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World News See other World News Articles Title: Jared Kushner, Easy Mark Other countries have good reasons to think that Trump's son-in-law and senior adviser is vulnerable to manipulation. So folks from the United Arab Emirates, China, Israel and Mexico have reportedly targeted Jared Kushner, the man President Donald Trump assigned to bring peace to the Middle East and to overhaul the federal government, as malleable and easily manipulated. As the Washington Post put it in a scoop it published Tuesday night, foreign powers see young Jared as vulnerable because of his complex business arrangements, financial difficulties and lack of foreign policy experience. The Posts reporting was sourced to current and former U.S. officials knowledgeable about intelligence reports relaying discussions foreign officials have had about the presidents son-in-law. The Posts report also could have been sourced to common sense. As the old poker adage goes: If youre seated at a card table with several people and you dont know who the mark is, guess what? Youre the mark. And Kushner is always the mark in the sprawling, complex and perilous poker game that encompasses international affairs. This shouldnt come as a surprise. Trump has made many reckless appointments over the last 13 months, but Kushners was singularly dubious because hes not only inexperienced and ill-suited for the hefty government portfolio he has, hes also a poster boy for the financial conflicts of interest that continue to make the Trump White House smell like a shopping mall. Kushner, lest youve forgotten, vastly overpaid over a decade ago for a trophy property in Manhattan, 666 Fifth Avenue, that has saddled his familys real estate operation with piles of unmanageable debt. The Wall Street Journal reported on Tuesday that the family intended to try to buy the portion of 666 Fifth that it doesnt already own from Vornado Realty Trust, the company that bailed out Kushner by taking a 49.5 percent stake in the tower in 2011. Perhaps the Kushners have the funds they need to pull that off, but you have to wonder. The property has lots of vacancies and doesnt generate enough cash to pay the debt on the building, and the Kushners and their Vornado partners have been digging into their own wallets to keep the skyscraper afloat. It sure doesnt look like the Kushners have the financial wherewithal to buy out their partners in a money-losing property drowning in debt. After all, that financial conundrum is one thing that originally drew federal investigators led by Justice Department Special Counsel Robert Mueller to examine Jared Kushners business dealings. The Federal Bureau of Investigation has been probing conversations Kushner had in December 2016 with Russias ambassador to the U.S., Sergey Kislyak, during a stretch when Kushner was seeking investors for 666 Fifth. Kislyak arranged a meeting between Kushner and Sergey Gorkov, the head of a major Russian bank, Vnesheconombank, also known as VEB. The U.S. had imposed financial sanctions on VEB because of Russian President Vladimir Putins military incursions in Ukraine and annexation of Crimea. VEB has close ties to the Kremlin, and Gorkov attended a training academy for members of Russias security and intelligence services. A Trump spokeswoman said that Kushners meetings with the Russians were routine, which is possible since he was acting as the president-elects liaison to foreign powers during the transition period after the 2016 election. But given how pivotal 666 Fifth was (and is) to his familys fortunes, its also possible that Kushner saw the Russians as investors who could rescue him. Remember, Kushner also spent several months in 2016 lobbying Anbang, an insurer and deal-maker close to Chinas government, for a major investment in 666 Fifth. Anbang had considered investing $4 billion in the building, which would have valued it at a handsome $2.85 billion, and also refinanced about $1.15 billion in debt. The possibility of that transaction brought scrutiny from two Bloomberg News reporters, Caleb Melby and David Kocieniewski, as well as from Congress and the New York Times. I discussed it in 2017, in columns on March 14 and March 29. The Anbang deal faded after the Bloomberg report and Anbang was taken over just days ago by Chinas government amid fraud charges leveled against the insurers chairman. Could Russia and China have been two countries that also saw Kushner as an easy mark? I dont know, you decide. According to the Post, White House officials were alarmed about Kushners more recent diplomatic forays. They were worried that he was naive and being tricked in his interactions with foreign officials, some of whom said they wanted to deal only with Kushner directly and not more experienced personnel. Kushner, now 37, has been wheeling and dealing in the White House over the last year without a permanent security clearance. Politico reported on Tuesday that Kushners interim security clearance was recently downgraded from top-secret to secret, which will limit his access to highly classified information. Meanwhile, according to the Post, Kushner has had contacts with foreign officials that he did not report or vet through the proper national security channels. And Mueller, the Post also said, is inquiring about the official protocols Kushner followed when setting up meetings with foreign leaders. The scrutiny is long overdue. Kushner should never have had the role he has in the first place. But because of the presidents poor judgment and ethical blind spots, theres a mark in the Oval Office. Post Comment Private Reply Ignore Thread
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