Khaleej Times

Former aide spills the beans, how long can Trump hold out?

- elizabeth drew —Project Syndicate Elizabeth Drew is a contributi­ng editor to The New Republic

As the first criminal trial of a major figure in US President Donald Trump’s 2016 election campaign got under way in Virginia last week, observers have wondered to what extent not only Paul Manafort, his campaign manager for a crucial period, but also Trump himself is in the dock. Manafort has been charged for his own alleged financial crimes — tax fraud, money laundering, and making false statements to investigat­ors. Having earned many millions of dollars working for dictators and thugs, including Ferdinand Marcos in the Philippine­s and Jonas Savimbi in Angola, in recent decades he made much of his fortune working for Russian oligarchs and the Russian-backed former president of Ukraine, Viktor Yanukovych.

After Manafort and his minions helped Yanukovych defeat former Prime Minister Yuliya Tymoshenko in the 2010 presidenti­al election, Yanukovych had her imprisoned on trumped-up charges, with help from a legal brief prepared — at Manafort’s bidding — by the prominent American law firm Skadden Arps. The case was handled by one of the firm’s partners, Gregory B. Craig, who had briefly served as president Barack Obama’s White House counsel. US Special Counsel Robert Mueller has referred Craig’s role to the US Attorney for the Southern District of New York for further investigat­ion. Yanukovych was overthrown by a popular revolt in 2014 and fled to Russia.

The prosecutor­s on Mueller’s team in the Virginia case opened the trial with a descriptio­n of Manafort’s extravagan­t tastes, including a custommade $15,000 ostrich-skin jacket (think leather that has caught the measles). He also paid nearly $20,000 for a python jacket, but the ostrich jacket, with white satin lining, caught the public’s imaginatio­n.

Manafort also maintained several expensive homes — in Virginia, Brooklyn, the Hamptons, Palm Beach Gardens, and, of course, Trump Tower. While the judge would not allow photos of all this magnificen­ce to be shown in the courtroom, the point about Manafort’s greed and ostentatio­usness was made.

But the prosecutor­s’ real goal was to show that Manafort paid for these goods — nearly $1 million in suits from the world’s most expensive tailors, high-priced antique rugs, lamps, and electronic equipment — by wire transfers from offshore bank accounts, such as one in Cyprus. At least one supplier said that Manafort was their only customer who operated that way.

Manafort’s attorneys, who appeared to have the weaker hand, tried to blame the suspicious transactio­ns on his longtime deputy, Rick Gates, who, after being indicted, chose to cooperate with Mueller. But this defense — the adult equivalent of “the dog ate my homework” — quickly fell apart. Manafort’s former bookkeeper testified that he had been personally involved in these transactio­ns, and an accountant testified that Manafort himself had altered his tax returns, hid income as loans (saving $500,000 one year), and failed to inform his accountant­s about offshore accounts. Gates is to testify this week.

When Manafort went to work on Trump’s campaign in late March 2016, all appeared normal. He had worked for previous mainstream Republican candidates such as Robert Dole, Gerald Ford, and Ronald Reagan; more important, he appeared to be the only traditiona­l Republican operative willing to work for the candidate. He was also a former business partner of Republican operative Roger Stone, who remained close to Trump.

But the Trump campaign vetted its new chairman less diligently than most people do when hiring a house cleaner. Manafort offered to work for Trump for free, but it turns out that he was dead broke at the time.

There could be only one explanatio­n: the Trump connection might turn out to be highly lucrative. Not only might Manafort attract future clients, but he could also help himself with his former wealthy Russian backers — most of them closely connected with the Kremlin — through the campaign itself. At the time he took the job, Manafort was indebted to the Russian oligarch Oleg Deripaska, an aluminium tycoon close to President Vladimir Putin, to the tune of $19 million. Deripaska, who is subject to US sanctions, had previously maintained a $10 million annual contract with Manafort.

Like other Russian oligarchs, Deripaska is not known to deal gently with people who displease him. After he took the job, Manafort emailed a Ukraine-based employee, “How do we use [this] to get whole?” Manafort also offered to brief Deripaska about what was going on in the Trump campaign.

Manafort’s role in the campaign was to help Trump sew up the nomination and run the Republican Party convention, at which Trump’s victory would become official. One matter under investigat­ion is the Trump campaign’s role in ensuring that the Republican platform contained no provisions backing arms supplies for Ukraine — which mainstream Republican­s supported.

Manafort was forced out of the Trump campaign in August 2016. And under normal circumstan­ces, an American politician would be in trouble for having employed a figure as compromise­d as Manafort. The ongoing Trump-Russia scandal ranks among the country’s most famous — including the Teapot Dome affair of the 1920s, the collapse of the energy giant Enron in the early 2000s, and more recently Bernie Madoff ’s Wall Street Ponzi scheme — and it is all the more menacing for involving a hostile power.

But the current circumstan­ces are anything but normal. So far, Trump is talking as if he had barely met Manafort. But as Manafort’s trial unfolds, Trump will almost certainly have to change his story.

The prosecutor­s on Mueller’s team opened the trial with a descriptio­n of Manafort’s extravagan­t tastes, including a custom-made $15,000 ostrich-skin jacket.

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