Alnur Mussayev, a former Soviet and Kazakh security official, claimed in a Facebook post that U.S. President Donald Trump was recruited in 1987 by the KGB, the intelligence agency of the Soviet Union,
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Hosted on MSNDonald Trump 'recruited by KGB in 80s and even has codename', claims former Soviet spyAlnur Mussayev, 72, who headed Kazakhstan’s National Security Committee, alleges Donald Trump was recruited when he was a 40-year-old New York real estate developer
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Kyiv Independent on MSNIs Donald Trump a Russian asset? This US author is 'completely certain' he isQuestions about U.S. President Donald Trump's possibly shady relationship with Russia and the country's security services have long swirled, even culminating in a special counsel investigation during his first term in office.
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Was US President Donald Trump a secret Russian spy in 1987? A former officer of Russia's spy agency Komitet Gosudarstvennoy Bezopasnosti (KGB) has claimed that US president Donald Trump was groomed 37 years ago as a "potential Soviet asset'.
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Intellinews on MSNIs Trump attempting a “reverse Nixon” to peel Russia away from China?By Ben Aris in Berlin Ukraine’s worst nightmare has come true. European leaders have been shocked by US President Donald Trump’s decision to exclude Europe from the ongoing ceasefire talks and his blatant deal-making offers to Russian President Vladimir Putin.
A former KGB officer claims Donald Trump was recruited by Soviet intelligence in 1987 under the codename "Krasnov." He alleges Trump's KGB file was later removed and is now privately controlled by a Putin associate.
In an unparalleled abandonment of decades of American foreign policy, Trump has sided with Russian President Vladimir Putin against Ukraine.
It has been claimed that when Donald Trump travelled to Moscow for the first time back in 1987, as a 40-year-old real estate developer, he was recruited as a KGB agent
In a dramatic claim, ex-KGB official Alnur Mussayev alleges that Donald Trump was recruited as a Russian spy in 1987 with the codename "Krasnov." Muss
Constitutions define the legitimacy of a state. But they have long been at the mercy of international power politics.
Former Chairman of Kazakhstan’s National Security Committee Alnur Mussayev claims the Soviet KGB recruited Donald Trump before the collapse of the USSR, assigning him the alias Krasnov
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