Former Trump adviser says in email that he 'arranged for Ivanka to sit in Putin's private chair' during a trip to Moscow
Chip Somodevilla/Getty Images
The claim came in an email from Felix Sater, a Russian-born businessman who urged the Trump Organization to pursue a real-estate deal in Moscow that he said could help Trump, then a presidential candidate, win the election.
The first line of the email, which was obtained by The New York Times and published on Monday, alludes to a trip to Moscow that two of Trump's children, Ivanka Trump and Donald Trump Jr., took in 2006.
"I arranged for Ivanka to sit in Putins private chair at his desk and office in the Kremlin," Sater wrote to President Trump's lawyer, Michael Cohen, in November 2015.
The boast was followed by an assurance that Sater could get Putin to "buy in" to the real-estate deal and that it would help Trump's candidacy.
Ivanka Trump said she had no involvement in discussions about the deal, according to the Times. She also did not confirm or deny whether she sat in Putin's chair, only saying that she has "never met President Vladimir Putin."
She said that during the 2006 trip, she took "a brief tour of Red Square and the Kremlin," the Times reported.
But the possibility of a trip to Putin's office would suggest a much closer relationship to Moscow than the Trumps have previously suggested. And it would provide a new lead for Robert Mueller, the special counsel heading the investigation into the Trump campaign's possible collusion with Russia in the US presidential election.
"Sitting at Putin's desk is certainly not on the regular Kremlin tours," Daniel Treisman, a UCLA political science professor and expert on Russian politics, told Business Insider in an email. "If true, this would show that Ivanka's guide inside the Kremlin had the highest security clearances and was personally trusted by Putin."
"It would be bizarre for him to take her into the president's personal office - presumably while the president was absent - unless Putin and his security service advisors knew about it and viewed the relationship with the Trumps as worth developing."
President Trump said later in 2015 that he was "not that familiar" with Sater.
According to the Times, the Trump Organization turned over the email, along with other correspondences between Sater and Cohen, to the House Intelligence Committee, which is also investigating the Trump campaign's relationship with Russia.
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