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Hosted on MSNExplosive Claim: Trump Was a KGB Recruit, Says Ex-Soviet SpyA former Soviet intelligence officer has made a shocking claim that Donald Trump was recruited by the KGB back in 1987 and given the codename “Krasnov.” The statement comes from a former high-ranking official who worked in the intelligence sector of the Soviet Union.
Even before the new Trump administration began to erode U.S. influence on autocratic countries, a diverse array of experts started to rethink the future of global democracy.
A submarine base in Balaklava was once a Soviet secret, then it reopened as a tourist museum. Now, observers claim the base is being revived once more for warfighting Russian vessels.
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Special Operators; The KGB, Soviet Union?Explore the powerful and secretive world of the KGB, the Soviet Union's intelligence agency. Discover their operations, influence, and ultimate decline in this captivating overview of a formidable organization.
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.
On a cold December morning in 1975, Soviet dissident Andrei Sakharov met a Norwegian diplomat on a Moscow street to hand over his acceptance speech for the Nobel Peace Prize, so his wife could read his words at the Oslo award ceremony he was forbidden to attend.
President Donald Trump’s foreign policy is a lot less unpredictable than sometimes shocking headlines would suggest, this veteran analyst says.
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
With world-beating museums and spectacular nature, Almaty – Kazakhstan’s largest metropolis – remains surprisingly undiscovered
Estonia and Lithuania haven’t forgotten how they suffered during their forced membership in the Soviet Union. Ever since his stunning White House comeback, much ado has been made about U.S. president Donald Trump’s renewed calls for NATO members to spend 5 percent of their gross domestic product (GDP) on defense.
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