The White
House said President Donald Trump’s son in-law, Jared Kushner, will testify to
the Senate Intelligence Committee under Sen. Richard Burr, on his contacts with
a Russian bank.
White House
spokesman Sean Spicer said on Monday that Kushner was Trump Campaign’s foreign
contact during the 2016 election campaign.
A Russian
bank under U.S. economic sanctions over Russia’s incursion into Ukraine,
disclosed on Monday that its executives had met Kushner during the campaign.
Kushner, 36,
married to Trump’s daughter, Ivanka Trump, will testify to the Senate committee
investigating whether Russia tried to interfere in the Nov. 8 election.
Spicer said:
“Throughout the campaign and the transition, Jared served as the official
primary point of contact with foreign governments and officials until we had
State Department officials up.
“I think
based on the questions that surround this, he volunteered to go in and sit down
with them and say, ‘hey, I’m glad to talk about the role that I played and the
individuals I met with’.
“But again,
remember, given the role that he played both during the campaign and during the
transition, he met with countless individuals.
“That was
part of his job. That was part of his role. And he executed it completely as he
was supposed to,” Spicer said.
Executives
of Russian state development bank Vnesheconombank (VEB) had talks with Kushner
during a bank roadshow in 2016 when it was preparing a new strategy, the bank
said.
“As part of
the preparation of the new strategy, executives of Vnesheconombank met with
representatives of leading financial institutes in Europe, Asia and America
multiple times during 2016,” VEB said in a statement.
It said
roadshow meetings took place “with a number of representatives of the largest
banks and business establishments of the United States, including Jared Kushner,
the head of Kushner Companies”.
Allegations
by U.S. intelligence agencies that Russian actors were behind hacking of senior
Democratic National Congress operatives and spreading disinformation has
lingered over Trump’s presidency.
Democrats
alleged that Russian wanted to tilt the election toward the Republican, a claim
dismissed by Trump, while Russia slso denied the allegations.
Trump’s
first National Security Adviser, Michael Flynn, was forced to resign on Feb. 13
after revelations that he had discussed U.S. sanctions on Russia with Amb.
Sergey Kislyak and misled Vice President Mike Pence about the conversations.
U.S.
officials said that after meeting with Kislyak at Trump Tower last December, a
meeting also attended by Flynn, Kushner met later in December with Sergei
Gorkov, the CEO of Vnesheconombank.
(NAN)
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