Obama Caught Secretly Meeting Russian 'Lawyer' Who Set Up Don Jr, Guess Who She Worked For…
Democrats were upset that Donald Trump Jr. met with a mysterious Russian lawyer who claimed
to have dirt on Hillary Clinton.
That was back in 2016.
New reports suggest that Barack Obama and his administration were allegedly caught secretly
meeting with that same lawyer, which doesn't look very good from a political perspective.
It seems like Barack Obama and his administration actively colluded with Hillary Clinton and
the Democratic National Committee to set up the Russian narrative against Donald Trump
way before anyone even thought he would go on to be elected 45th President of the United
States.
The person of interest is Natalia Veselnitskaya, the same Russian lawyer who some people believe
is really a Russian spy working for the Democrats and their associates within the FBI and DOJ.
Here is more on this via The Last Refuge: "At the heart of the current media Russian
narrative du jour is a story about Donald Trump Jr. meeting with a Russian attorney
named Natalia Veselnitskaya.
That meeting took place on June 9th 2016 in Trump Tower.
Now it is discovered via video and images, that only 5 days later, June 14th 2016, Ms.
Veselnitskaya was a guest of former Obama administration Russian Ambassador Michael
McFaul in Washington DC for a House of Representatives hearing on U.S. Policy Toward Putin's Russia.
Ms. Natalia Veselnitskaya is pictured seated in the front row directly behind former U.S.
Ambassador to Russia Mr. Michael McFaul at the House Foreign Affairs Committee.
This is June 14th, 2016, five days after the reported meeting with Donald Trump Jr.
It should be noted that Ambassador McFaul was very publicly discussing the 'Muh Russia'
conspiracy narrative in the media and appeared on numerous NBC and MSNBC broadcasts during
the 2016 campaign, and immediately after the election.
Additionally, it was Michael McFaul who was the architect of the Obama/Clinton "Russian
Reset", that eventually led McFaul to becoming the Ambassador to Russia (NYT Link).
Ambassador Michael McFaul immediately caused quite a bit of controversy while in Russia
as he indulged with various anti-Putin operatives.
Michael McFaul, the U.S. ambassador in Moscow from 2012-2014, was accused by Russian state
television of seeking to orchestrate the overthrow of President Vladimir Putin after hosting
opposition activists and Kremlin critics at the embassy in his second day on the job.
(Politico Link)
On the heels of the 2011 WikiLeaks State Department Cables release (example below) Ambassador
McFaul was kicked out of Russia:
(C) On January 14, National Security Council Senior Director for Russia Michael McFaul
met with Boris Nemtsov and Vladimir Milov of the Solidarity Movement, Grigoriy Bovt
of the political party Right Cause, and Vladimir Ryzhkov, former head of the now defunct Russia's
Republican Party and professor at Moscow's Higher School of Economics.
All four leaders view Barack Obama as a highly pragmatic president focused on external cooperation
with Russia, but supposedly not willing to pressure the Russian government for greater
political freedom.
President Medvedev is not seen as a viable alternative to Prime Minister Putin, who they
believe will likely retake the Presidency in 2012.
This, according to them, will ensure that a corrupt and unresponsive government continues
to run Russia.
They agreed that the aim of the political opposition over the next two years should
be to prevent the return of Putin to the presidency.
According to them, however, given Putin's control over society only an emergency situation
could bring about his fall from grace.
[…] McFaul opined that "de-Putinization" must come from within Russia, from a focus
on civil education to broaden demands within society for increased freedom.
Though the President may not be as vocal about his support for civil society within Russia
as opposition members in Russia might prefer, McFaul made clear to this group, all of whom
he has known throughout his career, that the President fully supports democratic reform
in Russia.
All agreed that dramatic change in the Russian political landscape would not take place in
the near future
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