The Guardian (USA)

Chair of US Fed prank-called by Russians pretending to be Zelenskiy

- Maya Yang

The chair of the US Federal Reserve, Jerome Powell, recently held a call with Volodymyr Zelenskiy, the Ukrainian president who is leading his country’s fight against Russian invaders.

Or so Powell thought.

On Thursday, Bloomberg reported that what Powell believed to be an official conversati­on in January was actually a prank call from two Russians, Vladimir Kuznetsov and Alexei Stolyarov, supporters of the Russian president, Vladimir Putin.

Clips of the conversati­on, widely circulated online, show Powell appearing to address topics including inflation and the Russian central bank.

At one point, the pranksters ask: “In your opinion, which countries also suffered more from recent political situations [economical­ly]?”

Powell says: “Well I would say not the United States. We have our own energy here so it’s really not us … You know better than I do, but it’s going to be … Poland and the eastern European countries that are … close to Ukraine.”

He adds: “We all see what’s happening, people like me just want to support you in any way we can but I have limited ways to do that in my profession­al job.”

The conversati­on pivots to inflation rates, the pranksters asking: “The decrease in inflation is clearly less than we’d like and if it starts to rise, is the Fed ready to raise the rates sharply again?”

Powell says: “Yes of course. If we need to raise our rates more, then we’ll absolutely do that. We raised rates very sharply, historical­ly sharply last year, to get to the place we’re at now.”

The Fed said the video, which has been broadcast on Russian state television, appeared to have been edited. The Fed could not confirm its accuracy, Bloomberg reported.

In a statement, a Fed spokespers­on acknowledg­ed the conversati­on, saying: “Chair Powell participat­ed in a conversati­on in January with someone who misreprese­nted himself as the Ukrainian president.

“It was a friendly conversati­on and took place in a context of our standing in support of the Ukrainian people in this challengin­g time. No sensitive or confidenti­al informatio­n was discussed.”

The spokespers­on also said the “matter has been referred to appropriat­e law enforcemen­t, and out of respect for their efforts, we won’t be commenting further”.

The two Russian pranksters have held conversati­ons with other policymake­rs including Christine Lagarde, the head of the European Central Bank, with whom they also pretended to be Zelenskiy.

“The president agreed to this conversati­on in good faith, also to demonstrat­e her support for Ukraine and its people defending themselves from Russia’s war of aggression,” an ECB spokespers­on told Bloomberg.

Other pranked leaders include the former German chancellor Angela Merkel and the Polish president, Andrzej Duda.

 ?? Ken Cedeno/Reuters ?? Bloomberg reported conversati­on was a prank call from Vladimir Kuznetsov and Alexei Stolyarov, who are supporters of Putin. Photograph:
Ken Cedeno/Reuters Bloomberg reported conversati­on was a prank call from Vladimir Kuznetsov and Alexei Stolyarov, who are supporters of Putin. Photograph:

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