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American documents officially condemn the UAE for interfering in the US elections

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The US Public Prosecution Office has officially condemned the UAE for interfering in the US elections on several occasions other than spending millions of dollars in illegal contributions.

The documents showed George Nader, adviser to Abu Dhabi Crown Prince, Mohammed bin Zayed, acknowledging that the UAE had helped smuggle and pump millions of dollars in illegal contributions to the Democratic campaign of Hillary Clinton in the 2016 elections and concealed its source.

In the first official US accusation against the UAE in attempting to influence the US elections, the US Public Prosecution said that George Nader had ordered to hide the money out of a desire to pressure the UAE government on behalf and promote the interests of the interests his client.

The documents stated that George Nader and Los Angeles businessman Ahmed Khawaja also sought to develop their relationships with key figures in the campaign of former US President Donald Trump.

They added that Khawaja donated one million dollars to the Trump inauguration committee, provided by the UAE.

The documents indicated that George Nader took his instructions from the Crown Prince of Abu Dhabi, Sheikh, and gave him updates on his progress in approaching Hillary Clinton.

At one point, Khawaja complained that the money from George Nader and the Emirates did not reach a party he was organizing to collect donations.

The documents also showed that George Nader informed an Emirati official via text messages that he would meet the “big sister and her husband” in reference to Hillary Clinton.

Nader added, “I would love to see you listen to your directions and instructions and receive your blessings,” referring to Mohammed bin Zayed.

On June 26, 2020, an American court charged Nader on paedophilia and sexual exploitation charges and sentenced him to ten years in prison.

George Nader is a key witness in Special Counsel Robert Mueller’s investigation into Russian interference in the 2016 presidential election.

George Nader, who recently visited US President Donald Trump at the White House, has spent decades working in international diplomacy. He is described in the Mueller report as a potent mediator connecting people associated with the Trump administration with interests in the Middle East and Russia, including the president’s special adviser.

Nader was among the figures Detective Mueller interrogated because of his relationship with the UAE.

During the investigation with Nader, FBI agents searched his phones and found what appeared to be child pornography in WhatsApp messages sent to him, according to what US newspapers revealed.

While Nader asserts that while the photos showed naked children, they were meant to be funny rather than sexual, he didn’t realize they were on his phone. He admitted receiving an email containing child pornography in 2012 and bringing a child into the country for sexual purposes in 2000.

George Nader pleaded guilty to bringing a 14-year-old boy from the Czech Republic to the United States 20 years ago to engage in sexual activity. He also admitted to possessing child pornography.

According to reports, George Nader agreed to pay $150,000 in compensation to the abusive Czech boy who is now an adult and testified at the sentencing hearing in US court by phone. “George has practically ruined my whole life, and I’m trying to put it back together piece by piece,” he said through an interpreter.

And George Nader, an American-Lebanese businessman, suddenly became the focus of the attention of the American media, and Special Counsel Robert Mueller, whose team conducted interrogation sessions with him after the research went beyond the Russian role in the American elections to begin looking into the potential role of the United Arab Emirates in buying political influence in America.