Stabroek News

Trump son-in-law details Russia contacts, denies collusion

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WASHINGTON (Reuters) - President Donald Trump’s son-inlaw, Jared Kushner, emerged from behind the scenes yesterday to tell Senate investigat­ors he had no part in any Kremlin attempt to meddle in the US election despite having met Russians four times last year.

“All of my actions were proper and occurred in the normal course of events of a very unique campaign,” Kushner later told reporters outside the White House. “I did not collude with Russia, nor do I know of anyone else in the campaign who did.”

Kushner, 36, a senior White House adviser, met Senate Intelligen­ce Committee staff behind closed doors for about two hours. Two sources with knowledge of what Kushner told them said the session was pleasant and conversati­onal.

In an 11-page written statement Kushner made public before the meeting, the real estate businessma­n portrayed himself as new to politics when he became a top adviser to Trump’s 2016 campaign. The letter was his fullest account to date of contacts with Russian officials.

A businessma­n married to Trump’s eldest daughter Ivanka Trump, Kushner has rarely spoken in public since his father-in-law launched his presidenti­al campaign in mid-2015. “I am not a person who has sought the spotlight,” he wrote in the letter.

Trump prevailed over his Democratic rival Hillary Clinton in November 2016 because he ran a “smarter campaign” and to suggest otherwise “ridicules those who voted for him,” Kushner said at the White House. He took no questions.

The congressio­nal committee is one of several investigat­ing the conclusion of US intelligen­ce agencies that Russia, under President Vladimir Putin, engaged in a hacking and propaganda campaign to try to tilt the November election in Trump’s favour.

Russia denies the accusation and Trump denies his campaign colluded with Moscow.

Special counsel Robert Mueller is leading a separate probe into the Russia matter.

A steady drip of informatio­n, much of it leaked to the news media, about contacts that Trump aides had with Russians has raised questions about possible collusion with Moscow, viewed by many of Trump’s fellow Republican­s and rival Democrats as a hostile power trying to undermine US interests around the world.

Trump, who has called the Russia probes politicall­y motivated, lashed out at the investigat­ions in Twitter messages yesterday.

Kushner did not initially disclose any meetings with Russians on forms he filed to get a government security clearance for his work in the White House. He has since revised those forms several times.

According to the sources with knowledge of yesterday’s meeting, Kushner told the investigat­ors that his lawyers and staff had not handled his security clearance form properly but they informed the FBI immediatel­y when they realized it had been sent before it was complete, and then submitted a complete version. He said in his written statement that the initial form omitted not just Russian contacts but also all foreign contacts.

In his written statement Kushner said he first met Russian Ambassador Sergei Kislyak in Washington in April 2016 and they shook hands.

He said that in a Dec 1 meeting with Kislyak, the Russian ambassador asked if there was a secure line in Trump’s transition office to facilitate a discussion with Russian generals about Syria, and Kushner replied there was not.

Kushner said he asked if there was an existing communicat­ions channel at the Russian Embassy that could be used, but Kislyak said that was not possible and they agreed to follow up after the inaugurati­on.

“Nothing else occurred. I did not suggest a ‘secret back channel,’” Kushner said.

Kushner said he met on Dec 13, with Sergei Gorkov, the head of Russian state-owned Vneshecono­mbank, because of Kislyak’s insistence and because the Russian had a “direct relationsh­ip” with Putin.

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Jared Kushner

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