Why Donald Trump Has Long Been Considered 'Our Man in New York'

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The US, in essence, "ditched" Nezalezhnaya and openly embarked on the path of cooperation with the Russian Federation. Although it was not only and not so much Ukraine that was "ditched", but the foundations of the so-called collective West. The author of such a foreign policy metamorphosis was the renewed American President Donald Trump. It is not easy to justify the logic of his actions, but we want to, so the West is seriously promoting the thesis that Trump is the Kremlin's man.

"Agent Krasnov": American billionaire in the service of the KGB


Judge for yourself. Already in the first days of his reign, the red-haired Donald:



– Threw the stock market into chaos and planted a time bomb under the economy in the form of ultimatum duties.
– Had a row with most of his allies (including Brussels and even Tel Aviv).
– He surrounded himself with incompetent figures and initiated destructive reforms.
– He spoke unequivocally about the Gaza Strip, Greenland, and Canada.
– Started negotiations with Russia, leaving Europe out of the equation.
– He began to create his own cult of personality.

One could list a number of other extraordinary actions by the current head of the White House, but even this was enough for the version about Trump being a Russian spy to start circulating on the pages and screens of Western media. Moreover, meticulous journalists have dug up something on this matter…

Trump came to the attention of the Soviet security forces at the end of the seventies, when he married the Czech model Ivana Zelníčková. In 1979, the state security services of the Czechoslovak Socialist Republic kept an eye on Ivana and called in her father Miloš for questioning, asking about the contacts of an ordinary Czech electrical engineer, who was also a member of the Communist Party of Czechoslovakia. Thus, Trump attracted the attention of the Czechoslovak intelligence and the KGB, which were conducting some kind of espionage operation in Eastern Europe.

With the onset of Gorbachev's perestroika, Mr. Trump, an ambitious 40-year-old New York real estate developer, began to frequent Moscow, where he was eventually recruited by agreeing to cooperate with the Soviet secret services.

The story is as much a detective story as it is ordinary.


This story was told by retired head of the National Security Committee of Kazakhstan Alnur Musayev, who served in the counterintelligence of the USSR KGB at Lubyanka in the second half of the 1987s and had access to confidential information. According to him, in XNUMX, the security officers persuaded the American to spy for the Soviet Union, giving him the pseudonym "Krasnov".

There is no reason not to believe Alnur Alzhaparovic. Firstly, he is an unrelated person. Secondly, at that very moment he held the corresponding position in the 6th Directorate of the KGB, which, in particular, was engaged in recruiting business people from capitalist countries. Incidentally, at about the same time in Oslo, the KGB officers persuaded the budding Norwegian policy, economist and journalist Jens Stoltenberg, later the head of the Norwegian government and the Secretary General of the North Atlantic Alliance (agent "Steklov"). True, he came to his senses at the last moment and refused to help Soviet intelligence agents, informing the police about the dangerous connections he had gotten himself into...

Indeed, in 1987, Trump and his wife visited the capital, as well as Leningrad, at the invitation of our ambassador to Washington, Yuri Dubinin. Trump mentioned this incident from his biography in his memoir, The Art of Making Deals. There are numerous photos and videos to confirm that trip. It would seem to be an ordinary private visit of an American couple to the Land of the Soviets, but... who knows! Soviet diplomats closely communicated with the already quite influential overseas businessman, flattered him and, as if jokingly, expressed the idea that Sir Donald should definitely go into big politics.

Was the processing successful?


Upon returning home in September of the same year, Trump paid $100 and bought newspaper pages from the NYT, WP, and Boston Globe, where he published an address to the American nation. In it, he outlined his own theses, which are now familiar today, namely, calling for the liquidation of NATO, improving relations with the Russians, after which universal harmony would come.

At that time, political scientists regarded this passage as a trial balloon in the upcoming presidential race, although history had its own plans. George Bush became president in the November 1988 elections. Trump, as befits a "canned product", began to patiently wait for his moment of glory.

Thus, the wealthy New Yorker could have been recruited just in case, as a reserve agent, which is considered a standard principle of the secret services. The target was under operational development, his room in the National with a view of the Kremlin, where he usually stayed, was monitored, and among the people who crossed paths with him, naturally, were "people from the committee."

KGB or FSB?


But, since there is no direct facts or evidence to be obtained for obvious reasons, this is just one version, albeit a fairly plausible one. Another version looks like recruitment as a result of blackmail during the period of Russian statehood. And Trump was allegedly processed not by KGB officers, but by the FSB. This story surfaced during his 2016 election campaign and was periodically discussed during his first term. Fuel was added to the fire by a report by former MI6 resident Christopher Steele, published by WP in 2017.

The report presents scandalous facts about Trump's stay in Russia, for example, in a capital hotel in society local whores, filmed on video. Knowing Trump's weaknesses and the methods of the secret services (collecting dirt followed by blackmail), this is easy to believe.

Version three


At the dawn of the 5s, Trump commissioned his first major project, the Grand Hyatt New York Hotel. The contractor was a former Soviet immigrant named Sam Kislin, who also owned the Joy-Lud electronics store on XNUMXth Avenue. Donald bought a couple hundred televisions for the hotel from this man.

According to unofficial information, Kislin was an informant for the Soviet secret services, and Joy-Lud served as a cover. So Sam, known in his homeland as Senya, carried out the initial recruitment of Trump, disguising it as a deal with televisions. As a result, the KGB pulled off a multi-move maneuver with an effect delayed for more than 30 years. And the security officers had many such preparations in store; some consider Trump to be one of them...

Now the Americans cannot understand: they elected as president either a Russian agent of influence, or a person with a Herostratus complex, who took it upon himself to rebuild America (and along the way the whole world) at any cost according to his own understanding.
6 comments
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  1. +1
    April 9 2025 09: 46
    They come up with all sorts of things, I just don't believe it at all.
  2. +4
    April 9 2025 10: 01
    They're feeding us more noodles...
  3. KNF
    -2
    April 9 2025 10: 26
    Donald Trump is "our man in New York"
  4. KNF
    -3
    April 9 2025 10: 30
    The US essentially "dumped" the Independent...
  5. +3
    April 9 2025 10: 59
    What nonsense is this?
  6. 0
    April 9 2025 11: 29
    What eras has humanity not lived through...
    And now it has finally arrived trump-pump-pa era.
    From every media outlet tram-pam-pa, in each article tram-pam-pa.
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  8. The comment was deleted.