It’s increasingly difficult to be surprised by Donald Trump’s presidency, but once in a while, the White House manages to take a position that seems truly bonkers, even by 2018 standards.
The White House is reviewing a request by Russian President Vladimir Putin to allow Russian investigators to question a number of Americans they say are implicated in criminal activity, including a former U.S. ambassador, a spokeswoman said.
At the top of Moscow’s wish list, evidently, is Michael McFaul, who served as the U.S. ambassador to Russia in the Obama administration (and who spoke with Rachel about these latest developments on the show last night).
Note, we’re not talking about information from an anonymous source, leaking word of a ridiculous behind-the-scenes plan. On the contrary, White House Press Secretary Sarah Huckabee Sanders spoke about this, on the record, during yesterday’s briefing.
A reporter asked, “Russian authorities yesterday named several Americans who they want to question, who they claim were involved in Bill Browder’s ‘crimes,’ in their terms, including a former ambassador to Russia, Michael McFaul. Does President Trump support that idea? Is he open to having U.S. officials questioned by Russia?”
Sanders responded that the president “is going to meet with his team” on this, adding that “there was some conversation” about this between Trump and Putin.
So to recap, Russia’s authoritarian president has an obsessive grudge against a former U.S. ambassador, and wants access to this American for questioning. America’s president, who seems unnervingly eager to make his Russian counterpart happy, should’ve dismissed the idea out of hand, but he’s instead considering the possibility.
This all stems from what Trump considered an “incredible offer” from Putin.
At Monday’s press conference in Helsinki, the Russian president acknowledged the recent indictment of 12 Russian intelligence officials for their alleged role in attacking the American election. Putin said he’s willing to allow U.S. officials to interview the accused, but he’d expect the Trump administration to “reciprocate” by giving Russians access to Americans that Putin’s government doesn’t like.
The whole gambit sounded quite ridiculous, which made it all the more jarring when Trump told reporters, “I think that’s an incredible offer.”









