Harley Schlanger, www.LaRouchePAC.com, Russiagate Exposed, Trump Putin Summit Major Steps, End of European Superstate, China Belt and Road with America and European Countries, Trade Not War, Michelle Deagle, Dr Bill Deagle MD AAEM ACAM A4M, NutriMedical Report Show, www.NutriMedical.com, www.ClayandIRON.com, www.Deagle-Network.com,
"UNBOUND" TRUMP OPENS THE DOOR FOR THE U.S. TO JOIN THE NEW PARADIGM, EXPOSES WHY RUSSIAGATE WAS LAUNCHED
By: Harley Schlanger
June 22 -- The worst nightmare of those British and U.S. intelligence operatives responsible for the fraud known as "Russiagate" appears to be on the verge of coming true. Reports coming from Trump administration sources confirm that planning for a Trump-Putin summit is well-advanced, possibly to take place as soon as the second week of July, either before or after the NATO summit in Brussels on July 11-12. National Security Council (NSC) spokesman Garrett Marquis tweeted on June 21 that at the end of June, National Security Advisor John Bolton will "travel to Moscow to discuss a potential meeting between Presidents Trump and Putin." The Russiagate scandal was launched precisely to prevent Trump from developing a collaborative relationship with Putin, which would break with the anti-Russian policy of his predecessors.
The {Times of London} immediately reacted with a nasty article citing numerous unnamed British officials as being upset by the news. A "senior western diplomatic source" said a Trump-Putin summit would cause "dismay and alarm", while a Whitehall source told the Times, "Everybody is perturbed by what is going on and is fearing for the future of the alliance", referring to NATO. The Times charges that Trump's call at the G7 meeting for reinstating Russia had the effect of "wrecking Mrs May's efforts to further isolate Mr Putin after the Salisbury poisonings." Not surprisingly, The Times did not mention that the British charge against Russia in the Skripal affair remains unproven, and was one of a series of provocations by London against Russia and Putin, to deter a Trump-Putin get-together.
Similar anti-Trump, anti-Putin comments have been heard in the U.S. Ned Price, a former spokesman for the NSC under Obama, tweeted on June 21 that for Trump to meet with Putin "before or after the NATO summit is a slap in the face to the alliance....And that's probably just as Trump intended." Members of both parties in the Congress have criticized Trump for moving to fulfill his campaign pledge to achieve a good, positive collaborative relationship with Putin. Senator Charles Schumer, the Senate Minority leader, attacked Trump for his call at the G7 summit in Quebec to bring Russia back into the G7, saying he is "turning our foreign policy into an international joke." Republicans have been less outspoken than Schumer in attacking the decision to work with Putin, but many warn that Putin cannot be trusted -- which is the same line many elected officials have -- including Schumer and Republican Senators such as Marco Rubio, Bob Corker and John McCain -- in criticizing Trump for meeting with North Korea's Kim Jong-un, and for pursuing a collaborative friendship with China's President Xi Jinping.
Congressional anti-Russian hysteria was behind the August 2017 vote in the U.S. House and Senate for sanctions against Russia over unproven allegations of election meddling. The votes of 419 to 3 in the House and 98-2 in the Senate were condemned by Trump, but he signed them anyway, as a veto would have been easily overturned. Despite positive meetings with Putin on the sidelines of summits in Hamburg and Vietnam, the President has been constrained, until now, by the Russiagate investigation which has targeted him, his family and his campaign, to prevent him from building on those encounters.
TRUMP "FREED"