Vladimir Putin just made an
unexpected offer to Robert Mueller
Russian President Vladimir Putin and
US President Donald Trump responded to Mueller’s Russiagate indictments.
July 17, 2018
By
In the July 16th joint press
conference between U.S.
President Donald Trump and Russian President Vladimir Putin, the question arose
of U.S. Special Counsel Robert Mueller’s recent indictment of 12 Russian
intelligence officials for allegedly having engineered the theft of computer
files from the Democratic National Committee and from John Podesta, Hillary
Clinton’s campaign chairman.
Here is that part of the press
conference, in a question that was addressed to both Presidents (and I boldface here
the key end part of Putin’s presentation, and then I proceed to link to two
articles which link to the evidence — the actual documents — that Putin is
referring to in his response):
REPORTER (Jeff Mason from Reuters):
For President Putin if I could follow up as well. Why should Americans and why
should President Trump believe your statement that Russia did not intervene in
the 2016 election given the evidence that US Intelligence agencies have
provided? Will you consider extraditing the 12 Russian officials that were
indicted last week by a US Grand jury.
TRUMP: Well I’m going to let the
president [meaning
Putin] answer the second part of that question.
As you know, the concept of that came
up perhaps a little before, but it came out as a reason why the Democrats lost
an election, which frankly, they should have been able to win, because the
electoral college is much more advantageous for Democrats, as you know, than it
is to Republicans. [That
allegation from Trump is unsupported, and could well be false.] We won
the electoral college by a lot. 306 to 223, I believe. [It was
actually 304 to 227.] That was a well-fought battle. We did a
great job.
Frankly, I’m going to let the
president speak to the second part of your question. But, just to say it one
time again and I say it all the time, there was no collusion. I didn’t know the
president. There was nobody to collude with. There was no collusion with the
campaign. Every time you hear all of these 12 and 14 — it’s stuff that has
nothing to do — and frankly, they admit, these are not people involved in the
campaign. But to the average reader out there, they are saying, well maybe that
does. It doesn’t. Even the people involved, some perhaps told mis-stories. In
one case the FBI said there was no lie. There was no lie. Somebody else said
there was. We ran a brilliant campaign. And that’s why I’m president. Thank
you.
PUTIN: As to who is to be believed,
who is not to be believed: you can trust no one. Where did you get this idea
that President Trump trusts me or I trust him? He defends the interests of the
United States of America and I do defend the interests of the Russian
Federation. We do have interests that are common. We are looking for points of
contact.
There are issues where our postures
diverge and we are looking for ways to reconcile our differences, how to make
our effort more meaningful. We should not proceed from the immediate political
interests that guide certain political powers in our countries. We should be
guided by facts. Could you name a single fact that would definitively prove the
collusion? This is utter nonsense — just like the president recently mentioned.
Yes, the public at large in the United States had a certain perceived opinion
of the candidates during the campaign. But there’s nothing particularly
extraordinary about it. That’s the normal thing.
President Trump, when he was a
candidate, he mentioned the need to restore the Russia/US relationship, and
it’s clear that certain parts of American society felt sympathetic about it and
different people could express their sympathy in different ways. Isn’t that
natural? Isn’t it natural to be sympathetic towards a person who is willing to
restore the relationship with our country, who wants to work with us?
We heard the accusations about it. As
far as I know, this company hired American lawyers and the accusations doesn’t
have a fighting chance in the American courts. There’s no evidence when it
comes to the actual facts. So we have to be guided by facts, not by rumors.
Now, let’s get back to the issue of
this 12 alleged intelligence officers of Russia. I don’t know the full extent
of the situation. But President Trump mentioned this issue. I will look into
it.
So far, I can say the following.
Things that are off the top of my head. We have an existing agreement between
the United States of America and the Russian Federation, an existing treaty
that dates back to 1999. The mutual assistance on criminal cases. This treaty
is in full effect. It works quite efficiently. On average, we initiate about
100, 150 criminal cases upon request from foreign states.
For instance, the last year, there
was one extradition case upon the request sent by the United States. This
treaty has specific legal procedures we can offer. The appropriate commission
headed by Special Attorney Mueller, he can use this treaty as a solid
foundation and send a formal, official request to us so that we could
interrogate, hold questioning of these individuals who he believes are privy to
some crimes. Our enforcement are perfectly able to do this questioning and send
the appropriate materials to the United States. Moreover, we can meet you
halfway. We can make another step. We can actually permit representatives of
the United States, including the members of this very commission headed by Mr.
Mueller, we can let them into the country. They can be present at questioning.
In this case, there’s another
condition. This kind of effort should be mutual one. Then we would expect that
the Americans would reciprocate. They would question officials, including the
officers of law enforcement and intelligence services of the United States whom
we believe have something to do with illegal actions on the territory of
Russia. And we have to request the presence of our law enforcement.
For instance, we can
bring up Mr. Browder in this particular case. Business associates of Mr.
Browder have earned over $1.5 billion in Russia. They never paid any taxes.
Neither in Russia nor in the United States. Yet, the money escapes the country.
They were transferred to the United States. They sent huge amount of money,
$400 million as a contribution to the campaign of Hillary Clinton. [He
presents no evidence to back up that $400 million claim.] Well,
that’s their personal case. It might have been legal, the contribution itself.
But the way the money was earned was illegal. We have solid reason to believe
that some intelligence officers guided these transactions. [This
allegation, too, is merely an unsupported assertion here.] So we
have an interest of questioning them. That could be a first step. We can also
extend it. There are many options. They all can be found in an appropriate
legal framework.
REPORTER (Jeff Mason from Reuters):
Did you direct any of your officials to help him [Trump] do that [find those
‘options’]?
PUTIN: Yes, I did. Yes, I did.
Because he talked about bringing the US/Russia relationship back to normal.
The evidence regarding that entire
matter, of Bill Browder and the Magnitsky Act, can be seen in the links and the
other evidences that are presented in two articles that I published on that
very subject, earlier this year. One, titled “Private
Investigations Find America’s Magnitsky Act to Be Based on Frauds”, summarizes the independently done private
investigations into the evidence that is publicly available online regarding
Bill Browder and the Magnitsky Act. The Magnitsky Act was the basis for the
first set of economic sanctions against Russia, and were instituted in 2012;
so, this concerns the start of the restoration of the Cold War (without the
communism etc. that were allegedly the basis of Cold War I).
The other article, “Russiagate-Trump
Gets Solved by Giant of American Investigative Journalism”, provides further details in the evidence, and
connects both the Magnitsky Act and Bill Browder to the reason why, on 9 June
2016, the Russian lawyer Nataliya Veselnitskaya, met privately at Trump Tower,
with Donald Trump Jr., Paul Manafort, and Jared Kushner — the reason was
specifically in order to inform them about the documentation on this case, so
that Trump, if elected, would be aware of the contents of those documents. She
had used the promise of dirt on Hillary so as to enable Trump, who
effectively became the Republican nominee on 26 May 2016, to learn about the actual documents in this crucial
case.
The Russian government has been
legally pursuing Mr. Browder, for years, on charges that he evaded paying $232
million taxes that were due to the Russian government. These private
investigations into this matter — regarding whether or not the Magnitsky Act
was based on fraudulent grounds — have all found that Mr. Browder has clearly
falsified and misrepresented the actual documents, which are linked to in those
two articles I wrote. These might be the very same documents that she was
presenting on June 9th.
So: this is a matter of importance
not only to the validity (or not) of the Magnitsky Act economic sanctions
against Russia, but to the Russiagate accusations regarding U.S. President
Donald Trump. In my two articles, the general public can click right through to
the evidence on the Magnitsky case.
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