Let's Talk Turkey...
Posted: Sat Mar 11, 2017 12:38 pm
I don't know whether Trump was aware of this earlier or not, but it really wouldn't have mattered. So long as you're a Trump suck-ass, Lord Dampnut doesn't give two small shits what laws or ethical rules you violate. The only thing that matters to him is when those no good bastards in the press makes your behavior public, and then he blames them, not you.http://www.cnbc.com/2017/03/11/flynn-at ... urkey.htmlFlynn Attended Intel Briefings While Taking Money To Lobby for Turkey
Former National Security Advisor Michael Flynn was attending secret intelligence briefings with then-candidate Donald Trump while he was being paid more than half a million dollars to lobby on behalf of the Turkish government, federal records show.
Flynn stopped lobbying after he became national security advisor, but he then played a role in formulating policy toward Turkey, working for a president who has promised to curb the role of lobbyists in Washington.
White House spokesman Sean Spicer on Friday defended the Trump administration's handling of the matter, even as he acknowledged to reporters that the White House was aware of the potential that Flynn might need to register as a foreign agent.
When his firm was hired by a Turkish businessman last year, Flynn did not register as a foreign lobbyist, and only did so a few days ago under pressure from the Justice Department, the businessman told The Associated Press this week.
Attempts by NBC News to reach the Turkish businessman, Ekim Alptekin, were unsuccessful Friday.
Price Floyd, a spokesman for Flynn, said the retired general would have no comment.
Flynn was fired last month after it was determined he misled Vice President Mike Pence about Flynn's conversations with the Russian ambassador to the United States. His security clearance was suspended.
When NBC News spoke to Alptekin in November, he said he had no affiliation with the Turkish government and that his hiring of Flynn's company, the Flynn Intel Group, had nothing to do with the Turkish government.
But documents filed this week by Flynn with the Department of Justice paint a different picture. The documents say Alptekin "introduced officials of the Republic of Turkey to Flynn Intel Group officials at a meeting on September 19, 2016, in New York."
In the documents, the Flynn Intel Group asserts that it changed its filings to register as a foreign lobbyist "to eliminate any potential doubt."
"Although the Flynn Intel Group was engaged by a private firm, Inovo BV, and not by a foreign government, because of the subject matter of the engagement, Flynn Intel Group's work for Inovo could be construed to have principally benefited the Republic of Turkey," the filing said.
The firm was paid a total of $530,000 as part of a $600,000 contract that ended the day after the election, when Flynn stepped away from his private work, the documents say.
During the summer and fall, Flynn, the former director of the Defense Intelligence Agency, was sitting in on classified intelligence briefings given to Trump.
Spicer acknowledged Friday that Flynn's lawyer called the Trump transition team inquiring about whether Flynn should amend his filing to register as a foreign agent.
"That wasn't the role for the transition," Spicer said. "This was a personal matter, it's a business matter."
He did not explain whether anyone in the Trump operation dug into Flynn's lobbying work.
It was well known that on Election Day, Flynn authored an op-ed in the Hill, a Washington newspaper, in which he lambasted Fethullah Gülen, a Turkish cleric residing in Pennsylvania who is blamed by the Turkish government for fomenting a July coup attempt there.