<p/><br></br><p><b> Book Synopsis </b></p></br></br><b>Wait till you read this book. It blew me away. . . . This is a must-read book. . . . This will be a movie. --Sean Hannity</b> <p/> <b>"George Papadopoulos was the whole reason for the Trump Russia investigation." --Mark Meadows, White House Chief of Staff</b> <p/> <b>A shocking account of international spy games and a disturbing eyewitness report on a secret double government--the Deep State--intent on destroying lives and a presidency</b> <p/> George Papadopoulos became a national figure when he was called in Special Counsel Robert Mueller's investigation into Russian interference in the 2016 election. His global network and clandestine meetings about Hillary Clinton's hacked emails made him the first target of Spygate, the Mueller Investigation, and the Russian Collusion Hoax. <p/> And it was a hoax, as validated by the Mueller Hearings--but first exposed here in Papadopoulos' historic account. <p/> As he explains in <i>Deep State Target, </i> American and allied intelligence services set out to destroy a Trump presidency before it even started. Papadopoulos faced a rogues' gallery of infamous figures employed by agents from the US, Britain, and Australia. Here, he gives the play-by-play of how operatives like Professor Joseph Mifsud, Sergei Millian, Alexander Downer, and Stefan Halper worked to invent a Russian conspiracy that would damage the Trump administration. <p/><p/><br></br><p><b> Review Quotes </b></p></br></br><br>Papadopoulos' book reads like a spy novel.--<i>New York Post</i> <p/> This account . . . leaves little doubt that [Papadopoulos] was the victim of a full-court press by intelligence assets in and around the FBI, CIA, and MI6.--<i>Consortium News</i> <p/> Revealing. . . . a troubling story of prosecutors railroading him. . . . Papadopoulos's saga unfolds like a spy thriller. . . . He convincingly debunks anti-Trump theorizing about the supposedly sinister contacts of campaign underlings: it wasn't collusion, he argues, but instead the normal, promiscuous networking of on-the-make foreign relations consultants like him looking to gain status by forging connections with and between powerful people. The result is a revealing . . . insider account of a seemingly central piece of the special counsel investigation. --<i>Publishers Weekly</i> <p/><br>
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