The former Czechoslovakian State Security (StB) stepped up its spying campaign against Donald Trump in the late 1980s, targeting him to gain information about the “upper echelons of the US government,” archive files and testimony from former cold war spies reveal.
The StB carried out a long-term spying mission against Trump following his marriage in 1977 to his first wife, Ivana Zelnickova. The operation was run out of Zlin, the provincial town in southwestern Czechoslovakia where Zelnickova was born and grew up.
Her father, Milos Zelnicek, gave regular information to the local StB office about his daughter’s visits from the US and on his celebrity son-in-law’s career in New York. Zelnicek was classified as a “conspiratorial” informer. His relationship with the StB lasted until the end of the communist regime.
New archive records obtained by the Guardian and Czech magazine Respekt show the StB’s growing interest in Trump after the 1988 US presidential election, won by George H.W. Bush.
The StB’s first directorate responsible for foreign espionage sought to “deepen” its Trump-related activity.
A former StB official, Vlastimil Danek — tracked down to the village of Zadni Arnostov, where he lives in retirement — confirmed the Trump operation.
Addressing the matter publicly for the first time, he said: “Trump was of course a very interesting person for us. He was a businessman, he had a lot of contacts, even in US politics.”
“We were focusing on him, we knew he was influential. We had information that he wanted to be president in future,” Danek added.
He said his senior colleagues at StB headquarters in Prague were also focused on Trump.
“It wasn’t only us who paid attention to him. The first department of the StB were interested in him. I don’t know if the first directorate shared information on Trump with the KGB. I can’t verify or deny,” he said.
“I don’t want to tell you any more details. It’s a past I would like to forget. I don’t want to have any problems,” he added.
The files do not say whether the Soviet Union ordered or shaped the decade-long StB Trump operation, but Czechoslovakian spies routinely shared secrets with KGB colleagues and the Moscow-based security agency had a large liaison office in Prague. Many StB officers also worked directly for the KGB, known as “the friends.”
In summer 1987, Donald and Ivana Trump visited Moscow and Leningrad, following a personal invitation from the Soviet ambassador in Washington, Yuri Dubinin. The trip was arranged by Intourist, an undercover KGB outfit.
Soon after returning from Moscow, Trump announced he was thinking of running for president. That presidential bid failed to materialize.
In October 1988, on the eve of the US election, Ivana Trump visited her parents in Zlin, known at the time as Gottwaldov.
According to the files, she “confidently” predicted Bush’s victory to her father, who in turn passed the tip to local StB officers.
“The outcome of the election confirmed the veracity of this information,” StB field agent Lieutenant Peter Sury wrote in a document dated Jan. 23, 1989, and marked “secret.”
The prediction came “from the highest echelons of power in the US,” it said.
Ivana was “not only a well-heeled US citizen,” but moved in “very top political circles,” Sury said.
He listed a number of “action points” that might be taken. They included remaining in “conspiratorial contact” with Zelnicek. The StB’s goal was to gain more information about US foreign policy, politics and economy, plus “the activities of America’s intelligence agencies.”
Sury, who was deputy head of the local StB, still lives in Zlin.
“Yes, I wrote that file,” he said, speaking about it publicly for the first time. “Trump was a rich businessman and interesting for us. I didn’t work on him, though. My colleagues did. The first department focused on him. I don’t know details.”
The comments by former StB officers suggest that Moscow and Prague were intensely interested in Trump in the late Cold War era. Spy agencies in both socialist capitals noted Trump’s growing political ambitions and sought to exploit his in-laws and family ties, using them as a dynamic intelligence channel.
The scale of Soviet Moscow’s spying operation on Trump is unknown. No documents are public. It is unclear when the KGB began a file on the future president.
In Prague, a bout 60,000 StB documents were declassified in the mid-1990s, after the collapse of communism. The StB destroyed most records. However, secret memos written by then-KGB chaiman Vladimir Kryuchkov in the mid-1980s reveal that he berated his officers for their failure to cultivate top-level Americans.
Kryuchkov circulated a confidential personality questionnaire to KGB heads of station abroad, setting out the qualities wanted from a potential asset.
According to instructions leaked to British intelligence by KGB defector Oleg Gordievsky, they included corruption, vanity, narcissism, marital infidelity and poor analytical skills.
The KGB should focus on personalities who were upwardly mobile in business and politics, especially Americans, the document said.
SEEKING CHANGE: A hospital worker said she did not vote in previous elections, but ‘now I can see that maybe my vote can change the system and the country’ Voting closed yesterday across the Solomon Islands in the south Pacific nation’s first general election since the government switched diplomatic allegiance from Taiwan to Beijing and struck a secret security pact that has raised fears of the Chinese navy gaining a foothold in the region. The Solomon Islands’ closer relationship with China and a troubled domestic economy weighed on voters’ minds as they cast their ballots. As many as 420,000 registered voters had their say across 50 national seats. For the first time, the national vote also coincided with elections for eight of the 10 local governments. Esther Maeluma cast her vote in the
Nearly half of China’s major cities are suffering “moderate to severe” levels of subsidence, putting millions of people at risk of flooding, especially as sea levels rise, according to a study of nationwide satellite data released yesterday. The authors of the paper, published by the journal Science, found that 45 percent of China’s urban land was sinking faster than 3mm per year, with 16 percent at more than 10mm per year, driven not only by declining water tables, but also the sheer weight of the built environment. With China’s urban population already in excess of 900 million people, “even a small portion
UNSETTLING IMAGES: The scene took place in front of TV crews covering the Trump trial, with a CNN anchor calling it an ‘emotional and unbelievably disturbing moment’ A man who doused himself in an accelerant and set himself on fire outside the courthouse where former US president Donald Trump is on trial has died, police said yesterday. The New York City Police Department (NYPD) said the man was declared dead by staff at an area hospital. The man was in Collect Pond Park at about 1:30pm on Friday when he took out pamphlets espousing conspiracy theories, tossed them around, then doused himself in an accelerant and set himself on fire, officials and witnesses said. A large number of police officers were nearby when it happened. Some officers and bystanders rushed
HYPOCRISY? The Chinese Ministry of Foreign Affairs yesterday asked whether Biden was talking about China or the US when he used the word ‘xenophobic’ US President Joe Biden on Wednesday called for a hike in steel tariffs on China, accusing Beijing of cheating as he spoke at a campaign event in Pennsylvania. Biden accused China of xenophobia, too, in a speech to union members in Pittsburgh. “They’re not competing, they’re cheating. They’re cheating and we’ve seen the damage here in America,” Biden said. Chinese steel companies “don’t need to worry about making a profit because the Chinese government is subsidizing them so heavily,” he said. Biden said he had called for the US Trade Representative to triple the tariff rates for Chinese steel and aluminum if Beijing was