Philippine Daily Inquirer

Trump in-law’s secret

Report says Kushner asked Russia ambassador during White House transition to set up surveillan­ce-proof communicat­ion lines

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US President Donald Trump’s son-in-law, Jared Kushner, had reportedly made a proposal to the Russian ambassador to set up a secret, bug-proof communicat­ions line with the Kremlin.

President Donald Trump’s son-in-law, Jared Kushner, made a preinaugur­ation proposal to the Russian ambassador to set up a secret, bug-proof communicat­ions line with the Kremlin, The Washington Post reported Friday evening.

Kushner, a close adviser to Trump, went so far as to suggest using Russian diplomatic facilities in the United States to protect such a channel from being monitored, the Post said, quoting US officials briefed on intelligen­ce reports.

The Post story is yet another sensationa­l element in the deluge of allegation­s raising questions about team Trump’s relationsh­ip with the Russians, whom US intelligen­ce agencies say tried to sway the November election in Trump’s favor and thus deny Hillary Clinton the presidency.

And it ensures that Trump will be thrust right back into the din of the Russia scandal upon his return to Washington this weekend, following his first foreign trip, a tour of the Middle East and Europe.

The Washington Post said the secret communicat­ions proposal was made Dec. 1 or 2 at Trump Tower in New York, according to intercepts of Russian communicat­ions that were reviewed by US officials.

Flynn there, too

Michael Flynn, whowould become Trump’s national security adviser before being fired 24 days into the job for not telling the truth about meetings he held with the Russian ambassador, was also at the meeting, the Post said.

The Russian ambassador, Sergei Kislyak, was surprised by Kushner’s idea of the secret channel and passed it on to the Kremlin, the Post said. It did not specify what came of Kushner’s alleged pitch, if anything.

The White House did not immediatel­y comment on the Post report.

But “not disclosing contacts which has been a pattern here. It raises a lot of questions,” Jim Himes, a Connecticu­t Democrat on the House Intelligen­ce Committee, told MSNBC.

“If it’s true that somebody did ask for some kind of private line, some kind of mode of communicat­ion that was secure that was unusual, boy does that raise a whole bunch of questions.”

Besides the Kushner developmen­ts, which strikes at Trump’s core by drawing his family into the crisis, the White House also faces a cascade of other worries in the coming week.

The Senate Intelligen­ce Committee has “asked President Trump’s political organizati­on to gather and produce all Russia-related documents, e-mails and phone records going back to his campaign’s launch in June 2015,” the Post reported. There was no immediate White House reaction.

 ?? —AFP ?? Ex-national security adviser Michael Flynn (left) and Jared Kushner, senior Trump adviser and son-in-law, are now the central figures in the investigat­ion of ties between the Trump campaign and Russia.
—AFP Ex-national security adviser Michael Flynn (left) and Jared Kushner, senior Trump adviser and son-in-law, are now the central figures in the investigat­ion of ties between the Trump campaign and Russia.

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