Skip to content
Case File
d-37608House OversightOther

CNN interview previewing Xi‑Obama summit with adviser Robert Lawrence Kuhn

Date
November 11, 2025
Source
House Oversight
Reference
House Oversight #023694
Pages
1
Persons
1

Summary

The passage is a standard broadcast preview of a diplomatic meeting, offering no concrete new information, transactions, or allegations involving powerful actors. It merely repeats publicly known fact Mentions upcoming informal meeting between President Xi Jinping and President Barack Obama at Sunnyl Features Robert Lawrence Kuhn, longtime adviser to Chinese leadership, as interviewee. References

This document is from the House Oversight Committee Releases.

View Source Collection

Persons Referenced (1)

Tags

barack-obamadiplomacyxi-jinpinguschina-relationsmedia-interviewhouse-oversight
Share
PostReddit

Related Documents (6)

House OversightOtherNov 11, 2025

Epstein‑forwarded essay on “Blackberry diplomacy” and US Syria policy

The document is a forwarded opinion piece discussing the pace of decision‑making on Syria and praising Susan Rice and Barack Obama. It contains no specific allegations, transactions, dates, or actiona Mentions Susan Rice as “new assistant to the president for national security affairs” (2013). Critiques the Obama administration’s rapid, email‑driven approach to Syrian policy. Frames the issue as a

3p
House OversightOtherNov 11, 2025

SWOT analysis of Cuba following US‑Cuba diplomatic thaw (Nov 2015)

The document merely outlines a public diplomatic development and provides generic economic data. It contains no specific names of financial transactions, covert actions, or misconduct, and offers no a US flag raised in Havana on Aug 14 2015, marking restoration of diplomatic ties. Barack Obama and Secretary of State John Kerry publicly advocated lifting the embargo. Basic macro‑economic figures fo

1p
House OversightOtherNov 11, 2025

Financial Times Opinion Piece Suggests Obama Administration Pressured to Call for Assad's Removal

The passage is an editorial commentary that mentions President Obama and Secretary of State Hillary Clinton discussing regime‑change rhetoric toward Syria. It provides no concrete evidence, dates, tra Mentions President Barack Obama allegedly succumbing to calls for Assad's removal. Quotes Secretary of State Hillary Clinton questioning the consequences of calling for Assad's head. Frames U.S. call

1p
House OversightOtherNov 11, 2025

Former Australian PM Paul Keating critiques Labor and foreign leaders in interview

The passage is a political commentary with no specific allegations, transactions, dates, or actionable leads. It mentions high‑profile figures but only in generic critique, offering no concrete eviden Keating describes Labor as a party of insiders and faction managers. He criticizes US President Barack Obama and German Chancellor Angela Merkel for perceived indecisive Mentions “shooting‑star polic

1p
House OversightOtherNov 11, 2025

Strategic memo linking Syria‑Iran dynamics to Israeli policy and regional diplomatic overtures

The passage is a high‑level discussion memo that mentions senior officials (Dennis Ross, Jane Harmon, Walter Isaacson, Benjamin Netanyahu, Barack Obama, Mohamed Morsi) but provides no concrete evidenc Dennis Ross, Jane Harmon, and Walter Isaacson discuss Israel’s need to reassess threats from Iran an Mentions a potential Israeli‑Turkey initiative as a cover for broader Islamic‑world engagement. Re

1p
House OversightOtherNov 11, 2025

Generic overview of Barack Obama's foreign policy initiatives (Nov 2011)

The passage provides a broad, publicly known summary of President Obama's foreign‑policy actions with no new specifics, transactions, or allegations. It lacks actionable leads, novel information, or d Mentions troop surge in Afghanistan, New START treaty, Libya intervention, Iraq withdrawal, China tr Describes Obama as having shifted from anti‑war senator to a more conventional, sometimes hawkish,

1p

This document was digitized, indexed, and cross-referenced with 1,400+ persons in the Epstein files. 100% free, ad-free, and independent.