The Atlantic

What Jared Kushner's Statement Reveals About Russian Methods

There were numerous attempts to establish contact with the campaign and the transition team.
Source: Joshua Roberts / Reuters

In trying to fend off suspicion of collusion with the Kremlin, Donald Trump Jr. and Jared Kushner have recently provided the public with two very interesting documents. Shoving responsibility for any outreach onto the Russian side, the two men have given us with a partial account of Russian methods in approaching the Trump camp in 2016.  

If the accounts are true—and, given that their accounts have changed in the past, these ones might as well—then, taken together, the Trump Jr. emails and Kushner’s statement show a Russian side that is experimenting with ways of getting the Trump team’s attention. They show a side that really is, as one former Obama administration told me, “throwing spaghetti at the wall and seeing what would stick.”

According to Trump Jr. released two weeks ago, some Russians. Goldstone told Trump Jr. that the Agalarovs had “very high level and sensitive information” on Hillary Clinton and that it “is part of Russia and its government's support for Mr. Trump - helped along by Aras and Emin [Agalarov].” They, in turn, seem to have sent Russian lawyer , who is close to , the Russian prosecutor general, or, as Goldstone refers to him, “the Crown prosecutor of Russia.”

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