{UAH} Donald Trump Met Russian Ambassador During The Campaign, Despite Repeated Denials | The Huffington Post
Donald Trump Met Russian Ambassador During The Campaign, Despite Repeated Denials
03/07/2017 03:42 pm ET | Updated 4 hours ago
On April 27, Trump met Sergey Kislyak in Washington, D.C., before a big foreign policy speech.
President Donald Trump and his advisers have, on dozens of occasions, denied Trump's campaign aides and other associates had any contact with Russian officials.
Those denials were not true. At least five members of his team met with Russian Ambassador Sergey Kislyak before Trump officially took office.
White House spokeswoman Sarah Huckabee Sanders tried to mitigate the spiraling situation last week, telling reporters the main issue was that Trump himself had never met with any Russian government officials during the campaign.
"The big point here is the president himself knows what his involvement was, and that's zero," Huckabee Sanders said on March 3. "And I think that he's the primary person that should be held responsible, and he had no interaction, and I think that's what the story should be focused on."
But according to a May 13, 2016 report in The Wall Street Journal noticed by AmericaBlog, Trump had at least some interaction with Kislyak on April 27, right in the midst of campaign season.
The communication happened right before Trump delivered a foreign policy speech at the Mayflower Hotel in Washington, D.C.
"I believe an easing of tensions, and improved relations with Russia—from a position of strength only—is possible, absolutely possible," Mr. Trump said in a foreign-policy speech at Washington's Mayflower Hotel in April. "Some say the Russians won't be reasonable. I intend to find out."
A few minutes before he made those remarks, Mr. Trump met at a VIP reception with Russia's ambassador to the U.S., Sergey Ivanovich Kislyak. Mr. Trump warmly greeted Mr. Kislyak and three other foreign ambassadors who came to the reception.
It is not clear what Trump and Kislyak discussed, or how extensive the interaction was. The New York Times also recently mentioned that Kislyak had attended Trump's speech. Dimitri Simes, president of the Center for the National Interest, told the outlet he had simply introduced Trump to Kislyak in a receiving line at the hotel:
Mr. Simes introduced Mr. Kislyak to Mr. Trump in a receiving line last April at a foreign policy speech hosted by his center at the Mayflower Hotel in Washington. Mr. Kislyak was one of four ambassadors who sat in the front row for Mr. Trump's speech at the invitation of the center. Mr. Simes noted that Mr. Sessions, then a senator from Alabama, was there, but he did not notice whether he and the ambassador spoke at that time.
Huckabee Sanders told The Huffington Post on Tuesday that there was no real meeting with Kisylak.
"The National Interest hosted Mr. Trump's foreign policy speech and pre-speech reception. Several ambassadors were present. Mr. Trump was at the reception for about five minutes and then went immediately to the podium," she said. "We have no recollection of who he may have shaken hands with at the reception and we were not responsible for inviting or vetting guests. To state a 'meeting' took place is disingenuous and extremely misleading."
Simes also said he didn't think there would have been time for an extensive meeting between Trump and the ambassador.
"From everything I saw, when the receiving line was over, the Secret Service led Mr. Trump to a specially cleared holding area behind the podium where he was supposed to speak," he said Tuesday. "There would have been no opportunity for him to talk to Kislyak separately. After the speech was over, Mr. Trump returned to the holding area and then left the hotel without any time or format for a private encounter with anyone. Again, the Secret Service managed his movements."
Trump has been unable to move on from his administration's ties to Russia after U.S. intelligence agencies concluded the Russian government had interfered in the U.S. election to help Trump defeat Democratic presidential nominee Hillary Clinton. So far, there is no evidence of collusion between Trump's team and the Russian government.
But the administration has taken hits as reports come out that some of the president's top campaign officials met with Russian officials, despite denying they had done so. Michael Flynn stepped down as national security adviser in February over the issue, and Attorney General Jeff Sessions recently promised to recuse himself from the Justice Department's investigations into Russia's meddling in the presidential race after The Washington Post reported that he had met with Russia's ambassador twice during the campaign.
During his confirmation hearing, Sessions told senators that he "did not have communications with the Russians."
Trump himself told NBC News on Jan. 11 that no members of his campaign staff had communicated with Russian officials.
This story has been updated with comment from Dimitri Simes and the White House.
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