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Email from Sultan Bin Sulayern to Jeffrey Epstein containing a Fareed Zakaria op‑ed about Trump

The passage is a forwarded newspaper column with no new factual allegations, financial details, or actionable leads. It merely shows that an individual (Sultan Bin Sulayern) emailed the column to Jeff Email sent on 9/18/2015 from Sultan Bin Sulayern to Jeffrey Epstein. Contains a reproduced Fareed Zakaria article criticizing Donald Trump’s rhetoric. No mention of financial flows, legal exposure, o

Date
November 11, 2025
Source
House Oversight
Reference
House Oversight #029849
Pages
1
Persons
3
Integrity
No Hash Available

Summary

The passage is a forwarded newspaper column with no new factual allegations, financial details, or actionable leads. It merely shows that an individual (Sultan Bin Sulayern) emailed the column to Jeff Email sent on 9/18/2015 from Sultan Bin Sulayern to Jeffrey Epstein. Contains a reproduced Fareed Zakaria article criticizing Donald Trump’s rhetoric. No mention of financial flows, legal exposure, o

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politicsemail-correspondencehouse-oversightmedia

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Text extracted via OCR from the original document. May contain errors from the scanning process.
From: Sultan Bin Sulayern Sent: 9/18/2015 5:26:12 AM To: Jeffrey Epstein [jeevacation@gmail.com] Subject: Fareed Zakaria: Trump sells America short Importance: — High Fareed Zakaria: Trump sells America short Dear Donald Trump: China, Japan and Mexico are not “killing us” By Fareed Zakaria, Thursday, September 17, 2015 Donald Trump’s presidential bid is centered on the promise of his personal talents. He says he’s the “most successful person ever to run for the presidency, by far.” (George Washington and Dwight Eisenhower, sit down!) But if there is an idea animating his candidacy, it is that the United States is being badly beaten by its economic competitors. In his speech on foreign policy this week, Trump explained that America is being bested by countries such as China, Japan and Mexico because their leaders are “smarter, more cunning and sharper than our leaders.” “They’re killing us,” he often says. This is an odd moment to make these charges because the reality is almost entirely the opposite. The United States is more dominant on the global economic landscape than at any point since the heyday of Bill Clinton’s presidency — perhaps even more so. Last quarter, the U.S. economy grew at a 3.7 percent clip. Annual growth now is almost twice that of Europe and four times that of Japan. Unemployment is at 5.1 percent, the lowest in seven years. The deficit as a percentage of gross domestic product (2.8 percent in 2014) is at its lowest since 2007. “The U.S. has come out of the 2008 crisis better than all the others,” says Ruchir Sharma, head of global macro investing at Morgan Stanley. “Americans have reduced their debt burden more than the Europeans, while China’s debt has skyrocketed to extremely dangerous levels. If you look outside of China, U.S. growth is actually faster even than the emerging markets. Since the 2008 crisis, U.S. equity markets have outperformed all others — in fact 9 out of the 10 most valuable companies in the world are now American. The dollar is the currency of choice. Global growth is not what it used to be, but in a bad neighborhood, the U.S. has the best house by far.” Sharma points out that for the past four years, the United States’ share of global GDP has increased while Europe’s and Japan’s have moved down. When | was in Europe last week, businessmen there were concerned with what they saw as a new level of U.S. dominance in everything from technology to entertainment to finance. Consider America’s big banks. They were at the epicenter of the financial crisis and were badly battered by it. Since then, bankers have complained that they’ve faced uncertainty about government policies, overzealous regulators trying to compensate for their laxness before the crisis and the unwieldy burdens of the Dodd-Frank law. Well, U.S. banks today are more dominant than ever. The Wall Street Journal notes that in the past five years, JPMorgan Chase, Bank of America, Citigroup, Goldman Sachs and Morgan Stanley have increased in value by $254.6 billion. In the same period, their European competitors, Barclays, Credit Suisse, Deutsche Bank, UBS and Royal Bank of Scotland added just $9.5 billion. In July, Barclays Chairman John McFarlane was asked if America’s banks were eating European lenders’ lunch. He replied: “They are doing a good job of it.” He added that the U.S. banks “are the only ones that really claim to be global and successful.”

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