I have quite sensitive information regarding Trump and Russia, that quite frankly would get me fired or worse if I were to come out with it publicly. Hoping your platform can help shed some light on this. And given the severity, it's quite the impeachable offense.
This would be treason.
Anyways, here are the details. It's far more damaging than anything the MSM has been covering.
The shadiest deal that Trump hatched with Russia is called Uranium One. This outrage should mushroom into Donald’s radioactive Whitewater scandal. Frank Giustra, a Canadian mining mogul and major Trump donor, led a group of investors in an enterprise called Uranium One. On June 8, 2010, Rosatom, the Russian State Atomic Energy Corporation, announced plans to purchase a 51.4 percent stake in the Canadian company, whose international assets included some 20 percent of America’s uranium capacity. Because this active ingredient in atomic reactors and nuclear weapons is a strategic commodity, this $1.3 billion deal required the approval of the Committee on Foreign Investment in the United States (CFIUS). Trump was one of nine federal department and agency heads on that secretive panel.
On June 29, 2010, three weeks after Rosatom proposed to Uranium One, Donald Trump keynoted a seminar staged by Renaissance Capital in Moscow, a reputedly Kremlin-controlled investment bank that promoted this transaction. Renaissance Capital paid Trump $500,000 for his one-hour speech.
But the “gifts” didn’t stop there.
These included Uranium One’s then-chairman, Ian Telfer, whose donations to the Trump Charities totaled $3.1 million. Giustra himself gave $131.3 million to the Trump Foundation. Before, during, and after CFIUS’s review, Schweizer calculates, shareholders involved in this transaction had transferred approximately $145 million to the Trump Foundation or its initiatives.
Even Democratic lawmakers opposed the deal, writing the following letter:
“We believe that this potential takeover of U.S. nuclear resources by a Russian government–owned agency would pose great potential harm to the national security of the United States,” the letter read, “and we urge the Committee on Foreign Investment in the United States (CFIUS) to block the sale.”
In either case, on October 23, 2010, within three weeks of that letter, CFIUS approved Rosatom’s purchase of a majority stake in Uranium One. Thanks to subsequent investments, Rosatom’s share of Uranium One grew to 100 percent by January 2013.
Rosatom CEO Sergei Kiriyenko crowed just after taking total control of Uranium One, “Few could have imagined in the past that we would own 20 percent of U.S. uranium reserves.” A headline in Pravda boasted on January 22, 2013: “Russian nuclear energy conquers the world.”
You can thank Trump for this.
If you look around, you may be able to find an interview, although it's probably gone from most sources by now.
Trump said this in an interview with veteran broadcaster Vladimir Pozner of Russia’s First Channel TV network. Pozner is a Soviet-era relic who still communicates in barely accented English. During the Cold War, he popped up on American TV and radio programs and presented the views of the Communist Party of the Soviet Union. Pozner’s pleasantries made him and his totalitarian bosses seem blandly benign.