After being turned away by American banks due to bankruptcies, Trump has been getting considerable investments from Russian sources, including many with known criminal ties. At one point he even turned to Muammar Gaddafi, the terrorism loving Libyan dictator that blew up American soldiers at a discotech in Germany, funded the Irish Republican Army, destroyed Pan Am Flight 103 over Lockerbie, Scotland and the French UTA Flight 772 over the Sahara. Those airline attacks alone killed 413 total passengers and crew.4
Trump certainly must have been thrilled to be in the presence of the super Nouveau-riche of Moscow, a city where Mercedes Benz was selling more cars than anywhere else in the world. Even Putin’s personal counter-assault teams from the KGB rode in armored stretch Mercedes G-Wagons. The money was spilling from Russia and Trump was now associating himself with some of the most powerful people in the eastern hemisphere.
The beauty pageant would be held in the Crocus City Hall, a 7,500-seat concert hall just four years old. Trump was dazzled, and desired the attention of the only oligarch who mattered, Vladimir Putin. He tweeted with gleeful apprehension, “Do you think Putin will be going to The Miss Universe Pageant in November in Moscow—if so, will he become my new best friend?”5
When Trump met with the Agalarovs in November 2013, Alex Sapir and Rotem Rosen were also in attendance. The Russian developers helped construct the Trump Soho hotel and condominium project in Manhattan.-72 Sapir’s father was alleged to have had close ties to ex-KGB officers. This should hardly be surprising as the KGB, now FSB, is a deeply-entrenched part of the new Russia, where ex-KGB hands reach out to make deals and take advantage wherever they can to the benefit of Putin’s regime.
Sapir told New York’s
Trump did not say whether or not he met Putin, but was fond of his reputation in the country. Putin “has a tremendous popularity in Russia,” Trump told Fox News. “They love what he’s doing. They love what he represents.”7
The pageant experience left Trump with a newfound “understanding” of Russian society. Trump explained in an interview with Fox News May 6, 2016, “I know Russia well,” Trump said. “I had a major event in Russia two or three years ago, which was a big, big incredible event.” Asked whether he had met with Putin there, Trump declined to say, though he added: “I got to meet a lot of people.” “And you know what?” he continued. “They want to be friendly with the United States. Wouldn’t it be nice if we actually got along with somebody?”8
The man Trump so enamored, whom Trump was so desperate to meet and impress was not just the ruler of Russia. He was a man steeped in the most dangerous of experiences—he was a master of espionage and an expert at manipulation and exploitation. He could do to Donald Trump what he did to the oligarchy of Russia; make him or break him with a single sentence of approval or insult. Trump, knowing he was culling favor with a powerful man—he had nuclear weapons and beautiful women—responded with obsequiousness that must have pleased such a spy king. Putin must have recognized this showman as a target who could be developed into a political asset friendly to Russia.
Putin’s Candidate Development Strategy
If Putin were to consult the spy-handling experts at the FSB or recall his lessons from the Yuri Andropov School of Intelligence, he would not be hard pressed to find a more suitable candidate that shared his values and could “Make America Great Again.”