Trump jnr communicated with WikiLeaks at end of election

President’s son exchanged direct messages with WikiLeaks on Twitter

Donald Trump, Jr, son of US president Donald Trump, who exchanged direct messages with the WikiLeaks Twitter account at the end of the US election. Photograph: AFP
Donald Trump, Jr, son of US president Donald Trump, who exchanged direct messages with the WikiLeaks Twitter account at the end of the US election. Photograph: AFP

Donald Trump Jr, the eldest son of the US president, was in direct communication with WikiLeaks in the crucial final stages of the 2016 presidential election, a new leak of private correspondence from inside the Trump circle reveals.

The younger Trump exchanged direct messages with the WikiLeaks account on Twitter between September 20th and October 12th, 2016.

Copies of the correspondence were handed to congressional investigators by Mr Trump Jr’s lawyers and subsequently obtained by the Atlantic magazine.

The communication occurred at a highly sensitive moment for both the Trump presidential campaign and for WikiLeaks, just weeks before election day and at the height of WikiLeaks’ publication of hacked emails belonging to senior Democratic figures at the instigation, US intelligence agencies allege, of the Russian government.

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The most politically explosive communication between the two parties, according to the Atlantic, came on and after October 12th, 2016.

“Hey Donald, great to see you and your dad talking about our publications,” the WikiLeaks account, @WikiLeaks, said to Trump Jr two days after his father had proclaimed at a campaign rally: “I love WikiLeaks!”

‘Many great stories’

“Strongly suggest your dad tweets this link if he mentions us. There’s many great stories the press are missing and we’re sure some of your follows [sic] will find it,” the message continued.

The message went on to offer a link to wlsearch.tk – a search tool that facilitates the exploration of the database of leaked emails from John Podesta, Hillary Clinton’s 2016 campaign chairman, that WikiLeaks had by then begun to publish.

Julia Ioffe, author of the Atlantic article, writes that Mr Trump Jr did not reply to the WikiLeaks message. But two days later, on October 14th, he did tweet that same link to wlsearch.tk, encouraging “those who have the time to read about all the corruption and hypocrisy” exposed by the WikiLeaks emails.

Mr Assange also wrote that the messages from WikiLeaks, including ones urging Mr Trump Jr to release his father’s tax returns through the organisation, showed its “chutzpah”.

This image of Donald Trump Jr’s Twitter account shows a series of direct messages he received from the Twitter account behind the WikiLeaks website, including his responses to the communications, which he posted on Monday, Nov. 13, 2017. Photograph: AP
This image of Donald Trump Jr’s Twitter account shows a series of direct messages he received from the Twitter account behind the WikiLeaks website, including his responses to the communications, which he posted on Monday, Nov. 13, 2017. Photograph: AP

A lawyer for Mr Trump Jr told the Atlantic: “We can say with confidence that we have no concerns about these documents and any questions raised about them have been easily answered in the appropriate forum.”

On Monday evening, Mr Trump Jr tweeted what he said were copies of the “entire chain of messages with @wikileaks”.

‘Putintrump’

The first contact from WikiLeaks was made on September 20th, 2016, the magazine reports. In it the open information website informed Mr Trump Jr that a new political action committee called “putintrump” was about to launch.

Mr Trump Jr replied the following morning: “Off the record I don’t know who that is, but I’ll ask around.”

According to leaked information obtained by the Atlantic, Trump Jr shared the news that WikiLeaks had been in touch with him with several members of the inner campaign team.

Among those he allegedly told were Steve Bannon, then chief executive of the Trump presidential campaign, as well as the candidate’s son-in-law Jared Kushner.

On October 3rd there was a further exchange through Twitter in which WikiLeaks encouraged the Trump team to publicise a comment by Mrs Clinton about wanting to “just drone” the head of WikiLeaks, Julian Assange.

“Already did that earlier today,” Mr Trump Jr replied, according to the Atlantic.

Soon after, the businessman sent a second DM to WikiLeaks asking to know more about an upcoming leak from WikiLeaks that had been teased by Roger Stone, the Trump-supporting political agitator.

According to the Atlantic the information flow continued until as late as July this year, although after 12 October 2016 it was entirely in one direction – after that date the younger Trump did not respond to any approaches.

Beyond that point, the leak becomes more revealing about WikiLeaks and its maverick founder Mr Assange, holed up in the Ecuardorian embassy in London, where he has lived since 2012, than about the circle of the US president.

Tax returns

The most revelatory detail in that regard dates back to October 21st, 2016 when the WikiLeaks account – presumably controlled by Mr Assange himself, though the identity of the correspondent is unknown – contacted Mr Trump Jr urging him to allow WikiLeaks to publish his father’s tax returns.

WikiLeaks suggested the move would be positive as it would undermine suggestions that the organisation was in the pocket of the Kremlin.

“If we publish [the tax returns] it will dramatically improve the perception of our impartiality,” WikiLeaks says.

“That means the vast amount of stuff that we are publishing on Mrs Clinton will have much higher impact, because it won’t be perceived as coming from a ‘pro-Trump’ ‘pro-Russia’ source.”

On election day itself, November 8th, WikiLeaks contacted Mr Trump Jr to make the extraordinary suggestion that should his father lose the contest, as was then widely expected, he should refuse to concede the race and instead turn the spotlight on the media for “rigging” the result. - The Guardian