An unregistered foreign agent told Trump 2016 campaign officials what to do — and they did it. When Donald Trump became president, the same foreign agent advised senior U.S. government officials on foreign policy — and they did what he wanted then, too.
Barrack knew precisely who he was answering to and where his allegiance rested.
Ultimately, that agent of a foreign power became the chairman of the 2017 Trump inauguration committee. He even sought out, albeit unsuccessfully, a more formal senior role in the Trump administration, including the job of special envoy to the Middle East, because that’s what foreign agents do: seek the most influential role they can find in order to serve their masters.
This is all according to the U.S. Department of Justice’s announcement Tuesday of an indictment of Thomas Barrack, a wealthy close friend of Trump’s, on charges of not disclosing that he was working for the United Arab Emirates to influence not only U.S. foreign policy but the Trump officials who seemed more than happy to be influenced. Two other men, Matthew Grimes and Rashid Sultan Rashid Al Malik Alshahhi, were also charged in the scheme.
To be clear, this is not just a garden-variety Foreign Agents Registration Act case. Nor is it a scenario where someone forgot to file a small fee and some paperwork to advise the U.S. Department of Justice that they are lobbying on behalf of another country. It’s also not a case where a foreign agent thought he was just working for some private interests as an “independent intermediary.”
That’s what Barrack has already tried to claim (and a spokesperson said he will be pleading not guilty) and will want you to believe — but that would be contrary to all known facts. The specific charge against Barrack, Grimes and Alshahhi is 18 USC 951(a), which implies they were allegedly working directly with and for representatives of a foreign government. (According to Bess Levin of Vanity Fair, as of Tuesday, Grimes’ attorney could not be reached for comment and Alshahhi was at large, the identity of his attorney unknown.)
While it’s often said that the cover-up is worse than the crime, it’s also true that a cover up can help prove the crime.
Here are the facts as set forth in the DOJ indictment, and here’s why we should all care.
First, Barrack seems to have been operating as a kind of double agent for the UAE. Mere lobbyists advocate for their clients, but they don’t collect sensitive nonpublic information from our government and pass it to another nation. The DOJ announcement said, “As alleged in the indictment, the defendants used Barrack’s status as a senior outside advisor to the campaign and, subsequently, to senior U.S. government officials, to advance the interests of and provide intelligence to the UAE while simultaneously failing to notify the Attorney General that their actions were taken at the direction of senior UAE officials.”
More specifically, the indictment alleges that “in May 2017, Barrack agreed to provide Alshahhi with non-public information about the views and reactions of senior U.S. government officials following a White House meeting between senior U.S. officials and senior UAE officials.”
Second, according to the indictment, Barrack was in frequent contact with UAE government officials. The indictment alleges “Barrack and Grimes also solicited direction from senior UAE officials in advance of the publication of an op-ed authored by Barrack and published in a national magazine in October 2016 and removed certain language at the direction of senior UAE officials, as relayed by Alshahhi.” Remember that when Barrack tries to assert that he had no idea who he was actually working for.
Because evidence indicates Barrack knew precisely who he was answering to and where his allegiance rested. The DOJ announcement said, “After one appearance in which Barrack repeatedly praised the United Arab Emirates, Barrack emailed Alshahhi, ‘I nailed it. . . for the home team,’ referring to the UAE.”








