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Abandoning English 'stupid' - Lavrov

Sergey Lavrov
© Sputnik/Pavel BednyakovFile photo: Russian Foreign Minister Sergey Lavrov
Russians should not give up the English language just to spite the West in the way Kiev ditched Russian to spite Moscow, Foreign Minister Sergey Lavrov said in Moscow on Thursday.

Lavrov was hosting an 11-year-old girl from Lugansk named Anastasia as part of the 'Wishing Tree' charity campaign. When she told the foreign minister she was studying English, he praised her and said it was a good language to know.

"I don't think they are right, those who say 'Well they are setting the entire world against us, so let's get away from the English language.' That's stupid, because the language has nothing to do with it," the minister said.

"That's just like when [Ukrainian President Vladimir] Zelensky banned the Russian language, Russian education, [and] Russian media in Ukraine," he added.

Some Russian lawmakers have mooted downgrading the status of English in all levels of education, from mandatory to optional. A member of the State Duma from the ruling 'United Russia' party, argued in April that English had become the main international language only because schools mandate it.

Arrow Down

Ukraine suffering severe frontline ammo shortages - El Pais

Ukrainian soldiers
© John Moore/Getty ImagesFILE PHOTO.
Ukrainian troops are facing serious ammunition shortages, newspaper El Pais has reported. The Spanish daily also pointed out that Russia has been ramping up its own arms production of late, apparently outperforming Kiev's Western backers.

In an interview with CNN's Christiane Amanpour published on Wednesday, Ukrainian Foreign Minister Dmitry Kuleba confirmed that Kiev's military was "rapidly burning through" Western arms and ammunition supplied earlier in the conflict. The country's top diplomat urged the West to "expedite the decisions that are pending" on further deliveries.

In its article on Thursday, El Pais quoted Aleksandr, a sergeant from the '47' mechanized brigade fighting in the city of Avdeevka, north of Donetsk, as complaining that Kiev's troops are on an ammunition diet, with arsenals depleted.

The source told Spanish reporters that he and his comrades were having to fight with what they "have available, not always with what is the most suitable to attain the goal."

Comment: Low on men, low on ammo, low on morale. The only thing Ukraine has a lot of is corruption.


Bad Guys

Israel commits war crime by assassinating senior Hamas figure: Palestinian official

Deputy Chairman of the Movement’s Political Bureau Saleh Al-Arouri
© Ahmed Gamil/Anadolu AgencyDeputy Chairman of the Movement’s Political Bureau Saleh Al-Arouri
The assassination carried out by Israel against a senior Hamas figure with an uncrewed aerial vehicle (UAV) in the Lebanese capital, Beirut, means a violation of international law and Lebanon's sovereignty, according to a Palestinian journalist and author.

The editor of The Palestine Chronicle, Palestinian journalist-author Ramzy Baroud told Anadolu that Israel's attack on civilian areas in Lebanon was a serious violation of international law, referring to the assassination of the deputy head of Hamas' Political Bureau Saleh al-Arouri.

"For now, we know that six more people were killed along with Arouri," he said. "In this attack, a UAV that fired three missiles targeted a residential area and damaged the building where Arouri held his meetings along with other structures."

Radar

Why Biden's Red Sea strategy will blow up in his face

Houthis
The Houthis are going to prevent Israel-bound commercial ships from reaching Israeli ports as long as Israel prevents food, water and medicine from reaching Palestinians in Gaza. If Israeli leaders want to end the blockade, they need to stop killing Palestinians and end the siege. This is the simple, moral solution to the current crisis in the Red Sea.
Over the weekend, Houthi fighters launched attacks on two more commercial ships despite the presence of US warships patrolling the area. The primary target was the Maersk Hangzhou that was swarmed by small boats filled with Houthi militants who fired small arms weapons at the sailors on board. US Naval helicopters were sent to the scene and sunk three of the boats killing all of the crew.

Sometime later, the Maersk Hangzhou was attacked again in the southern part of the Red Sea. It was hit by a missile that was launched from a location on Yemen's coastline. Following the attack, the Hangzhou made a Mayday call requesting assistance from Naval ships operating in the area. According to one account: "The vessel is reportedly seaworthy an there are no reported injuries."

It's worth noting, that Maersk had ordered a complete suspension of all commercial ships passing through the Red Sea just two weeks ago on December 15. Maersk had only reluctantly agreed to resume sailing because leaders at the Pentagon had assured them that they would be safe. On December 19, Pentagon chief Lloyd Austin launched a multi-national maritime task-force, named Operation Prosperity Guardian, that was supposed to protect commercial ships in Red Sea from Houthi missile and drone attacks. The incidents that occurred this weekend prove that Austin's coalition is a failure. And Maersk has tacitly admitted it is a failure by pausing all sailing through the Red Sea for the next 48 hours. We expect that the "pause" will be indefinitely extended until the issue is resolved, which is unlikely to be anytime in the near future.

Quenelle - Golden

Houthis launch sea drone attack on US ships hours after Washington issued 'final warning'

us red sea
© AP Photo/Jon GambrellFILE - U.S. Navy Vice Adm. Brad Cooper, who heads the Navy's Bahrain-based 5th Fleet
An armed unmanned surface vessel launched from Houthi-controlled Yemen got within a "couple of miles" of U.S. Navy and commercial vessels in the Red Sea before detonating on Thursday, just hours after the White House and a host of partner nations issued a final warning to the Iran-backed militia group to cease the attacks or face potential military action.

Vice Admiral Brad Cooper, the head of U.S. Navy operations in the Middle East, said it was the first time the Houthis had used an unmanned surface vessel, or USV, since their harassment of commercial ships in the Red Sea began after the outbreak of the Israel-Hamas war. They have, however, used them in years past.


Comment: It's not the 'Israel-Hamas war', it's Israel's genocide in Gaza.


Comment: See also: Red Sea tensions spike: UK threatens 'direct action' against Houthis, Iran sends warship into Red Sea


Cult

Best of the Web: Times of Israel: Assassinated Hamas deputy Saleh al-Arouri "was instrumental in hostage-release negotiations"


Comment: Buried in the following Israeli media report, we find the actual motive for Israel to drone-strike Hamas deputy Saleh al-Aouri in Beirut earlier this week...


saleh al-aouri
Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu told the relatives of hostages held in Gaza that the exile of the Hamas terror group's leadership from the Strip was a possible outcome of the war, several media outlets reported Tuesday.

During the meeting, news broke of the death of Hamas's deputy leader abroad Saleh al-Arouri in an alleged Israeli airstrike in Beirut, the Walla news site reported, but the representatives of the hostages' families did not have their phones on them, and the matter's potential impact on negotiations with the terror group was not raised.

In the meeting at the Defense Ministry in Tel Aviv, Netanyahu reportedly stressed the importance of returning the captives, claiming that talks on the matter were ongoing. Hamas was said to freeze the talks following Arouri's killing.

Netanyahu told them that "Hamas eased its ultimatums," though, according to leaks from the meeting, one of the hostages' relatives noted that according to their information, talks had already been halted.

"We aren't giving up on anybody. With us, there aren't categories. We have to bring everyone back alive and we are fighting a monstrous enemy," Netanyahu said, according to reports, adding that military pressure in Gaza was helping the process.

Comment: Netanyahu's words are exposed by this deed. The Israeli regime is condemning the remaining hostages to the same fate as Gazans. They don't want hostage releases because those slow down the operation to expel all Palestinians from the Gaza Strip, and allow space in which media can enter the killing zone and document the atrocities.


Light Sabers

Fake intellectuals working for think tanks funded by the arms industry are driving support for war after war after war

icons
© prezibzse.com
Iraq, Afghanistan, Libya, Syria, Ukraine, Russia, China, and Now Iran

A few days after the October 7 attacks in northern Israel, The Atlantic Council ran an inflammatory article on its website by Jonathan Panikoff, a former deputy national intelligence officer, entitled "It doesn't matter whether Iran planned the Hamas attack — Tehran is still to blame."[1]

The article referenced a Wall Street Journal article that claimed unfoundedly that Iran was responsible for planning the attacks, and expressed belief that even if Iran didn't directly plan it, Iran was still responsible because it had supported Hamas in the past.

The article went on to support an aggressive military response by the U.S. and Israel that could potentially entail bombing Iran. The latter was a long-held dream of neoconservatives who have wanted to overthrow the regime of the Ayatollahs since it took over from the Shah, a U.S. and Israeli client, in a 1979 revolution.

Glenn Diesen, The Think Tank Racket: Managing the Information War With Russia (Clarity Press, 2023) looks at the influence of think tanks like The Atlantic Council in driving gargantuan U.S. military budgets and endless wars that have no end in sight.

The Atlantic Council has been particularly hawkish with regards to Russia, helping to fuel a proxy war between the U.S. and Russia in Ukraine that has decimated a generation of Ukrainian and Russian youth and left us on the threshold of World War III.

Briefcase

War on Gaza: Turkey backs South Africa 'genocide' case against Israel at ICJ

protest
© Yasin Akgul/AFPIsrael-Palestine-Gaza Protest • Istanbul, Turkey • January 1, 2024
Ankara says Israel's crimes against humanity in Gaza should not go unpunished in another deterioration in ties between the two states.

Turkey has officially backed South Africa's case against Israel at the International Court of Justice, which accuses the state of genocide in its ongoing war on Gaza.

Turkish foreign ministry spokesperson Oncu Keceli said in a statement that Ankara welcomes the South African case, which says Israel has violated its obligations under the 1948 Convention on the Prevention and Punishment of the Crime of Genocide.
"Israel's murder of more than 22,000 Palestinian civilians, the majority of whom were women and children, in Gaza for nearly three months should not go unpunished in any way. Those responsible for this must be held accountable before international law," he continued, adding: "We hope that the process will be completed as soon as possible."
South Africa filed the case last month and wants an order calling on Israel to halt its military operations in the besieged enclave.
"Such an order is necessary in this case to protect against further, severe and irreparable harm to the rights of the Palestinian people.

"Israel has engaged in, is engaging in and risks further engaging in genocidal acts against the Palestinian people in Gaza."

Comment: More countries need to come forward and consolidate support for South Africa's initiative.

See also:


Better Earth

U.S. war plans failed in 2023

Flag army
© Dwynn Ronal/Gulf News
The American strategy of waging war against Russia and China at the same time was thwarted by the emergence of a new front in the Middle East.

In 2023, all American war plans were thwarted. Washington was preparing for a conflict scenario against the powers that lead the geopolitical transition towards multipolarity - Russia and China. But the worsening security crisis in the Middle East prevented the American strategy from being implemented successfully.

First, it is necessary to remember that the central guideline of American military policy has been, since at least the end of Cold War, the ability to "win two wars at the same time". After the dismantling of the USSR, Washington became the hegemonic power, undoubtedly stronger than any other country in the world. At the time, there was no state with enough strength to win a direct conflict against American forces, which is why the U.S. believed it could fight and win two conflicts simultaneously.

Over time, this scenario changed. Countries like Russia and China developed militarily and economically and began a process of reformulation of the global geopolitics. Thus, tensions began between the U.S.-led West and the multipolar powers, which reached their highest point in the Ukrainian crisis.

Cult

Bill Clinton, Stephen Hawking, and Bill Gates: Here's who's in the unsealed Epstein docs so far

bill gates jeffrey epstein
© Rick Friedman, Fabrice Coffrini, Timothy A. Clary/Getty Images
Update (0855ET): Here's the list of names mentioned so far in the unsealed Epstein documents (of which there are many more to come). Their inclusion does not necessarily equal wrongdoing.

Bill Clinton - "He said one time that Clinton likes them young, referring to girls."

Michael Jackson - One accuser was asked: ""Did you ever meet anybody famous when you were with Jeffrey?" to which she replies: "I met Michael Jackson" at "Jeffrey's house in Palm Beach." The accuser said she was not forced to perform 'massage' on the pop star (perhaps because she wasn't a 12-year-old boy).

Prince Andrew - According to accuser Johanna Sjoberg, Prince Andrew touched her breast while posing for a picture with a puppet of himself.

Comment:
UPDATED JAN. 4, 2024

source:Intelligencer
authors: Chas Danner, Benjamin Hart, and Matt Stieb

New details regarding Bill Clinton and Donald Trump

Sjoberg also claimed she was once on a private plane with Epstein when it made an unexpected stop in Atlantic City. "Great, we'll call Trump," she said, paraphrasing Epstein. (Both Trump and Clinton have denied any wrongdoing in the years in which they associated with Epstein.)

Epstein told his brother he knew things about Trump and Hillary Clinton that could have upended the 2016 election

On the day the court documents were unsealed, Mark Epstein, the younger brother of the late financier, told the New York Post that his brother once told him he knew damning details about both Hillary Clinton and Trump.
"Here's a direct quote: 'If I said what I know about both candidates, they'd have to cancel the election,'" Mark Epstein said, paraphrasing his brother.
David Copperfield and Michael Jackson allegedly hung out with Epstein

Sjoberg also provided two new Epstein associates in her deposition: David Copperfield and Michael Jackson. She claimed she met Jackson at Epstein's Palm Beach mansion. On another occasion at one of Epstein's homes, she met Copperfield, who she said "did some magic tricks." Sjoberg claimed Copperfield "questioned me if I was aware that girls were getting paid to find other girls." Sjoberg, who was in college, recalled seeing a younger girl at dinner with Copperfield and thought she appeared to be of high-school age but she wasn't certain:
"I had to assume for my own sanity that she was a daughter of one of his friends."
Epstein's former butler claims Maxwell threatened him to stay quiet

In a deposition from 2009, former Epstein housekeeper Alfredo Rodriguez said that Ghislaine Maxwell threatened him to keep quiet about Epstein's alleged sex trafficking. "She said something like don't open your mouth or something like that," he said. "I'm 55 and I'm afraid. First of all, I don't have a job, but I'm glad this is on tape because I don't want nothing to happen to me."

Rodriguez also stated in the deposition that he was supposed to carry cash "at all times" to hand over to girls at Epstein's Palm Beach mansion. He died in 2015 after being sentenced to 18 months in prison for attempting to sell Epstein's little black book — the same sentence length Epstein was given for his crimes.

New details on known Epstein associates like Prince Andrew and Jean-Luc Brunel

The documents include new allegations regarding several contacts already known to have had associations with Epstein:
  • An unnamed victim, Jane Doe No. 3, alleges she was forced to have sex with Prince Andrew on three separate occasions when she was a minor, including in an orgy with numerous other underage girls on Epstein's island.
  • The same victim alleges Epstein forced her to have sex with Alan Dershowitz on several occasions when she was a minor, including once on Epstein's plane.
  • Johanna Sjoberg testified that she once heard Epstein talking about celebrity hairstylist Frédéric Fekkai over the phone. "Can we find some girls for him?" she claims Epstein said.
  • Other known Epstein associates named in the documents include billionaire Thomas Pritzker, billionaire Les Wexner, billionaire Glenn Dubin, and accused rapist and model scout Jean Luc-Brunel.
Buckingham Palace declined to comment to the Daily Beast on Prince Andrew's behalf. When the documents were released, Dershowitz — who helped negotiate Epstein's cushy prison deal — went on Fox News to deny the allegations.

The court documents do not include Epstein's client list

Some social media posts have claimed that the newly released documents contain the names from Jeffrey Epstein's client list, but those claims are false.

Vera Wang

According to the Wall Street Journal, the designer was one of the people listed on Epstein's schedules after 2008, and some victims who the Journal spoke with said that Epstein had used Wang's name while leading the victims to believe he would help them with their fashion careers. Per the Journal,
"Wang said she regrets ever associating with Epstein. 'I never knew he was using my name in any capacity, and it horrifies and repulses me to now hear that he did so,' she said."
Naomi Campbell

The Wall Street Journal also reports that the model's name was in Epstein's schedules after 2008, and that one of Epstein's accusers went with him to a Campbell event in Paris:

The Ukrainian model said she attended a 2010 fashion event for Naomi Campbell in Paris when Epstein spotted her and sent a Russian woman to talk to her. The woman described Epstein to her as a wealthy philanthropist who was a friend of Campbell and could help her modeling career.
"She seemed very upper-class," the Ukrainian said of the Russian woman. "I saw her standing next to the celebrities in the VIP crowd." Campbell "had no idea Epstein was using her name to attract young girls interested in modeling, and as he did with many others, he overstated their acquaintanceship," said a spokeswoman for the model. "She deeply regrets having had any contact with Epstein after his conviction."
Thorbjørn Jagland, former Norwegian prime minister

The Wall Street Journal reports that one of Epstein's accusers said he had shown her emails he had exchanged with Jagland, explaining that he wanted her to meet him.

Robert Kennedy Jr.

Presidential candidate Robert Kennedy Jr. said in a Fox News interview that he twice flew on Jeffrey Epstein's plane, as Intelligencer's Matt Stieb explains:
"I was on it in 1993," Kennedy said. "And I went to Florida with my wife and two children to visit my mom over Easter. My wife had some sort of relationship with Ghislaine Maxwell." He said the second trip was also with his wife at the time, Mary Richardson, and his four children to go fossil-hunting in South Dakota. You know, standard family-trip fare ...

Kennedy claimed that he was on a flight to Palm Beach, Florida, for Easter in 1993. But Epstein's flight logs from the early '90s show that RFK Jr. and family members flew with Epstein and Maxwell from Teterboro airport to Florida on February 17 and that they flew back on February 27 — almost two months before the Easter holiday that year. There is also no record in any publicly available Epstein flight logs of the Kennedy family's fossil-collecting trip to South Dakota.
Sergey Brin, Google co-founder

According to a court filing, Epstein advised Brin from 2004 to 2007, including guidance on how to set up a tax shelter — a tax-saving trust for Brin's kids called a grantor-retained annuity trust, or GRAT — with bankers at JPMorgan Chase. Brin had become a client of the bank in 2004 following a referral from Epstein and subsequently held more than $4 billion in accounts there. The Wall Street Journal notes that Epstein helped billionaire and Apollo Global Management co-founder Leon Black set up a similar tax shelter. Epstein's relationship with Brin came to light in an August 2023 court filing by the U.S. Virgin Islands in its civil suit against JPMorgan over the bank's relationship with Epstein.

Cecile de Jongh, former First Lady of the U.S. Virgin Islands

The Wall Street Journal reports that according to court filings made by JPMorgan Chase in response to the civil suit brought against the bank by the U.S. Virgin Islands, Cecile de Jongh allegedly began working for Epstein starting in 2000 and continued working for him when her husband, John de Jongh, was serving as governor of the U.S. territory (from 2007 to 2015). The court filings also allege Cecile de Jongh helped arrange visas for some of Epstein's victims. Per the Journal's report:
De Jongh helped get visas for several alleged victims of Epstein, JPMorgan said in court filings. She connected one woman to a local immigration lawyer and worked to get others student visas by arranging special classes for them at the University of the Virgin Islands, the bank said. De Jongh helped arrange and enroll Epstein victims in an English as a second language, or ESL, course at the university, according to emails she sent to university staff and Epstein.

"They are structuring the class around the ladies. Please let me know so that they know what to do or not to do," de Jongh wrote to Epstein in June 2013, according to the court filings.
Ehud Barak, former Israeli prime minister

According to the documents, the longtime Israeli politician was a regular guest of Epstein's at his Upper East Side townhouse in the years from 2013 to 2017, meeting with the financier monthly for large stretches of that time. He also flew on Epstein's jet. Reached by the Journal, Barak acknowledged that he met with Epstein when visiting New York City and that Epstein "often brought other interesting persons, from art or culture, law or science, finance, diplomacy or philanthropy." He said he never met Epstein "with girls or minors, or even adult women in improper context or behavior,"

Bill Gates

The connection between Epstein and Gates has been well known for years, but in late May, the Journal published a revelatory new story on their relationship. The paper reported that Gates had an affair with a bridge player named Mila Antonova in the early 2010s and that Epstein attempted to leverage his knowledge of the situation against the Microsoft co-founder.

By Antonova's account, Gates, an avid bridge player, had met her at a tournament in 2010 while Gates was still married to his now ex-wife, Melinda. Antonova later sought money to fund a start-up that would help people learn the game online. Boris Nikolic, a friend and then-scientific adviser to Gates, introduced Antonova to Epstein in 2013. Epstein didn't agree to fund the venture but did pay for Antonova to go to software-coding school.

Then, in 2017, well after the Gates-Antonova relationship had ended, Epstein reportedly emailed Gates requesting that he reimburse him for the cost of the schooling. That message came shortly after Gates rebuffed Epstein's efforts to get a major charitable fund with JPMorgan Chase off the ground. From the Journal:
The implication behind the message, according to people who have viewed it, was that Epstein could reveal the affair if Gates didn't keep up an association between the two men.
But Gates reportedly never paid Epstein.
"I had no idea that he was a criminal or had any ulterior motive," Antonova told the Journal of Epstein. "I just thought he was a successful businessman and wanted to help." She said, "I am disgusted with Epstein and what he did." And Nikolic said, "I deeply regret that I ever met Epstein. His crimes were despicable. I never saw anything like his illegal behavior. My heart goes out to his victims and their families."
Leon Botstein, president of Bard College

Epstein had roughly two dozen meetings scheduled with Botstein over the four years covered in the documents, mostly at his townhouse. Regarding his relationship with Epstein, Botstein told the Journal he was only interested in Epstein's money: "I was an unsuccessful fundraiser and actually the object of a little bit of sadism on his part in dangling philanthropic support."

Botstein said he first met with Epstein in 2012 to thank him for making unsolicited donations to the college's high schools, then he continued meeting with him to try to secure more. Epstein donated 66 laptops to Bard in 2015, according to the documents, and Botstein twice invited Epstein to musical performances at the college, but the longtime Bard president said he ultimately concluded that Epstein wasn't interested in making more donations and "he was simply stringing us along."

A follow-up report from the Journal found that Botstein accepted $150,000 in checks from an account linked to Epstein in 2016. Botstein claims that money was then donated to Bard, which was confirmed by the school. A spokesperson for Botstein added that the money was for his yearlong role on an advisory board for Gratitude America, Epstein's charity.

That Epstein was a convicted sex offender who had admitted to procuring a child for prostitution didn't dissuade Botstein and Bard from seeking his financial support. "We looked him up, and he was a convicted felon for a sex crime," Botstein told the Journal, but "we believe in rehabilitation." He said they kept his criminal history in mind when Epstein visited the school: "Because of his previous record, we had security ready. He did not have any free access to anybody." According to the plans in the documents, Epstein brought some of his young female assistants on his trips to Bard.

William Burns, CIA director

The documents indicate that Epstein had three scheduled meetings in 2014 with Burns, who was at that point the deputy secretary of State in the Obama administration. They met both in Washington, D.C., and New York, per the Journal:
A lunch was planned that August at the office of law firm Steptoe & Johnson in Washington. Epstein scheduled two evening appointments that September with Mr. Burns at his townhouse, the documents show. After one of the scheduled meetings, Epstein planned for his driver to take Mr. Burns to the airport.
The longtime diplomat left the State Department in October of that year and became president of the Carnegie Endowment for International Peace, where he remained until President Biden nominated Burns to run the CIA in 2021.

CIA spokesperson Tammy Kupperman Thorp released a statement to the Journal denying Burns had any kind of relationship with Epstein: "The director did not know anything about him, other than that he was introduced as an expert in the financial services sector and offered general advice on transition to the private sector," she said. "They had no relationship."

Noam Chomsky

According to the documents, Epstein arranged several meetings with Chomsky in 2015 and 2016, when he was teaching at MIT, where Epstein had donated hundreds of thousands of dollars. The scheduled meetings included a gatherings of academics as well as a flight with Epstein aboard his private jet to New York to have a dinner at his townhouse with film director Woody Allen and his wife, Soon-Yi Previn.

When the Journal asked Chomsky about the meetings, the 94-year-old replied in an email that his "first response is that it is none of your business. Or anyone's. Second is that I knew him and we met occasionally." Chomsky said he and Epstein discussed politics and academics, and "if there was a flight, which I doubt, it would have been from Boston to New York, 30 minutes. I'm unaware of the principle that requires that I inform you about an evening spent with a great artist."
"What was known about Jeffrey Epstein was that he had been convicted of a crime and had served his sentence," Chomsky told the Journal. "According to U.S. laws and norms, that yields a clean slate." He also said Epstein arranged for him to meet Barak so they could talk about "Israel's policies with regard to Palestinian issues and the international arena."
A follow-up report from the Journal showed that Chomsky received a transfer of around $270,000 from an account linked to Epstein in March 2018.
"My late wife died 15 years ago after a long illness. We paid no attention to financial issues," Chomsky explained by email. "We asked Epstein for advice. The simplest way seemed to be to transfer funds from one account in my name to another, by way of his office."
Terje Rød-Larsen, noted ex-diplomat

Rød-Larsen may not be a household name, but he's a big deal in diplomatic circles, having helped put together the landmark Oslo Accords in the early 1990s. Per the Journal, he was such a fixture at Epstein's New York townhouse between 2013 and 2017 that the staff knew to have cucumbers ready for his gin. He also received a personal loan from Epstein as well as a donation to his nonprofit.

Rød-Larsen stepped down from that nonprofit when his ties to Epstein were initially revealed in 2020. He gave no additional comment to the Journal.

Joshua Cooper Ramo, a FedEx board member

The Journal reports that Epstein scheduled more than a dozen meetings over the four years with Ramo, who was at that point a co-CEO of Henry Kissinger's consulting company. Ramo also served on the board of Starbucks and still serves on the board of FedEx. Most of the meetings were scheduled in the evening at Epstein's Manhattan townhouse. Epstein also invited him to a 2013 breakfast at the townhouse that Barak attended.

Ramo didn't respond to the Journal's requests to comment on the meetings.

Ariane de Rothschild, chairwoman of Edmond de Rothschild Group

In 2019, the private Swiss bank Edmond de Rothschild Group falsely claimed it and its chairwoman, Ariane de Rothschild, had no ties to Epstein. According to the documents reviewed by the Journal:
Mrs. de Rothschild, who married into the famous banking family, had more than a dozen meetings with Epstein. He sought her help with staffing and furnishings as well as discussed business deals with her, according to the documents. In September 2013, Epstein asked Mrs. de Rothschild in an email for help finding a new assistant, "female ... multilingual, organized."

"I'll ask around," Mrs. de Rothschild emailed back.

She bought nearly $1 million worth of auction items on Epstein's behalf in 2014 and 2015, the documents show. Mrs. de Rothschild was named chairwoman of the bank in January 2015. That October, she and Epstein negotiated a $25 million contract for Epstein's Southern Trust Co. to provide "risk analysis and the application and use of certain algorithms" for the bank[.]
In a response to the Journal, the bank admitted that its 2019 statement was inaccurate and said that de Rothschild had business-related meetings with Epstein from 2013 to 2019, that he had introduced the bank to U.S. finance leaders, provided tax and risk consulting, and had recommended law firms. The bank also said that Epstein "solicited her personally on a couple occasions for advice and services on estate management" and that she "was similarly unaware of any questions regarding his personal conduct" at the time.

Kathryn Ruemmler, Goldman Sachs general counsel

The documents reveal that Epstein scheduled more than three dozen meetings with Ruemmler, starting in 2014, after she left the White House counsel's office and joined the private sector as a partner at the law firm Latham & Watkins. Epstein also scheduled her to fly with him to Paris in 2015 and to his now-notorious island estate in the U.S. Virgin Islands, he looked at apartments she was interested in, and he discussed with his staff whether the young women working at his Manhattan townhouse would make Ruemmler uncomfortable. According to emails obtained by NBC News, Epstein also referred her as a client to JPMorgan Chase in 2019, just months before his final arrest. "Jeffrey just thought that Kathy is one of the most powerful women in Washington and thought you two would bond," Epstein's assistant wrote to a JPMC staffer.

In 2020, Ruemmler took a job as a top lawyer at the Goldman Sachs Group, where she co-chairs the firm's reputational-risk advisory committee. A Goldman spokesperson told the Journal that Ruemmler's relationship with Epstein was professional and related to her work at Latham & Watkins:
In the normal course, Epstein also invited her to meetings and social gatherings, introduced her to other business contacts and made referrals. It was the same kinds of contacts and engagements she had with other contacts and clients.
The spokesperson also said that Ruemmler never noticed anything untoward at his townhouse, that she never flew anywhere with him, that she never visited his island, and that her comment was "I regret ever knowing Jeffrey Epstein."

Lawrence Summers

Ties between Epstein and the ex-Treasury secretary and Harvard president were already well known. But the Journal provides more detail about their connection. Though Harvard stopped accepting donations from Epstein after his 2008 conviction, Summers continued to meet with him frequently.

The paper uncovered an email Summers sent to Epstein in 2014, in which he asked the financier's advice on how to raise money for a nonprofit poetry initiative spearheaded by his wife, Harvard professor Elisa New. "I need small scale philanthropy advice. My life will be better if i raise $1m for Lisa," Summers wrote. "Mostly it will go to make it a pbs series and for teacher training. Ideas?" Epstein and Summers made plans for dinner near Summers's Massachusett home two days later, and in 2016, an Epstein-linked nonprofit gave $110,000 to New's project.

In a statement to the Journal, Summers and New said that Summers "deeply regrets being in contact with Epstein after his conviction," New "regrets accepting funding from Epstein," and that New's nonprofit had made a donation "exceeding the amount received" from Epstein to an anti-sex trafficking group.

Peter Thiel

The New York Times reports that according to Epstein's scheduling records, Epstein had several meetings with the PayPal co-founder in 2014:
The records — in the form of emails that Mr. Epstein's assistant sent to remind him of upcoming events — show that in September 2014 Mr. Thiel was scheduled to meet with Mr. Epstein on at least three occasions, either in one-on-one meetings or with others over lunch or dinner. Two other times, Mr. Thiel was listed among more than a dozen other well-known people Mr. Epstein should try to see while at his New York mansion. It's unclear from the records whether all the meetings with Mr. Thiel took place. Some were listed as tentative or "TBD" — for "to be determined."
The Wall Street Journal reports that Epstein also scheduled meetings between Thiel, himself, and Russian ambassador to the United Nations Vitaly Churkin. "I was rather naïve," Thiel said of the 2016 meeting. "I didn't think enough about what Epstein's agenda might have been."

Tom Barrack

Close Trump ally and private equity manager Tom Barrack was friends with Epstein and the former president back when they were close in South Florida in the 1980s. The Wall Street Journal reports that Epstein tried to revive the connection in 2016 after Trump cinched the Republican nomination.
In August of that year, Epstein scheduled a lunch with Barrack, who was an informal adviser to the Trump campaign at the time. Barrack was also invited to Epstein's Upper East Side townhouse in September 2016 with Russian Ambassador to the United Nations Vitaly Churkin and Woody Allen.

Leon Black

The private-equity giant's relationship with Jeffrey Epstein was made public years ago, eventually leading to his departure from his position as chairman of the Museum of Modern Art. But Leon Black is still facing scrutiny for his connections to Epstein. On July 25, the Senate Finance Committee announced it would investigate the Apollo Global Management co-founder's dealings with Epstein. The probe will look into the $158 million that Black paid Epstein over the years for tax and estate-planning advice — a nine-figure sum to a man who did not graduate college. Four days earlier, on July 21, Black also agreed to pay $62.5 million to the U.S. Virgin Islands in a settlement that would clear him from any allegations made during the territory's investigation into Epstein's alleged sex-trafficking ring on Little St. James.

Black could also be back in civil court for his Epstein connections. On July 26, an anonymous woman with Down syndrome and autism sued Black in New York for allegedly raping her when she was 16. The alleged assault took place in 2002 at Epstein's Manhattan mansion — after which Epstein refused to take her to see a doctor, leaving her in the care of Ghislaine Maxwell. Black's lawyer has called the allegations "frivolous and sanctionable."

One of the dealings Black had with Epstein, the New York Times reports, was when, in 2016, Epstein helped Black avoid taxes when Black sold a $25 million Alberto Giacometti sculpture and used the proceeds to buy $30 million Cezanne painting.

Jes Staley

Staley, too, has been a well-known associate of Epstein for years. But the banker's connections to Epstein have faced a new level of inspection over the past year. Staley, who resigned from Barclays in 2021 for his association with the sex criminal, had a close connection with Epstein. "I deeply appreciate our friendship," Staley wrote to him in 2009 when he was working at JPMorgan Chase. "I have few so profound." Emails obtained by the Daily Beast show that Epstein helped connect him to his high-society associates, including Prince Andrew, Bill Gates, former New York Fed board member Lee Bollinger, and Dubai businessman Sultan Ahmed bin Sulayem.

JPMorgan Chase

The largest bank in the world by market capitalization has been in trouble for years for its connections to Epstein. But over the past year, JPMorgan Chase has had to answer about how many people knew of their dealings with the alleged sex trafficker due to the U.S. Virgin Islands lawsuit alleging the bank helped enable Epstein's operation. The most recent detail came out in late August when USVI prosecutors claimed that JPMorgan processed over $1 billion for Epstein during his 16 years as a client.

The territory has sued the bank for $190 million in damages. In oral arguments on September 12, a lawyer for the U.S. Virgin Islands claimed that, in 2019, the bank had had informed the government of their business together dating back to 2003, reporting it "suspicious activity."
"Epstein's entire business with JPMorgan and JPMorgan's entire business with Jeffrey Epstein was human trafficking," attorney Mimi Liu stated.

"The only reason that JPMorgan finally after 16 years reported the billion dollars in suspicious transactions for Jeffrey Epstein is because he was arrested, and then he was dead." JPMorgan Chase has denied any liability and stated that its business was a "mistake."
A little less than a month ahead of the trial scheduled for October 23, JPMorgan Chase settled with the U.S. Virgin Islands's Attorney General's Office. The bank agreed to pay $75 million with $20 million of that going to charities, $20 million to lawyers' fees, and $10 million to a victims' mental-health fund. JPMorgan also reached a confidential settlement with Jes Staley for an undisclosed amount.

As New York's Kevin T. Dugan wrote, the settlement marked "the real beginning of the end into the official inquiries into the cabal of wealthy and powerful people who helped make — and who benefited mightily from — Epstein's monstrous crimes."

Prince Andrew

The royal's connections to Epstein have been public for years now, but a new documentary on the king's younger brother have placed him back in the tabloid headlines. In the A&E documentary Secrets of Prince Andrew, model Lisa Phillips claims that she saw Prince Andrew at Little St. James in 2000, where Epstein allegedly told her friend to have sex with the royal. "It was traumatic for her and after that, she was not the same," Phillips said in the doc. "Her life went completely out of control."

Royal biographer Andrew Lownie said in the documentary that Epstein and Prince Andrew were "real best buddies" and that "there were seven different numbers for Andrew in Epstein's little black book." According to Lownie, Epstein and Ghislaine Maxwell were invited to royal getaways like Balmoral and Sandringham and to "personal birthday parties at Windsor." (Indeed, there is a photo of Epstein and Maxwell at a cabin on the Balmoral estate.)
"Epstein and Ghislaine were invited to the heart of the British monarchy," Lownie said. He added that Epstein allegedly once said: "There's only one person who likes sex more than me, and that's Andrew."
According to Buckingham Palace press secretary Dickie Arbiter, Andrew would have had to seek "permission from the queen" to invite Epstein to private events. "The queen would believe her children," Arbiter said.