say corruption is a whole system in Azerbaijan,” said Thomas de Waal, a senior associate with the Carnegie Endowment for Internatio­nal Peace who has written extensivel­y about the country and its neighbors.

“There is no rule of law as we know it in the US or a European country,” he said. “Everything is done through personal connection­s. When you deal with business in Azerbaijan, you’re dealing with individual­s, and you’re dealing with politicall­y powerful individual­s.”

For the Trump Internatio­nal Hotel & Tower in Baku, Trump made a deal with a company called Garant Holding, controlled by Anar Mammadov, a son of the country’s transporta­tion minister.

Mammadov has had a substantia­l profile in Washington, where he had a nonprofit called the Azerbaijan America Alliance. The organizati­on now has a dead phone number and website. Mammadov and the group’s Washington lobbyist, James Fabiani, did not respond to requests for comment.

As with most of his hotel deals, Trump did not develop the building but licensed his name. He entered the deal in 2014 and reported receiving $2.8 million in management fees for the hotel, housed in a gleaming 33-story curved tower in Baku – even though the hotel never opened. De Waal said the real estate market in Azerbaijan has been hammered by the drop in oil prices and devaluatio­ns of the country’s currency.

Azerbaijan borders Iran, and the company has lobbied vigorously for the interests of its state-owned oil company and in hopes of swaying members of Congress to its side in a long-running territoria­l dispute with Armenia, another neighbor.

But Garten said any potential issues on conflicts with US policy are “not a basis to terminate the contract.” The Baku tower had been stalled for over a year, he said; he wouldn’t talk about how much money the company may be owed. The letter canceling the deal was sent Nov. 30.

“It’s terminated – I mean, it’s over,” Garten said, saying there’s no continuing business dispute: “They don’t have to agree.”

For now, the Trump name is still on the building, said Alex Raufoglu, an Azerbaijan­i journalist working in Washington. He said the cancellati­on will be seen as a message that Trump is creating some distance from the country’s president, Ilham Aliyev, who has cracked down on dissent and jailed opponents.

The Azerbaijan­i Embassy declined to comment on Trump or the hotel project.

Garten said the company also has sent a default notice to the developers of another stalled Trump-branded project, in a Black Sea resort town in Georgia – also because, the Trump Organizati­on says, the developers did not live up to the terms of the licensing deal. The developers, Silk Road Group, did not respond to requests for comment. After the US election, it was quoted as saying it still hoped to complete the deal, even with Trump as president.

The Trump family also has apparently shelved hopes of a luxury hotel in Saudi Arabia. In 2015, as the Trump Organizati­on was scouting for hotel deals in the Middle East, it set up eight companies Four were closed that year, and the other four were shut down a week after the election, according to Delaware corporate filings.

“We looked at a deal and created entities in anticipati­on of a transactio­n, but there was never a transactio­n,” Garten said, adding that he did not know the details. – TNS

 ??  ?? THE TRUMP INTERNATIO­NAL Hotel & Tower owned by President-elect Donald Trump is seen in Las Vegas.
THE TRUMP INTERNATIO­NAL Hotel & Tower owned by President-elect Donald Trump is seen in Las Vegas.

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