KGB enlisted young Trump in Soviet Cold War operation – sources
Author: Carlos Nodonaldo
Dec. 13, 2016 Inconsequential News Service
Federal agents this week revealed partial results of an investigation into Donald Trump that has unearthed what they say is proof he was and likely still is an agent of Russia, either as a willing participant or as an unwitting mind-controlled automaton who was awaiting instructions from deep inside the Kremlin
The investigation
centered on almost three years in which Trump's whereabouts were unknown.
Investigators say they
have confirmed where they believe Trump was during the years he mysteriously dropped
out of sight. No record until now had been found about his location or
activities during that span, but now documents discovered recently track his
path through the two Germanys and into the heart of the Soviet Union in Moscow.
According to insiders,
in a report issued Friday, Trump
left the Wharton School in Pennsylvania in the summer of 1968 and in early 1971
reappeared to take over management of his family's businesses. Where he was
during that time has long been a subject of speculation.
Authorities now say
they have proof Trump left the country and traveled first to Berlin where for a
short time he lived in a youth hostel. From there he disappeared, but recently documents
discovered in former East German archives, show Trump crossed into East Berlin
and was sighted about a month later in Moscow, capital of the former Soviet
Union.
From there the trail
went cold until he showed up in passport records as entering the U.S. on a
flight from Beirut, Lebanon, in January 1971 at least until earlier this year.
It was those two and a
half years out of sight that caught the attention of CIA investigators. In May
documents supposedly expunged from KGB records but discovered in an abandoned
building being demolished indicated a young American had been turned and was undergoing
extensive training and mind-control exercises.
The report and several
others found with it were signed by an agent named V. Putinchikov, believed
to be a young Vladimir Putin who is now president of Russia. Judging by the information
in the reports which is still being kept confidential, insiders say there's no
doubt the young American was Trump. According to one source the reports
document intense mind-control indoctrination. Documents detail actions
beginning in late summer 1968 and ending in the fall of 1970.
Our source cited one
document in particular that according to her stated that the indoctrination had
been successful and the subject was ready to be deployed.
It is believed that
during the 1950s and '60s hundreds of soviets lived in the Untied States as
ordinary citizens awaiting orders from Moscow officials to perform duties not
specified when they were deployed. The famous Manchurian Candidate was one such
effort where an American. serviceman captured in Korea was brainwashed and sent
back only to be activated by a psychological trigger to assassinate the
president.
The sources believe
Trump was among those who were sent to the U.S. as sleeper agents.
In January 1971 state
department records show Trump flew into the U.S. from Beirut, landing in New
York, and joining his family's firm shortly after that. From then until his
election as President and his actions against China, there were no indications
of whatever mission the Soviets may have prepared him for, but intelligence
experts now speculate Trump could have been triggered recently to stimulate
friction between the United States and China in order to further Russian economic interests.
Nothing in this story is true.
It is pure satire meant only to entertain.
From the facebook page: Fear and loathing Closer to the edge
5/22/25
t didn’t come from an intelligence leak. It didn’t require a whistleblower hotline or a congressional subpoena. It came from Facebook.
The post is titled “The evolution of Trump.” But Mussayev isn’t charting a political career. He’s unrolling a 40-year intelligence legend.
“Under the leadership of the First Zam. Chairman of the KGB Phillip Bobkov,” Mussayev writes, “a large group of top intelligence and counterintelligence officers prepared and executed the recruitment of Donald Trump and attributed him the pseudonym Krasnov.”
That’s not a theory. That’s an allegation of historic espionage, posted publicly, by name, by a man who once sat at the apex of a post-Soviet security empire. He isn’t whispering. He isn’t hinting. He’s dictating a classified history in real time.
And then it gets weirder.
“In those years, KGB employees controlling Trump’s operational activities affectionately called him Danila Krasnov among themselves.”
Danila Krasnov.
Not “Donald.” Not “The Donald.”
Danila. Like a Soviet fairytale woodcutter who stumbled into a golden elevator and decided to stay.
According to Mussayev, Trump wasn’t some reluctant pawn. He was an enthusiastic asset. A narcissistic goldmine. He shared freely. He circulated among America’s elite like a tacky chandelier at a state dinner.
After the collapse of the USSR, the real Trump—Danila—emerged. Not the suave operative, but the bloated, bottom-shelf version: greedy, crude, addicted to wealth and spectacle. Mussayev writes that the FSB had to prop him up with “complex operational combinations” and “huge financial costs” just to keep him useful.
Imagine the Kremlin accountants trying to justify line items for hush payments and golf cart motorcades. Imagine Putin’s intelligence chiefs arguing over whether reality TV ratings counted as “influence metrics.” That’s the kind of spy story we’re living in now.
And still—it wasn’t enough to cut him loose.
“Today, Danila Krasnov is the main strategic resource of the FSB and Putin personally,” Mussayev claims.
Strategic resource. Not former asset. Not relic. Active asset. Living monument. Ongoing investment.And then Mussayev drops the part that sounds like prophecy—or maybe satire, or maybe both:
“In 50 years, Trump-Krasnov will definitely be the national hero of the Russian people. More revered than Stirlitz or even Alexander Nevsky.”
Let’s decode that. Stirlitz is a Soviet spy hero—fictional. Nevsky is a Russian prince and saint—medieval. Mussayev is saying Trump will outshine them both. Not in America. In Russia.
They’ll build statues to the man who spray-tanned through four bankruptcies.
They’ll teach schoolchildren about his sacred mission to destabilize NATO and yell at dishwashers.
Maybe they’ll mount his red hat in a glass case next to Lenin’s brain.
This is either brilliant performance art—or Mussayev is telling the most terrifying truth of our time.
Let’s be very clear: this is not a meme. This is not satire. This is not a rogue account or parody profile.
This is Alnur Mussayev, using his real name and real reputation, publishing an allegation that should have led CNN to break into regular programming and drag every intelligence expert they could find onto live air.
Instead? Crickets.
The newsrooms that fed on the Steele dossier, that gasped over Trump’s phone calls with Zelensky, that foamed over Comey memos and ketchup tantrums? Nowhere. Still checking if “Danila” meets their editorial style guide.
Let’s face it: if Mussayev had posted a blurry UFO photo, they’d have ten op-eds by now. But say “Trump was a Soviet asset named Krasnov, managed by Bobkov himself” and they blink like deer at a drone strike.
In earlier reports, Mussayev’s allegations were dismissed or buried. Snopes released a half-baked fact-check that quoted anonymous blogs and Russian-language sites with ties to Kremlin-friendly pundits. France 24 used their “True or Fake” segment to slap a red X over Mussayev’s face and moved on without investigating the meat of his claim.
Now? They don’t get to ignore it.
Because today, Mussayev added structure, history, names, operations, and a codename that reads like a death sentence for anyone who still believes this was ever just about money or ego.
This isn’t about kompromat.
This is about legacy, strategy, and long-term asset cultivation.
And it’s about the fact that a man accused of being a 40-year Russian informant is currently President of the United States.
If Mussayev is lying, he’s playing the most dangerous game imaginable.
But if he’s telling the truth?
Then we’re not just living in a post-truth world.
We’re living inside the most successful intelligence operation in modern history—one built on vanity, greed, and the unkillable myth of Danila Krasnov.
And no one on TV has the spine to say it out loud.


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