Russian Beauty Secretary Meeting

Russian Beauty Secretary Meeting




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Russian Beauty Secretary Meeting
September 29, 2021, 4:47 PM · 3 min read
US President Donald Trump meets Russian President Vladimir Putin at the G20 summit in Osaka, Japan, on June 28, 2019. Kremlin Press Office / Handout/Anadolu Agency/Getty Images
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A book by a former Trump press secretary has new details of a 2019 meeting with Putin.
Per The New York Times , it says an aide thought Putin tried to distract Trump with an attractive woman.
Putin has been said to use mind games and other ploys to secure an advantage in meetings.
Russian President Vladimir Putin hired an attractive female interpreter to "distract" President Donald Trump at the G20 summit in 2019, a new book by the former White House press secretary Stephanie Grisham says.
Her memoir, "I'll Take Your Questions Now," set to be released next week, details Trump and Putin's meeting at the summit in Osaka, Japan, according to The New York Times , which published excerpts from it on Tuesday.
Grisham said that during the meeting, Fiona Hill, a White House advisor on Russia who was later a witness at Trump's first impeachment trial, turned to her to point out the ways Putin was trying to throw Trump off balance .
"As the meeting began, Fiona Hill leaned over and asked me if I had noticed Putin's translator, who was a very attractive brunette woman with long hair, a pretty face, and a wonderful figure," Grisham wrote, according to The Times.
"She proceeded to tell me that she suspected the woman had been selected by Putin specifically to distract our president."
Footage of their meeting at the summit that Insider reviewed showed a translator who matched that description sitting opposite Trump.
A video by the Russian state-backed video agency Ruptly showed Trump watching as the woman translated Putin's words into English.
Trump's relationship with Putin was the subject of intense scrutiny during Trump's term, as US intelligence agencies concluded that Russia had launched a campaign to covertly help Trump win the White House in 2016 .
Other reports and books have detailed attempts by Putin, a former Russian intelligence officer, to outfox Trump in meetings and phone calls.
Greg Miller's 2018 book, "The Apprentice," said Putin sought to exploit what he perceived to be Trump's personal weaknesses and encourage Trump's fears about a "deep state" of US officials plotting against him.
Trump has expressed admiration for authoritarian leaders such as Putin. Grisham's book reportedly says Trump told Putin at a meeting that he would pretend to adopt a tough tone with him for the sake of the cameras .
In a statement on Tuesday, Trump hit back at Grisham over the claims in the book without addressing any of them directly.
"Stephanie didn't have what it takes and that was obvious from the beginning," Trump said, claiming that she had become "very angry and bitter" after a breakup.
"She had big problems and we felt that she should work out those problems for herself," Trump said. "Now, like everyone else, she gets paid by a radical left-leaning publisher to say bad and untrue things."
Read the original article on Business Insider
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The Kremlin said a dramatic Security Council meeting on Ukraine was recorded in advance, after people realized a minister's watch showed the wrong time.
Amid rising tensions with Ukraine, Russian President Vladimir Putin convened an unscheduled meeting with his country's top security officials at the Grand Kremlin Palace in Moscow on Monday. 
The meeting was broadcast at 5 p.m. Moscow time, but a watch on the wrist of Russian Minister of Defence Sergey Shoygu — who spoke 47 minutes into the meeting — showed it was 12:47 p.m. instead, prompting speculation about whether the meeting was live or recorded. 
Although the meeting was announced unexpectedly, the Kremlin didn't specify whether it was live.
Dmitry Peskov, the Kremlin's press secretary, confirmed on Tuesday that the meeting was recorded in advance and that "certain nuances were not broadcast," the state-run RIA news agency reported.
He insisted that prerecording meetings wasn't unusual.
Hours after the meeting, Putin delivered a speech in which he announced that Russia would recognize two separatist regions — the Donetsk People's Republic and the Luhansk People's Republic — as independent states.
Late on Monday, Russia ordered troops into those regions, saying it did so for peacekeeping reasons.
The move drew swift condemnation from the West. The White House announced sanctions on the regions shortly after, and the UK confirmed on Tuesday that it would launch a "first barrage" of sanctions against Russia. Germany also said it would scrap plans for the Nord Stream II gas pipeline.

Updated Wed, Sep 7 2022 7:15 AM EDT
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A Russian serviceman stands guard the territory outside the second reactor of the Zaporizhzhia Nuclear Power Station in Energodar on May 1, 2022.
Andrey Borodulin | AFP | Getty Images
Firefighters at the rubble of a building destroyed by Russia's missile strike in the Ukrainian city of Kharkiv on Sept. 06, 2022.
Anadolu Agency | Anadolu Agency | Getty Images
Russia has increasingly looked to China for support as its relations with the West deteriorate, and Beijing has called for a diplomatic resolution to the war in Ukraine.
Alexei Druzhinin | Afp | Getty Images
Russian President Vladimir Putin said the West has been reluctant to recognize "irreversible tectonic shifts" in international relations and that the Asia-Pacific region has become a magnet for human resources, capital and production capacities.
Mikhail Svetlov | Getty Images News | Getty Images
A building damaged after an attack by Russian forces in Kharkiv, Ukraine, on Sept. 06, 2022.
Anadolu Agency | Anadolu Agency | Getty Images
NATO Secretary General Jens Stoltenberg talks speaks during a joint press with Sweden and Finland's Foreign ministers after their meeting at the Nato headquarters in Brussels on January 24, 2022.
US Secretary of Defense Lloyd Austin participates in a virtual Ukraine Defense Contact Group meeting at the Pentagon in washington, DC, on May 23, 2022.
Hollywood star and founder of CORE (Community Organized Relief Effort) Sean Penn holds a press conference at a building housing refugees from Ukraine after signing an agreement with authorities to help refugees from Ukraine on March 25, 2022 in Rzeszow, Poland.
Darek Puchala/ | Anadolu Agency | Getty Images
A serviceman of pro-Russian militia walks nest to a military convoy of armed forces of the separatist self-proclaimed Luhansk People's Republic (LNR) on a road in the Luhansk region, Ukraine February 27, 2022.
Russia to buy rockets from North Korea; IAEA calls for security zone around nuclear plant
Russian military vehicles escort a motorcade transporting the International Atomic Energy Agency expert mission while leaving the Zaporizhzhia nuclear power plant in Ukraine on Sept. 1, 2022.
This is CNBC's live blog tracking developments on the war in Ukraine. See below for the latest updates. 
Russian President Vladimir Putin slammed the West again on Wednesday, saying sanctions imposed on Russia for its invasion of Ukraine are a "danger" to the world.
Speaking at an economic forum in Russia's far east, Putin said Western countries have aggressively tried to impose their way of life on other countries and to make them "submit to their will."
Meanwhile, Ukraine appears to have launched a counterattack in the Kharkiv region in the northeast of the country, with several reports of fighting in the region.
Overnight and early this morning, the head of the Kharkiv regional state administration, Oleg Synegubov, posted on Telegram that Russian forces were shelling various parts of Kharkiv, the second-largest city in Ukraine, and fighting was taking place in the province.
Analysts said Russia's redeployment of troops from eastern to southern Ukraine to defend against Ukraine's counteroffensive there has likely enabled Kyiv to carry out the counterattack around Kharkiv.
Ukraine's top nuclear inspector says the Zaporizhzhia nuclear power plant could be shut down if hostilities continue around the plant. Europe's largest nuclear plant continues to be at the center of accusations between Russia and Ukraine — with both repeatedly accusing each other of shelling the Russian-occupied facility.
The head of Ukraine's nuclear regulatory body, Oleh Korikov, said shutting down the plant was under consideration.
"Further deterioration of the situation will lead to the fact that we will be forced to operate backup diesel power generators in order to sustain our security systems, and diesel fuel reserves are very difficult to replenish in conditions of war," Korikov said Wednesday in an interview broadcast on YouTube.
"In fact, we will need four tanks of diesel per day. It is very problematic to bring such a volume of fuel across the contact line now. That is, we can potentially get into a situation where we run out of diesel, which can lead to an accident with damage to the active zone of the reactors and the release of radioactive products into the environment. Then it will have consequences not only for Ukraine but also for other countries," he said.
"The option of turning off the station is indeed considered if appropriate conditions arise that would require such a stop. If this happens, the 6th power unit will be turned off."
The 6th reactor is currently the only one functioning in the plant, which was inspected by the International Atomic Energy Agency last week.
In the 52-page report , IAEA investigators warned that while ongoing shelling "has not yet triggered a nuclear emergency, it continues to represent a constant threat to nuclear safety and security."
"The IAEA recommends that shelling on site and in its vicinity should be stopped immediately to avoid any further damages to the plant and associated facilities, for the safety of the operating staff and to maintain the physical integrity to support safe and secure operation," wrote IAEA Director General Rafael Grossi.
Britain's Ministry of Defense has confirmed earlier reports from officials in Ukraine that the armed forces there have been counterattacking Russian positions in the northeastern and eastern parts of the country, as well the south, where a counteroffensive was launched last week.
"Over the last 24 hours, heavy fighting has taken place on three fronts: in the north, near Kharkiv; in the east in the Donbas; and in the south in Kherson Oblast," the ministry said in its latest intelligence update Wednesday.
"Russia's planned main effort is probably an advance on Bakhmut in the Donbas, but commanders face a dilemma of whether to deploy operational reserves to support this offensive, or to defend against continued Ukrainian advances in the south," the ministry added.
"Multiple concurrent threats spread across 500km will test Russia's ability to coordinate operational design and reallocate resources across multiple groupings of forces. Earlier in the war, Russia's failure to do this was one of the underlying reasons for the military's poor performance," it said.
Russia has indicated that plans are being made for President Vladimir Putin to meet his Chinese counterpart Xi Jinping on the sidelines of the Shanghai Cooperation Organization summit in Samarkand, Uzbekistan, from Sept.15-16.
Russian envoy to Beijing, Andrey Denisov, told reporters on Wednesday that "in less than ten days we will have a regular meeting of our SCO leaders in Samarkand, we are getting ready for it. In general, this summit promises to be interesting, because it will be the first full-fledged summit since the pandemic," he said in comments reported by Russian state news agency Tass.
"One way or another, there will be plenary sessions and various kinds of group meetings, and we are planning a serious, full-fledged meeting of our leaders with a detailed agenda, which we are now, in fact, working on with our Chinese partners," the official said.

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