'Country bumpkins': 5 business problems with Trump’s Russia project

To gain approval for a Moscow hotel project in 2015, the Trump Organization reportedly considered giving a lavish, $50 million penthouse to Russian president Vladimir Putin. That would supposedly clinch Putin’s approval for the deal, while drawing other rich tenants who would want to live in Putin’s orbit.

It might make a decent plot device in a movie. But people familiar with the business climate in Moscow deride the idea of blatantly bribing Putin as amateur armchair dealmaking. “You don’t need Vladimir Putin’s approval to open a hotel in Moscow,” says Scott Antel, an international real-estate lawyer who’s been involved with about 50 hotel projects in Moscow. “Never in my career have I needed the godfather’s approval. This is just embellishment.”

Donald Trump’s efforts to build a residential and commercial complex in Moscow have become a central focus of various investigations into his business dealings in Russia and possible compromising connections with Russian operatives. During Congressional testimony on Feb. 27, Trump’s former lawyer, Michael Cohen, said, “Mr. Trump knew of and directed the Trump-Moscow negotiations throughout the campaign and lied about it.”

Cohen originally told Congress Trump’s interest in a Moscow deal ended in January 2016, before the Republican primary elections began. But Cohen now says negotiations on a Moscow deal continued through at least June 2016, when Trump was poised to accept the Republican presidential nomination. Cohen later pleaded guilty to lying to Congress, one of several crimes for which he will spend roughly three years in prison, starting in May. Cohen also says two of Trump’s attorneys knew he’d be lying to Congress, a charge they deny.

Washington DC, February 27: Michael Cohen, President Donald J Trump's former personal lawyer, testifies at the House Oversight Committee at the US Capitol in Washington, DC. Cohen discussed Trump's business practices and his dealings with the Trump Presidential campaign, including payoffs to women that Trump allegedly was involved with. February 27, 2019. Credit: Patsy Lynch/MediaPunch /IPX
Michael Cohen testifying before the the House Oversight Committee on February 27. Credit: Patsy Lynch/MediaPunch /IPX

Trump’s desire to strike a lucrative deal in Moscow might explain the strange affinity he has expressed for Putin, along with a forgiving attitude toward Russia’s meddling in the 2016 U.S. election. Yet there are obvious holes in the tale of Trump’s never-consummated Moscow deal, which suggest Trump may have lacked the wherewithal to do a deal, or may not have been all that serious about it.

“It sounds like country bumpkins bumbling around,” says an American businessperson with years of experience in Russia. “It’s one of the most ludicrous things I’ve ever heard.”

Trump himself hasn’t detailed his recent business interests in Russia. The public narrative on the matter comes from Cohen’s testimony, snippets of legal filings, leaks to the press and comments from Trump family members years before Trump ran for president. Here are five problems with the story as we know it so far: