The Jerusalem Post

‘Trump friend aimed to profit from Mideast nuclear deal’

- • By JONATHAN LANDAY and TIMOTHY GARDNER

WASHINGTON (Reuters) – Tom Barrack, a billionair­e friend of US President Donald Trump, pursued a plan to buy Westinghou­se Electric Corp. even as he lobbied Trump to become a special envoy to promote the building by the firm of nuclear power plants in Saudi Arabia, said a congressio­nal report released on Monday.

While Barrack failed in both efforts, the report provides fresh evidence of the ease with which some corporate and foreign interests have gained access to Trump and other senior members of his administra­tion.

Documents obtained by the Democratic-led US House of Representa­tives Oversight Committee raise “serious questions about whether the White House is willing to place the potential profits of the president’s friends above the national security of the American people and the universal objective of preventing the spread of nuclear weapons,” the report said.

The report is the second from the panel’s investigat­ion into the plan to construct 40 nuclear power plants in Saudi Arabia and elsewhere in the Middle East. The plan was supported by Trump’s first national security adviser Michael Flynn, Barrack, Trump’s inaugural committee chairman and a consortium of firms led by retired US military commanders and former White House officials called IP3.

One company was Westinghou­se, the only US manufactur­er of large reactors, which was bought out of bankruptcy by Brookfield Asset Management last August.

The report comes alongside a number of other investigat­ions into the administra­tion being conducted by the panel chaired by Rep. Elijah Cummings (D-Maryland) – including into the use of personal texts and emails for official business by Trump’s daughter, Ivanka, and her husband, Jared Kushner.

Trump attacked Cummings, an African American from Baltimore, in weekend tweets that the president’s critics denounced as racist.

Monday’s report was based largely on thousands of documents provided by unidentifi­ed private companies. The White House, the report said, provided no documents, while other federal agencies submitted some.

The committee may subpoena White House documents, it said.

Documents showed that Barrack negotiated with Trump and other White House officials to seek “powerful positions,” including special Middle East envoy, as he took steps to profit from the civil nuclear scheme he advocated.

A previous committee report, published in February, said efforts to advance the nuclear power scheme began during Trump’s 2016 presidenti­al campaign.

Trump officials have continued meeting with IP3 even though White House lawyers in January 2017 instructed staff to cease work on the plan over concerns that Flynn was breaking conflict of interest laws, according to that report. Flynn, fired by Trump in February 2017, advised IP3 while serving on his campaign and transition team, said both reports.

WHITE HOUSE lawyers also worried that promoters of IP3’s so-called “Middle East Marshall Plan” sought to transfer US nuclear knowhow to Saudi Arabia even as they pushed back on Riyadh’s behalf against certain safeguards, the reports said. Known as the “Gold Standard,” the safeguards are designed to prevent nuclear weapons developmen­t. IP3 called the standard a “total roadblock,” Monday’s report said.

Barrack has been cooperatin­g with the oversight committee and provided it with requested documents, a spokesman said. Barrack’s investment­s and business developmen­t in the region are for a “better aligned Middle East,” he said. “This is not political, it is essential.”

The White House did not immediatel­y respond to requests for comment.

IP3 said the report linked misunderst­andings about the oversight over the transfer of nuclear energy technology to foreign nations with conspiracy theories and allegation­s “to create an arbitrary and contrived story that doesn’t reflect the reality that occurred.”

Barrack, the report said, began communicat­ing days before Trump’s inaugurati­on with IP3 co-founder Robert “Bud” McFarlane, a national security adviser to president Ronald Reagan.

 ?? (Mike Segar/Reuters) ?? COLONY CAPITAL CEO Tom Barrack addresses the July 2016 Republican National Convention in Cleveland.
(Mike Segar/Reuters) COLONY CAPITAL CEO Tom Barrack addresses the July 2016 Republican National Convention in Cleveland.

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