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Carter Page

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Carter William Page (born June 3, 1971) is an American petroleum industry consultant and a former foreign-policy adviser to Donald Trump during his 2016 presidential election campaign.[1] Page is the founder and managing partner of Global Energy Capital, a one-man investment fund and consulting firm specializing in the Russian and Central Asian oil and gas business.[2][3][4]

Key Information

Page was a focus of the 2017 Special Counsel investigation into links between Trump associates and Russian officials and the Trump campaign's suspected involvement into the Russian interference in the 2016 presidential election.[2] In April 2019, the Mueller report concluded that the investigation did not establish that Page coordinated in Russia's interference efforts.[5][6] In December 2019, the Inspector General for the Department of Justice, Michael E. Horowitz, issued a report on his inquiry into the Federal Bureau of Investigation's (FBI) investigation of the 2016 Trump campaign and its ties to Russia. Horowitz found fault with specific aspects of the FBI's conduct, including omission of facts and inclusion of false statements to the FISA court when the FBI applied for warrants to conduct surveillance on Page.

In 2019, the Justice Department determined the last two of four FISA warrants to surveil Page were invalid.[7][8] Page has filed four lawsuits;[further explanation needed] all were dismissed by courts.

Life and career

[edit]

Carter Page was born in Minneapolis, Minnesota, on June 3, 1971,[9] the son of Allan Robert Page and Rachel (Greenstein) Page.[10][11] His father was from Galway, New York, and his mother was from Minneapolis.[12] His father was a manager and executive with the Central Hudson Gas & Electric Company.[13]

Education and military service

[edit]

Page was raised in Poughkeepsie, New York, and graduated from Poughkeepsie's Our Lady of Lourdes High School in 1989.[10] Page graduated with a Bachelor of Science from the United States Naval Academy in 1993; he graduated with distinction (top 10% of his class) and was chosen for the Navy's Trident Scholar program, which gives selected officers the opportunity for independent academic research and study.[14][15][16] During his senior year at the Naval Academy, he worked in the office of U.S. Representative Les Aspin as a researcher for the House Armed Services Committee.[17] He served in the U.S. Navy for five years, including a tour in western Morocco as an intelligence officer for a United Nations peacekeeping mission, and attained the rank of lieutenant.[17][18] In 1994, he completed an MA degree in National Security Studies at Georgetown University.[17] After leaving active duty in 1998, Page was a member of the Navy's inactive reserve until 2004.[18]

Further education and business

[edit]

After leaving the Navy, Page completed a fellowship at the Council on Foreign Relations, and in 2001 he received an MBA degree from New York University.[14][19] In 2000, he began work as an investment banker with Merrill Lynch in the firm's London office, was a vice president in the company's Moscow office,[3] and later served as COO for Merrill Lynch's energy and power department in New York.[15] Page has stated that he worked on transactions involving Gazprom and other leading Russian energy companies. According to business people interviewed by Politico in 2016, Page's work in Moscow was at a subordinate level, and he himself remained largely unknown to decision-makers.[3]

After leaving Merrill Lynch in 2008, Page founded his own investment fund, Global Energy Capital, with partner James Richard and a former mid-level Gazprom executive, Sergei Yatsenko.[3][20] The fund operates out of a Manhattan co-working space shared with a booking agency for wedding bands, and as of late 2017, Page was the firm's sole employee.[2] Other businesspeople working in the Russian energy sector said in 2016 that the fund had yet to actually realize a project.[2][3] The building which contains Page's working space is connected to Trump Tower by an atrium, a fact Page referenced when describing his work for the 2016 Trump campaign in a 2017 letter to the Senate Intelligence Committee.[21]

Page received a PhD degree from SOAS, University of London in 2012, where he was supervised by Shirin Akiner.[2][14] His doctoral dissertation on the transition of Asian countries from communism to capitalism was rejected twice before ultimately being accepted by new examiners.[22] One of his original examiners later said Page "knew next to nothing" about the subject matter and was unfamiliar with "basic concepts" such as Marxism and state capitalism.[23] He sought unsuccessfully to publish his dissertation as a book; a reviewer described it as "very analytically confused, just throwing a lot of stuff out there without any real kind of argument."[2] Page blamed the rejection on anti-Russian and anti-American bias.[23] He later ran an international affairs program at Bard College and taught a course on energy and politics at New York University.[24][25] In more recent years, he has written columns in Global Policy Journal, a publication of Durham University.[3] In 2022, he earned an LLM (cum laude) from Fordham University School of Law.[26]

Foreign policy and ties to Russia

[edit]

In 1998, Page joined the Eurasia Group, a strategy consulting firm, but left three months later. In 2017, Eurasia Group president Ian Bremmer recalled on his Twitter feed that Page's strong pro-Russian stance was "not a good fit" for the firm and that Page was its "most wackadoodle" alumnus.[27] Stephen Sestanovich later described Page's foreign-policy views as having "an edgy Putinist resentment" and a sympathy to Russian leader Vladimir Putin's criticisms of the United States.[2] Over time, Page became increasingly critical of United States foreign policy toward Russia, and more supportive of Putin, with a United States official describing Page as "a brazen apologist for anything Moscow did".[4] Page is frequently quoted by Russian state television, where he is presented as a "famous American economist".[3]

In August 2013, Page wrote, "Over the past half year, I have had the privilege to serve as an informal advisor to the staff of the Kremlin in preparation for their Presidency of the G-20 Summit next month, where energy issues will be a prominent point on the agenda."[28] Page described his role differently in 2018: "I sat in on some meetings, but to call me an advisor is way over the top."[29]

Also in 2013, Evgeny Buryakov and two other Russians attempted to recruit Page as an intelligence source, and one of them, Victor Podobnyy, described Page as enthusiastic about business opportunities in Russia but an "idiot".[2][25] "I also promised him a lot," Podobnyy reported to a fellow Russian intelligence officer at the time, according to an FBI transcript of their conversation, which was covertly recorded. "How else to work with foreigners?" Podobnyy added.[25][30][31]

Page was the subject of a Foreign Intelligence Surveillance Act (FISA) warrant in 2014, at least two years earlier than was indicated in the stories concerning his role in the 2016 presidential campaign of Donald Trump.[32] 2017 news accounts about the warrant indicated it was granted because of Page's ties to Buryakov, Podobnyy, and the third Russian who attempted to recruit him, Igor Sporyshev.[33]

Trump 2016 presidential campaign

[edit]

Trump announced Page as a foreign policy adviser in his campaign on March 21, 2016.[34] On September 23, 2016, Yahoo News reported U.S. intelligence officials investigated alleged contacts between Page and Russian officials subject to U.S. sanctions, including Igor Sechin, the president of state-run Russian oil conglomerate Rosneft.[4] Page promptly left the Trump campaign.[1][35] Upon his departure, Trump campaign communications director Jason Miller said of Page, "He’s never been a part of our campaign. Period." Another campaign spokesman, Steven Cheung, stated, "we are not aware of any of his activities, past or present." [36]

Shortly after Page left the Trump campaign, the Federal Bureau of Investigation obtained another warrant from the United States Foreign Intelligence Surveillance Court (FISC) in October 2016 to surveil Page's communications and read his saved emails.[37][38] To issue the warrant, a federal judge concluded there was probable cause to believe that Page was a foreign agent knowingly engaging in clandestine intelligence for the Russian government.[39] The initial 90-day warrant was subsequently renewed three times.[40] The New York Times reported on May 18, 2018, that the surveillance warrant expired around October 2017.[41] The FBI did not use a so-called "filter team" to prevent irrelevant information from being seen by investigators, and it was later determined that use of such a team is not required.[38]

In January 2017, Page's name appeared repeatedly in the Steele dossier containing allegations of close interactions between the Trump campaign and the Kremlin.[42][43][44][45] By the end of January 2017, Page was under investigation by the Federal Bureau of Investigation, the Central Intelligence Agency, the National Security Agency, the Director of National Intelligence, and the Financial Crimes Enforcement Network.[46] Page was not accused of any wrongdoing.[47]

The Trump Administration attempted to distance itself from Page, saying that he had never met Trump or advised him about anything,[2] but a December 2016 Page press conference in Russia contradicts the claim that Page and Trump never met.[48] Page responded to a question about his contact with Trump saying, "I've certainly been in a number of meetings with him and I've learned a tremendous amount from him."[49] The Mueller Report found that Page produced work for the campaign, traveled with Trump to a campaign speech and "Chief policy adviser Sam Clovis expressed appreciation for Page's work and praised his work to other Campaign officials".[50][51]

In October 2017, Page said he would not cooperate with requests to appear before the Senate Intelligence Committee and would assert his Fifth Amendment right against self-incrimination.[52] He said this was because they were requesting documents dating back to 2010, and he did not want to be caught in a "perjury trap". He expressed the wish to testify before the committee in an open setting.[53]

On July 21, 2018, the Justice Department released a heavily redacted version of the October 2016 FISA warrant application for Page, which expressed in part the FBI's belief that Page "has been collaborating and conspiring with the Russian government",[54] as well as that Page had been the subject of targeted recruitment by Russian intelligence agencies.[55] The application also said that Page and a Russian intelligence operative had met in secret to discuss compromising material (kompromat) the Russian government held against "Candidate #2" (presumed to be Hillary Clinton) and the possibility of the Russians giving it to the Trump campaign.[56] Former U.S. Attorney for the District of Columbia Joseph diGenova, who was under consideration to join Trump's legal team in 2018,[57] argued before and after release of the Mueller Report that the FISA warrants to surveil Page were obtained illegally.[58] Other observers opposed diGenova's view, pointing out that the warrants were approved by four different judges, all of whom were appointed by Republican presidents.[59][60]

The FBI applications to the FISA court to wiretap Page were partly founded on the Steele dossier,[61] and the dossier "played a central and essential role"[62]: vi  in the FBI applications to the FISA court to wiretap Page.

In 2019 the Justice Department determined the last two of four FISA warrants to surveil Page were invalid.[7][63]

House Intelligence Committee testimony

[edit]

On November 2, 2017, Page testified[64] to the House Intelligence Committee that he had kept senior officials in the Trump campaign such as Corey Lewandowski, Hope Hicks, and J. D. Gordon informed about his contacts with the Russians[65] and had informed Jeff Sessions, Lewandowski, Hicks and other Trump campaign officials that he was traveling to Russia to give a speech in July 2016.[66][67]

Page testified that he had met with Russian government officials during this trip and had sent a post-meeting report via email to members of the Trump campaign.[68] He also indicated that campaign co-chairman Sam Clovis had asked him to sign a non-disclosure agreement about his trip.[65] Elements of Page's testimony contradicted prior claims by Trump, Sessions, and others in the Trump administration.[66][68][69][70] Lewandowski, who had previously denied knowing Page or meeting him during the campaign, said after Page's testimony that his memory was refreshed and acknowledged that he had been aware of Page's trip to Russia.[71]

Page also testified that after delivering a commencement speech at the New Economic School in Moscow, he spoke briefly with one of the people in attendance, Arkady Dvorkovich, a Deputy Prime Minister in Dmitry Medvedev's cabinet, contradicting his previous statements not to have spoken to anyone connected with the Russian government.[72] In addition, while Page denied a meeting with Sechin as alleged in the Steele dossier, he did admit he met with Andrey Baranov, Rosneft's head of investor relations.[73] The dossier alleges that Sechin offered Page a brokerage fee from the sale of up to 19 percent of Rosneft if he worked to roll back Magnitsky Act economic sanctions that had been imposed on Russia in 2012.[73][74] Page testified that he did not "directly" express support for lifting the sanctions during the meeting with Baranov, but that he might have mentioned the proposed Rosneft transaction.[73]

Mueller report findings

[edit]

When the Mueller Report was released in April 2019, it described Page's testimony about his role in the 2016 Trump campaign and connections to individuals in Russia as contradictory and confusing, and his contacts with Russians before and during the campaign as tangential and eccentric.[75] He was not charged with any crimes, though the report indicated there were unanswered questions about his actions and motives: "The investigation did not establish that Page coordinated with the Russian government in its efforts to interfere with the 2016 presidential election." However, with incomplete "evidence or testimony about who Page may have met or communicated with in Moscow", "Page's activities in Russia – as described in his emails with the [Trump campaign] – were not fully explained."[76][77]

Horowitz report findings

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In December 2019, Michael E. Horowitz, the Inspector General for the Department of Justice, concluded an investigation into the circumstances of the FBI's investigation into the 2016 Trump campaign and its ties to Russia, codenamed Crossfire Hurricane.[78] On December 9, 2019, US Inspector General Michael Horowitz testified to Congress that the FBI showed no political bias at the initiation of the investigation into Trump and possible connections with Russia.[79][80][81] However, he also stated in a Senate hearing that he could not rule out political bias as a potential motivation.[82][83][84][85] Horowitz said he had no evidence the warrant problems were caused by intentional malfeasance or political bias rather than "gross incompetence and negligence",[86] adding his report was not an exoneration: "It doesn't vindicate anybody at the F.B.I. who touched this, including the leadership."[86][87]

Horowitz did fault the FBI for overreaching and mistakes during the investigation. These included failing to disclose, when applying for a FISA warrant to surveil Page in October 2016, that he had provided the Central Intelligence Agency (CIA) details of his prior contacts with Russian officials, including an incident the FBI indicated made Page's conduct suspicious.[78][88] In June 2017, FBI received written confirmation from the CIA that Page was an "operational contact" (a source who reported information from routine activities in foreign countries) of the CIA from 2008 to 2013. However, FBI attorney Kevin Clinesmith illegally doctored the email from the CIA liaison by inserting the words "and not a source", before forwarding it to another FBI agent who provided the written material for the fourth FISA application, which was submitted later in the month.[87][89][78][90][88] According to the Horowitz Report, if the FISA court judges had been informed of Page's CIA relationship, his conduct might have seemed less suspicious, although the Report did not speculate on "whether the correction of any particular misstatement or omission, or some combination thereof, would have resulted in a different outcome."[78][91] Horowitz referred Clinesmith to prosecutors for potential criminal charges.[92] On August 14, 2020, Clinesmith pleaded guilty to a felony for making a false statement by altering the email.[93][94] On January 29, 2021, Clinesmith was sentenced to 12 months federal probation and 400 hours of community service after pleading guilty in August to making a false statement.[95]

In a December 10, 2019, interview on Hannity, Page indicated that he had retained attorneys to review the Horowitz Report and determine whether he has grounds to sue.[96]

In December 2019, the Justice Department secretly notified the FISA court that in at least two of the 2017 warrant renewal requests "there was insufficient predication to establish probable cause" to believe Page was acting as a Russian agent.[97]

In a subsequent analysis of 29 unrelated FISA warrant requests, Horowitz found numerous typographical errors but just two material errors, which were determined not to impact the justifications for the resulting surveillance.[98]

Senate Intelligence Committee findings

[edit]

The Republican-controlled committee released its final report on 2016 Russian election interference in August 2020, finding that despite problems with the FISA warrant requests used to surveil him, the FBI was justified in its counterintelligence concerns about Page.[99] The committee found Page evasive and his "responses to basic questions were meandering, avoidant and involved several long diversions."[99] The committee found that although Page's advisory role in the Trump campaign from March 2016 to September 2016 was insignificant, Russian operatives may have thought he was more important than he actually was.[99]

Claim that Steele Dossier was "a significant portion" of FISA application

[edit]

On April 18, 2017, CNN reported that, according to U.S. officials, information from the dossier had been used as part of the basis for getting the October 2016 FISA warrant to monitor Page.[100][101] The Justice Department's inspector general revealed in 2019 that in the six weeks prior to its receipt of Steele's memos, the FBI's Crossfire Hurricane team "had discussions about the possibility of obtaining FISAs targeting Page and Papadopoulos, but it was determined that there was insufficient information at the time to proceed with an application to the court."[62]: 101 

The role of evidence from the dossier in seeking FISA warrants soon became the subject of much debate. How much of the evidence was based on the dossier? Was it a "significant portion"[102] or only a "smart part" of the FISA application?[59]

In February 2018, the Nunes memo alleged FBI Deputy Director Andrew McCabe's testimony backed Republican claims that the "dossier formed 'a significant portion' of the Carter Page FISA application".[102] McCabe pushed back and said his testimony had been "selectively quoted" and "mischaracterized".[102] He also "denied having ever told Congress that the [FISA] warrant would not have been sought without information from the dossier".[103]

Before the Crossfire Hurricane team received dossier material on September 19, 2016, they had already gathered enough evidence from their own sources to make them seriously consider seeking FISA warrants on Carter Page, but they needed a bit more, and, because their own sources "'corroborated Steele's reporting' with respect to Page",[104] the mutually independent corroborations gave them more confidence to make that decision.

The IG report described a changed situation after the FBI received Steele's memos and said the dossier then played a "central role" in the seeking of FISA warrants on Carter Page[62] in terms of establishing FISA's low bar[105] for probable cause: "FBI and Department officials told us the Steele reporting 'pushed [the FISA proposal] over the line' in terms of establishing probable cause."[62]: 412 [106]

FBI Deputy Director Andrew McCabe mentioned the dossier's role in the start of the investigation and the FISA warrant:

'We started the investigations without the dossier. We were proceeding with the investigations before we ever received that information,' McCabe told CNN. 'Was the dossier material important to the [FISA] package? Of course, it was. As was every fact included in that package. Was it the majority of what was in the package? Absolutely not.'[107]

According to Ken Dilanian, "The so-called dossier formed only a smart part of the evidence used to meet the legal burden of establishing 'probable cause' that Page was an agent of Russia."[59]

In summary, the dossier formed a "smart part"[59] of the evidence, "not the majority",[107] yet, like the proverbial "last drop", it was just what was needed to push them "over the line"[62] to make that decision. That's how it "played a central role"[62] in the seeking of FISA warrants on Carter Page.

Lawsuits

[edit]

Against DNC and Perkins Coie

[edit]

In October 2018, Carter Page unsuccessfully sued the Democratic National Committee (DNC), Perkins Coie, and two Perkins Coie partners, for defamation.[108][109] The lawsuit was dismissed on January 31, 2019. Page said he intended to appeal the decision.[109][110]

On January 30, 2020, Page filed another defamation lawsuit (Case: 1:20-cv-00671, Filed: 01/30/20) against the DNC and Perkins Coie, naming Marc Elias and Michael Sussmann as defendants.[111] The suit was dismissed.[112]

Against Oath Inc. (Yahoo! News and HuffPost). Filed by Carter Page

[edit]

On February 11, 2021, Page lost a defamation suit he had filed against Yahoo! News and HuffPost for their articles that described his activities mentioned in the Steele dossier.[113] The judge wrote: "The article simply says that U.S. intelligence agencies were investigating reports of plaintiff's meetings with Russian officials, which Plaintiff admits is true."[114]

Page's suit targeted Oath for 11 articles, especially one written by Michael Isikoff and published by Yahoo! News in September 2016. The judge dismissed the suit on February 11, 2021,[115] noting that "Page's arguments regarding Isikoff's description of the dossier and Steele were 'either sophistry or political spin'." He also said that Page "failed to allege actual malice by any of the authors, and that the three articles written by HuffPost employees were true".[116] Page was represented by attorneys John Pierce[117] and L. Lin Wood, who was denied permission to represent Page because of his actions in the attempts to overturn the 2020 United States presidential election in favor of President Donald Trump.[118]

In January 2022, Page lost an effort to revive the defamation case over Isikoff's article. Chief Justice Collins J. Seitz Jr. said "the article at the crux of the case—by Yahoo News reporter Michael Isikoff—was either completely truthful or, 'at a minimum,' conveyed a true 'gist,' even if it included some 'minor' or 'irrelevant' incorrect statements." Bloomberg Law reported that "The court dismissed as far-fetched Page's theories about a conspiracy among interconnected media and political figures to tarnish Trump by concocting the Russia investigation from thin air."[119]

On May 16, 2022, the U.S. Supreme Court refused to hear a defamation suit filed by Page.[120]

Against USA, DOJ, FBI, and several officials

[edit]

On November 27, 2020, Page filed a $75 million (approximately $89.3 million in 2024) suit against the United States, DOJ, FBI, and several former leading officials alleging they violated "his Constitutional and other legal rights in connection with unlawful surveillance and investigation of him by the United States Government". The defendants included James Comey, Andrew McCabe, Kevin Clinesmith, Peter Strzok, Lisa Page, Joe Pientka III, Stephen Soma, and Brian J. Auten.[121][122]

The suit was dismissed on September 1, 2022, by United States district court judge Dabney L. Friedrich, who wrote:

To the extent these allegations are true, there is little question that many individual defendants, as well as the agency as a whole, engaged in wrongdoing. Even so, Page has brought no actionable claim against any individual defendant or against the United States.[123]

U.S. House of Representatives candidacy

[edit]

In September 2025, Page entered as a republican candidate for Texas's 18th congressional district special election.[124][125]

See also

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Publications

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  • Page, Carter (2020). Abuse and Power: How an Innocent American Was Framed in an Attempted Coup Against the President. Regnery Publishing. ISBN 978-1-68451-121-1.

References

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[edit]
Revisions and contributorsEdit on WikipediaRead on Wikipedia
from Grokipedia
Carter Page (born June 3, 1971) is an American energy consultant and former naval officer with specialized knowledge of Russian energy markets.[1][2] A graduate of the United States Naval Academy, he served as a lieutenant in the U.S. Navy from 1993 to 1998, including active duty as a surface warfare officer with deployments to the Middle East and Europe, followed by reserve service until 2004.[3][4] After leaving active duty, Page worked for seven years as an investment banker at Merrill Lynch, including postings in Moscow where he focused on energy sector deals involving Russian entities such as Gazprom.[3] In 2008, he founded Global Energy Capital, LLC, a New York-based firm providing advisory services and investment opportunities in the energy industries of emerging markets, particularly Russia and Central Asia.[5][6] Page briefly advised Donald Trump's 2016 presidential campaign on foreign policy matters from March to September 2016, during which he traveled to Moscow and met with Russian officials, including a speech at the New Economic School.[6] These activities drew attention from U.S. counterintelligence efforts, culminating in the FBI obtaining Foreign Intelligence Surveillance Act (FISA) warrants to monitor Page starting in October 2016 as part of the Crossfire Hurricane investigation into potential Trump campaign-Russia ties.[3] The warrants were renewed three times, but a 2019 Department of Justice Inspector General review identified at least 17 significant errors, omissions, and unsupported assertions in the applications, including failures to disclose exculpatory evidence that Page had been a CIA operational contact providing information on Russian intelligence activities.[7][8] Subsequently, the Justice Department conceded a lack of probable cause for two of the four warrants, leading the FISA court to invalidate them, while the Mueller investigation concluded no criminal conspiracy involving Page or the Trump campaign.[8]

Early Life and Education

Childhood and Family Background

Carter Page was born on June 3, 1971, in Minneapolis, Minnesota, to Allan Robert Page and Rachel (née Greenstein) Page.[2][9] His mother hailed from Minneapolis, providing Midwestern roots to the family, while his father originated from Galway, New York, and worked at Central Hudson Gas & Electric, a utility company serving the region.[9][10] Page was raised in Poughkeepsie, New York, in a middle-class household shaped by his father's career in the energy sector.[1][2] Public records offer scant details on his family's internal dynamics or early personal influences, with Page himself noting in later interviews a youthful emphasis on self-reliance amid limited disclosures about private family matters.[9] This environment preceded his formal education and military path, fostering an initial awareness of practical economic structures through his father's utility employment, though no verified accounts detail specific childhood experiences with global events or geopolitics at that stage.[9]

Academic Achievements and Degrees

Carter Page graduated from the United States Naval Academy in 1993 with a Bachelor of Science degree, earning distinction as a Trident Scholar and ranking in the top 10% of his class.[11][12] In 1994, while on active duty in the Navy, Page completed a Master of Arts degree in national security studies at Georgetown University.[11][10] Page later pursued advanced business education, obtaining a Master of Business Administration from New York University's Stern School of Business in 2001.[11][13] He received a PhD from the School of Oriental and African Studies (SOAS) at the University of London in 2012, with a dissertation examining Russia's strategic influence on Central Asia's post-communist economic transitions, including energy sector dynamics and the balance between capitalism and socialism.[14][15][13] The thesis, initially submitted in 2008 and revised after two rejections by examiners who described it as verbose and conceptually vague, was ultimately approved under the supervision of Shirin Akiner following allegations by Page of examiner bias.[16][17]

Military Service and Early Career

Carter Page graduated with distinction from the United States Naval Academy in 1993, ranking in the top 5% of his class and earning selection as a Trident Scholar.[18][19] Commissioned as a lieutenant in the U.S. Navy, he served five years on active duty from 1993 to 1998 in operational intelligence roles, focusing on threat analysis.[20][19] His service included sea assignments and worldwide billets that honed analytical skills essential for assessing geopolitical risks.[19] During his tenure, Page contributed to intelligence efforts in the Western Pacific and Middle East regions amid post-Cold War transitions and regional instabilities of the 1990s.[21] He also spent 18 months at the Pentagon as the Navy's representative on nuclear nonproliferation working groups, applying disciplined reasoning to strategic assessments.[21] These experiences developed his capacity for rigorous, evidence-based evaluation of threats, free from later politicized scrutiny. Page received an honorable discharge upon completing active duty, maintaining an unblemished service record with no disciplinary actions.[19] His naval career exemplified the discipline and precision required in intelligence operations, laying a foundation for subsequent professional endeavors in energy and policy analysis.[22][23]

Transition to Private Sector

Following his service as a U.S. Navy intelligence officer, which concluded around 2000 after five years of active duty post-graduation from the United States Naval Academy in 1993, Page transitioned to the private sector by entering investment banking.[24] He joined Merrill Lynch's capital markets group in London in 2000, where he focused on mergers and acquisitions in emerging markets.[25] Over the next seven years, Page's roles at the firm expanded to include positions in New York and Moscow, building his professional foundation in finance amid post-Cold War economic opportunities in Eastern Europe and Asia.[26] Page's work at Merrill Lynch emphasized energy sector transactions, particularly in natural gas and liquefied natural gas (LNG) projects, with involvement in advisory roles for clients like Russia's state-owned Gazprom on key deals.[27] From 2004 to 2007, he served in Merrill Lynch's Moscow office, handling transactions in Russia and Central Asia that honed his expertise in resource extraction and infrastructure financing in volatile regions.[28] This period marked his pivot toward energy consulting, leveraging analytical skills from naval intelligence to assess geopolitical risks in commodity markets, though specific performance metrics from these engagements remain limited in public industry records.[29] By 2007, Page had relocated to New York as chief operating officer of Merrill Lynch's energy and power department, solidifying his shift from general emerging markets banking to specialized energy advisory before departing to establish his own firm.[30] His Merrill Lynch tenure demonstrated competence in navigating complex international deals, as evidenced by sustained client engagements in high-stakes sectors, despite the firm's broader challenges during the 2008 financial crisis.[20]

Professional Career in Energy Consulting

Founding Global Energy Capital

Carter Page founded Global Energy Capital LLC in 2008, shortly after leaving his position at Merrill Lynch, creating a boutique investment and consulting firm targeted at energy opportunities in emerging markets.) Incorporated in New York, the firm functions as a private equity entity and advisory service, with Page serving as managing partner alongside co-founder Sergei Yatsenko, drawing on expertise in natural gas infrastructure and related sectors.[31][32] The business model of Global Energy Capital emphasizes specialized guidance for clients navigating volatile energy landscapes, including liquefied natural gas (LNG) projects and the economic consequences of geopolitical sanctions.[5] This approach relies on empirical evaluation of market forces and risk factors, facilitating strategic decisions such as asset repositioning in response to regulatory pressures and international tensions. By focusing on pragmatic assessments rather than prescriptive ideologies, the firm has positioned itself to support divestitures and investment reallocations in high-uncertainty environments, reflecting a core emphasis on causal drivers of energy market outcomes.[24]

Key Business Engagements and Expertise

Carter Page founded Global Energy Capital LLC in 2008 following a buyout from Merrill Lynch, establishing it as a specialized investment and consulting firm focused on energy opportunities in emerging Eurasian markets, including natural gas development and infrastructure projects in post-Soviet states.[27] The firm advises clients on strategic entry into these regions, emphasizing risk assessment and deal structuring to enable Western capital flows into undervalued assets amid geopolitical and regulatory complexities. Page's approach prioritizes empirical analysis of market dynamics, such as pipeline capacities and export volumes, to identify viable commercial pathways independent of dominant state players. Prior to launching his firm, Page served as an investment banker at Merrill Lynch from 2004 to 2007, primarily in Moscow, where he contributed to energy transactions exceeding several billion dollars in value, involving transactions with Russian firms like Gazprom and facilitating equity stakes for international investors in upstream and midstream projects.[29] His roles included advising on mergers, acquisitions, and financing in the former Soviet republics, drawing on on-the-ground knowledge of local regulatory frameworks and resource endowments to bridge U.S. and European institutional investors with regional opportunities. This experience honed his expertise in Eurasian energy logistics, including the assessment of LNG export potentials and diversification strategies to counter supply concentration risks. Page's professional engagements extend to consulting for institutional clients on broader Eurasian energy strategies, providing data-driven insights into market liberalization and investor protections in Central Asia and the Caucasus.) He has emphasized practical facilitation of U.S. capital into these markets, citing historical transaction volumes—such as over $10 billion in deals he influenced at Merrill—as evidence of successful cross-border value creation without reliance on unsubstantiated threat narratives.[27] His analyses often incorporate verifiable metrics like Gazprom's export shares (around 25% of Europe's gas supply in the mid-2010s) to argue for competitive reforms over isolationist policies, positioning his work as a counter to alarmist assessments lacking causal grounding in commercial realities.

Foreign Policy Views and Russia Engagements

Advocacy for U.S.-Russia Energy Cooperation

Carter Page has long positioned Russia as a pivotal global energy supplier, emphasizing its substantial production capacity and potential for collaborative ventures with the West. In a July 2016 speech at Moscow's New Economic School, he highlighted Russia's role as the world's largest oil producer in 2009, alongside rapid output growth in partnership with neighboring states like Kazakhstan from 2000 to 2010, underscoring the economic rationale for integrating Russian resources into broader market dynamics.[33][31] Page criticized U.S. sanctions imposed after Russia's 2014 annexation of Crimea as counterproductive, arguing they disrupted energy market efficiencies and heightened risks of supply instability for Europe by curtailing cooperative diversification. He contended that such measures, rooted in "sanctimonious expressions of moral superiority," impeded pragmatic bilateral engagement and failed to advance global stability, instead limiting Russian firms' expansion into innovative production and efficiency improvements.[33][34] In the same address, he noted that recent sanctions policy had "to a large extent limited these possibilities" for Russian energy initiatives, advocating instead for mutual respect and equality to align competing economic models through private-sector incentives.[31] Central to Page's rationale was the view that energy interdependence incentivizes cooperative behavior and diminishes conflict drivers, as evidenced by historical patterns of stabilized trade relations via resource linkages. He promoted lifting regulatory barriers to joint U.S.-Russia ventures, citing reduced vulnerability to supply shocks—such as Europe's pre-sanctions gas imports from Russia averaging over 150 billion cubic meters annually—as a verifiable benefit of integrated markets over isolationist policies.[35][31] This approach, Page argued, prioritizes empirical economic gains, like enhanced efficiency and lower emissions through cross-border innovation, over ideological confrontations.[36]

Public Statements and Criticisms of Western Policies

Carter Page has consistently criticized NATO's eastward expansion as a provocative policy that undermined post-Cold War stability. In June 2016, he publicly likened the addition of multiple new NATO members along Russia's borders to excessive force, stating, "Just as five police officers ganged up on [Eric] Garner, over a half-dozen new NATO members have expanded to Russia's border," framing the expansion as an aggressive encirclement rather than defensive necessity.[37] Page argued this approach ignored historical assurances against such expansion given to Soviet leaders in the early 1990s, empirically contributing to heightened tensions without enhancing European security. Page has highlighted policy failures in Ukraine as evidence of flawed Western strategies, pointing to the 2014 Maidan Revolution and subsequent conflict as outcomes of interventionist pressures that prioritized regime change over pragmatic diplomacy. He contended that U.S. and EU support for Ukrainian alignment with the West exacerbated divisions, leading to Russia's annexation of Crimea and ongoing eastern hostilities, which disrupted regional energy supplies and economic ties without achieving democratic consolidation or resolution.[30] These critiques emphasized causal links between NATO's Ukraine aspirations and retaliatory actions, contrasting with mainstream narratives attributing sole blame to Russian aggression. On sanctions, Page has opposed U.S. measures against Russia as counterproductive moral posturing that disregards market realities. In a May 2014 analysis, he described Western sanctions—imposed following Crimea's annexation—as "sanctimonious expressions of moral superiority" that inflicted self-harm by inflating global energy prices and hindering cooperative development in Arctic and Siberian resources.[36] He argued these policies ignored empirical data on Russia's role in stabilizing Eurasian energy flows, advocating instead for pragmatic engagement to mitigate disruptions, a view he expressed in pre-2016 writings and interviews as a non-partisan alternative to hawkish isolationism.[5]

Interactions with Russian Officials and Academics

In 2013, Page served in an informal advisory capacity to Rosneft, Russia's state-owned oil company, focusing on corporate governance reforms amid a potential stock deal involving ExxonMobil.[38] [39] During this period, he met with Igor Sechin, Rosneft's chief executive and a close associate of Vladimir Putin, to discuss these business matters; Page later described the interaction as brief and professional, occurring prior to his involvement with the Trump campaign.[40] In a December 2013 letter to the Moscow Center for Political Assessments, Page highlighted his role as an informal advisor to Kremlin staff on economic policy preparations, including recommendations for transparency and anti-corruption measures in the energy sector, which he framed as constructive input for Russian reforms.[38] [39] Page's engagements extended to academic and policy discussions, reflecting his long-standing interest in U.S.-Russia energy cooperation. Earlier experiences, such as his time studying in Moscow during the early 1990s as a U.S. Navy officer, informed his later professional outreach, but specific interactions with Russian academics were limited and publicly oriented.[41] In July 2016, while affiliated with the Trump campaign, Page delivered a public lecture on global economic trends at the New Economic School in Moscow, an independent academic institution known for its economics programs.[42] Following the speech on July 8, 2016, he met briefly with Arkady Dvorkovich, Russia's Deputy Prime Minister overseeing energy and trade, to exchange views on bilateral investment opportunities; Page reported this encounter to Trump campaign officials, including Hope Hicks and J.D. Gordon, emphasizing its overt and non-sensitive nature.[43] [42] These interactions, spanning business advisory work and academic exchanges, predated Page's formal Trump campaign role in March 2016 and involved no exchange of classified information, as corroborated by subsequent investigations.[42] Page's communications with Russian contacts were consistent with his energy consulting background and advocacy for policy resets, often conducted transparently through professional channels rather than covert means.[41] Post-campaign engagements remained sporadic and focused on similar themes, with no evidence of coordinated political activities.[39]

Role in the 2016 Trump Campaign

Appointment as Foreign Policy Advisor

In March 2016, Carter Page was recruited by Sam Clovis, a senior policy advisor in Donald Trump's presidential campaign, to join the campaign's nascent foreign policy team amid efforts to assemble expertise and counter criticisms of Trump's limited experience in international affairs.[44][45] On March 21, 2016, Trump publicly announced Page as one of several foreign policy advisors during an interview with The Washington Post's editorial board, listing him alongside figures such as Walid Phares, George Papadopoulos, and Keith Kellogg.[46][47][48] Page's inclusion highlighted the campaign's interest in advisors with specialized knowledge in energy and emerging markets, reflecting his background as a petroleum consultant.[42] Page's role remained low-profile and centered on providing input related to energy policy and U.S. economic interests abroad, consistent with the campaign's emerging "America First" orientation that emphasized restraint in overseas military engagements and prioritization of domestic priorities over expansive foreign interventions.[42] He participated sporadically in campaign calls and meetings but held no formal staff position or authority over policy formulation.[29] Campaign records and subsequent investigations, including the Mueller Report, indicate Page operated as an unpaid volunteer with peripheral involvement, attending only a handful of group discussions without direct access to senior leadership.[42][49] There is no documented evidence that Page exerted influence over campaign strategy or decisions; Trump campaign officials consistently downplayed his contributions, and Page himself confirmed he had no direct communication with Trump during his tenure.[50][51] This limited scope underscored the advisory team's function as a loose network of external voices rather than a centralized policy apparatus, with Page's expertise serving mainly to bolster the campaign's credentials in niche areas like global energy dynamics.[50][42]

Moscow Trip and Subsequent Departure

In July 2016, Carter Page undertook a private trip to Moscow, where he delivered a public lecture at the New Economic School on July 7.[52] The speech emphasized the need for mutual respect in U.S.-Russia relations and critiqued aspects of Western sanctions policy, framing energy sector cooperation as a pathway to improved bilateral ties; it contained no references to Donald Trump's presidential campaign strategies or operations.[52] [53] Page funded the travel and accommodations himself, without any financial support or reimbursement from the Trump campaign.[54] Prior to departure, Page briefed senior campaign officials—including foreign policy advisor J.D. Gordon and, subsequently, campaign chairman Paul Manafort—on the itinerary, which centered on the scheduled academic address and related discussions with Russian energy experts and academics.[55] [56] Campaign leadership raised no objections and issued no instructions tying the visit to political activities, consistent with Page's informal advisory role, which involved no salary or formal directives.[57] During the trip, Page engaged primarily with New Economic School affiliates and energy sector contacts; he later confirmed a brief, incidental greeting with Russian Deputy Prime Minister Igor Dvorkovich at an event but denied substantive meetings with senior intelligence or government figures beyond academic or professional exchanges.[58] [59] Media reports in September 2016 amplified questions about Page's prior professional contacts in Russia, prompting heightened scrutiny of his advisory position despite the trip's non-campaign nature.[29] On September 25, Page voluntarily resigned from the Trump campaign to mitigate distractions, stating in his announcement that the decision aimed to refocus attention on policy issues rather than personal associations.[60] [61] The resignation occurred without any internal campaign directive or allegation of misconduct related to the Moscow visit.

FBI Surveillance and the Steele Dossier Controversy

Origins of the FISA Warrants

The Federal Bureau of Investigation (FBI) first sought and obtained a Foreign Intelligence Surveillance Act (FISA) warrant targeting Carter Page on October 21, 2016, from the Foreign Intelligence Surveillance Court (FISC), designating him as an "agent of a foreign power" under 50 U.S.C. § 1801(b)(2)(E).[62] This surveillance authorization arose within the FBI's Crossfire Hurricane investigation, launched in July 2016 following a tip about Trump campaign advisor George Papadopoulos's knowledge of Russian possession of damaging material on Hillary Clinton, with an individual case file on Page opened in August 2016 due to his prior Russia contacts.[63] The initial application relied on unverified intelligence to assert probable cause that Page was knowingly engaging in clandestine intelligence activities for Russia, though subsequent reviews highlighted procedural deficiencies from the outset.[64] Page's FISA surveillance was extended through three renewals approved by the FISC in early 2017 (January, April, and June), each requiring a demonstration of ongoing probable cause, yet the Department of Justice later conceded that the final two renewals lacked sufficient evidentiary basis under its own standards.[8][65] These extensions proceeded without substantial new corroborating evidence of Page's alleged foreign agency, amplifying concerns over the warrants' foundational reliance on preliminary suspicions rather than verified developments.[66] The FISA applications breached the FBI's Woods procedures, established in 2002 to ensure accuracy by mandating supporting documentation for every factual claim in surveillance requests; a 2019 Department of Justice Inspector General review identified 17 significant errors or omissions across the four Page applications, including at least seven in the initial October 2016 filing.[63][67] Notably, the FBI omitted Page's prior cooperation with U.S. intelligence agencies, including his role from 2008 to 2013 as a CIA operational contact who voluntarily provided detailed information on Russian intelligence officers' recruitment attempts, which had been deemed useful and briefed to senior officials—facts that undercut assertions of Page as a knowing Russian asset.[63] Such nondisclosures violated verification protocols and deprived the FISC of material context for probable cause assessment.[68]

Role of the Steele Dossier in Applications

The Steele dossier, a series of reports compiled by former British intelligence officer Christopher Steele beginning in June 2016, alleged that Carter Page had been offered a brokerage commission on a potential sale of a 19 percent stake in Rosneft, Russia's state-owned oil company, during a July 2016 meeting in Moscow with Igor Sechin, Rosneft's CEO and a close associate of Vladimir Putin.[69] The reports further claimed Page discussed compromising the U.S. position on sanctions against Russia and quid pro quo arrangements tied to Moscow's election interference.[70] These assertions positioned Page as a potential Russian agent facilitating backchannel influence on the Trump campaign.[71] Financed initially by the Washington Free Beacon and later by Fusion GPS—a research firm retained by the law firm Perkins Coie on behalf of Hillary Clinton's 2016 presidential campaign and the Democratic National Committee—the dossier constituted opposition research with an inherent adversarial bias toward the Trump campaign.[72] The Clinton campaign and DNC misreported payments to Perkins Coie as "legal services," leading to a $113,000 Federal Election Commission fine in 2022 for improper disclosure of the funding used to produce the dossier.[73] Steele's work product reflected this political motivation, as he was compensated for delivering intelligence adverse to one side of the election.[74] In the FBI's October 2016 FISA warrant application targeting Page—and its three renewals through June 2017—the dossier's allegations served as central evidence to establish probable cause that Page was a foreign agent, despite the FBI's inability to corroborate any specific substantive claims against him prior to or during the applications.[75] FBI officials incorporated Steele's reporting without fully disclosing to the FISA court its uncorroborated status, Steele's potential biases as a paid political operative, or exculpatory information about Page, such as his prior cooperation with the CIA on Russian matters.[7] Declassified footnotes from the 2019 Department of Justice Inspector General report by Michael Horowitz revealed that the FBI knew of significant credibility issues with the dossier's primary sub-source, Igor Danchenko—including his history of providing unsubstantiated rumors and fabricating certain sub-sources—yet proceeded with the applications without adequate verification or disclosure.[76] Danchenko, a Russian analyst with ties to U.S. government contacts, later faced federal indictment in 2021 for allegedly lying to the FBI about the origins of his information fed to Steele, underscoring the dossier's reliance on unvetted hearsay that undermined its evidentiary weight.[77]

Key Investigation Findings

Mueller Report Conclusions on Page

The Special Counsel's investigation, detailed in Volume I of the report released on March 7, 2019, found insufficient evidence to establish that Carter Page conspired or coordinated with the Russian government in its efforts to interfere in the 2016 U.S. presidential election.[42] This assessment encompassed Page's prior professional contacts in Russia and his activities during the campaign period, including his July 2016 trip to Moscow, but yielded no basis for criminal charges against him.[42] Page's Moscow meetings with officials such as Igor Sechin of Rosneft and Sergey Ivanov, a Kremlin advisor, were scrutinized for potential links to election interference, yet the report determined these interactions occurred independently of any directive or knowledge from the Trump campaign that would constitute coordination.[42] Page had informed campaign advisors Sam Clovis and J.D. Gordon about the planned trip in advance and shared details afterward, including a briefing to senior campaign officials, but investigators uncovered no evidence that the campaign tasked Page with advancing Russian interests or that his actions advanced a joint effort to influence the election.[42] The report's examination of Page's conduct implicitly undermined unsubstantiated allegations from the Steele dossier—such as claims of Page securing a brokerage fee or equity stake in Rosneft—by noting the absence of corroborating evidence for such transactions or their connection to campaign objectives.[42] Overall, the lack of findings tying Page's behavior to criminal conspiracy or knowing assistance in Russia's interference activities led to his exclusion from indictments, highlighting the investigation's determination that his role did not meet the threshold for prosecutable offenses.[42]

Horowitz IG Report on FISA Abuses

In December 2019, the U.S. Department of Justice Office of the Inspector General (OIG), under Michael Horowitz, released a report examining the FBI's Crossfire Hurricane investigation, with a focused review of the four Foreign Intelligence Surveillance Act (FISA) applications targeting Carter Page between October 2016 and September 2017. The report identified at least 17 significant inaccuracies and omissions in these applications—seven in the initial warrant and accumulating to 17 across all renewals—violating internal FBI verification procedures known as Woods procedures, which require factual support for every claim in FISA submissions.[78][79] These flaws included repeated failures to disclose contradictory or exculpatory information about Page, such as his prior role as an approved CIA operational contact who had provided information on Russian intelligence efforts, which contradicted portrayals of him as a potential Russian asset.[68][80] Central to the applications was unverified reporting from the Steele dossier, which alleged Page served as an intermediary for Russian bribery schemes; the OIG found the FBI lacked any corroboration for these specific claims against Page at the time of reliance, despite internal awareness of Steele's potential biases and the dossier's partisan funding origins.[81] One documented alteration involved an FBI attorney modifying a CIA email to falsely indicate Page had never been a CIA source, obscuring exculpatory details that could have weakened probable cause assertions and breaching the FBI's duty of candor to the FISA Court.[82][83] Additional omissions encompassed Page's denials of Russian recruitment during FBI interviews and inconsistencies in source handling, contributing to applications that omitted material facts undermining the dossier's credibility.[68][84] While the OIG concluded there was no documentary or testimonial evidence of political bias or improper motivation in initiating Crossfire Hurricane or seeking Page's FISA warrants, it emphasized egregious performance lapses, including inadequate supervisory oversight and verification, that eroded the integrity of the process.[85][86] These institutional shortcomings persisted across renewals, with errors compounding despite opportunities for correction, revealing deficiencies in FBI compliance rather than isolated negligence. The report rejected claims of a politically motivated "witch hunt" in the probe's origins but substantiated misconduct in FISA handling, as the inaccuracies collectively rested the applications' foundation on unvetted and incomplete evidence.[87] To address these failures, the OIG issued recommendations for FBI reforms, including mandatory performance reviews for personnel involved in FISA preparation and approvals, enhanced training on candor obligations, and systemic improvements to Woods procedures for documenting and verifying factual assertions.[79][88] Empirical analysis in the report demonstrated that, absent the flaws, the applications' probable cause claims—predominantly reliant on the uncorroborated dossier—lacked sufficient independent validation, prompting subsequent FISA Court directives for the FBI to re-interview sources and audit broader compliance.[75][89]

Senate Intelligence Committee Assessment

The bipartisan Senate Select Committee on Intelligence (SSCI), in Volume 5 of its report on Russian active measures and interference in the 2016 U.S. election, released on August 18, 2020, examined counterintelligence threats and vulnerabilities associated with the Trump campaign, including Carter Page's role as a foreign policy advisor announced on March 21, 2016.[90][91] The assessment, drawing from over 200 witness interviews, more than a million pages of documents, and raw U.S. intelligence rather than primary reliance on the Steele dossier, detailed Page's prior Russia ties—such as his 2003–2007 residence in Moscow, work with Gazprom via Merrill Lynch, and 2013 interactions with Russian intelligence officers identified in a 2015 U.S. indictment—but found no definitive evidence that he served as a witting Russian agent or cooptee.[91] Page's pro-Russian views and expertise positioned him as a likely target of Russian interest, creating notable counterintelligence vulnerabilities for the campaign due to inadequate vetting of foreign policy personnel.[91] The report confirmed Page's July 2016 Moscow trip involved a brief exchange with Deputy Prime Minister Arkady Dvorkovich at the New Economic School and meetings with Rosneft executive Andrey Baranov, alongside a December 2016 dinner with Dvorkovich, but uncorroborated U.S. intelligence assessments of higher-level contacts with Igor Sechin (Rosneft CEO) or Sergey Divyekin (Kremlin internal affairs official) as alleged in unverified Steele dossier reports.[91] Page's accounts exhibited discrepancies, including denials of significant Kremlin interactions, vague references to "incredible insights" from officials, and incomplete itineraries, which fueled suspicions but lacked resolution through committee review.[91] Despite these contacts and a April 10, 2016, Skype discussion with George Papadopoulos on Russia outreach, the SSCI found no evidence of Page providing substantive contributions to the Trump campaign, sharing sensitive information with Russian entities, or engaging in coordinated election influence efforts.[91] Critiquing FBI procedures under Crossfire Hurricane (opened July 31, 2016), the report highlighted overreliance on uncorroborated Steele dossier allegations in FISA applications for Page, procedural errors, and incomplete documentation in renewals, as later echoed in the DOJ Inspector General's findings, though it affirmed an independent basis for initial concerns stemming from Page's pre-campaign history with Russian intelligence approaches dating to 2008–2013.[91][92] Overall, while Page's activities presented attractive targets for foreign influence and justified surveillance scrutiny, the committee concluded there was no corroborated coordination or conspiracy between Page, the Trump campaign, and Russia to interfere in the election.[91] This balanced view, grounded in primary intelligence and testimony, contrasted with media narratives amplifying dossier claims without similar verification.[93]

Lawsuits Against Media Outlets

In September 2017, Carter Page filed a defamation lawsuit in Delaware Superior Court against Oath Inc., the parent company of Yahoo News and HuffPost, alleging that eleven articles published between September 2016 and January 2017 falsely depicted him as a Russian intelligence asset seeking to influence the 2016 U.S. presidential election.[94] [19] The complaint asserted that the reports, which referenced unverified allegations from the Steele dossier, constituted reckless falsehoods by implying Page had met with Russian officials to discuss lifting sanctions and compromising material on Hillary Clinton, leading to severe reputational damage, professional ostracism, and death threats.[94] [19] Page sought compensatory and punitive damages exceeding $75,000, arguing the outlets failed to verify sources and amplified defamatory claims despite his public denials.[94] Oath Inc. moved to dismiss under Delaware's anti-SLAPP statute, which protects against strategic lawsuits aimed at chilling protected speech, and contended the articles were opinion or fair reporting on matters of public concern.[95] In February 2021, Superior Court Judge Craig Karsnitz granted the motion, ruling that Page, as a limited-purpose public figure on Russia-related issues, had not met the heightened pleading standard under New York Times v. Sullivan by alleging facts showing actual malice—knowledge of falsity or reckless disregard for the truth.[96] [95] The judge further found the articles non-actionable as they relied on attributed sources and subsequent events, including FISA warrants, lent initial plausibility to the claims at the time of publication.[95] Page appealed to the Delaware Supreme Court, which heard oral arguments in October 2021 and affirmed the dismissal in January 2022.[97] [98] The high court held that the lower court's anti-SLAPP application was proper, the articles were protected opinion or neutral reportage, and Page's pro se amended complaint still failed to plead actual malice with particularity, emphasizing First Amendment safeguards for reporting on government investigations.[99] [100] No further appeals against Oath Inc. were reported, though Page has cited the case in subsequent advocacy to critique media amplification of unvetted intelligence allegations later undermined by inspector general findings.[101] A related 2019 federal lawsuit by Page against the U.S. Agency for Global Media, encompassing Radio Free Europe/Radio Liberty, alleged defamation over 2017 reports echoing dossier claims of Page's Russian ties; it was dismissed in New York federal court for similar failure to state a claim, with no successful appeal.[102] [103] These outcomes reflect judicial deference to journalistic protections amid public-figure status, despite post hoc validations of Page's innocence in official probes.[99][101]

Suit Against DNC and Fusion GPS Associates

In October 2017, Carter Page filed a defamation lawsuit in the U.S. District Court for the Western District of Oklahoma against the Democratic National Committee (DNC), alleging that the organization funded opposition research through the law firm Perkins Coie, which retained Fusion GPS to produce the Steele dossier containing false claims about Page's Russian ties.[103] The suit contended that this effort constituted a coordinated hoax aimed at influencing the 2016 U.S. presidential election by disseminating unverified smears portraying Page as an unregistered foreign agent.[104] The complaint specified that Perkins Coie, hired by the DNC and the Clinton campaign, subcontracted Fusion GPS—a firm specializing in opposition research—which then engaged Christopher Steele to compile a series of memos alleging Page's involvement in illicit dealings with Russian officials, including discussions of sanctions relief and energy deals.[105] Page argued these allegations were fabricated or recklessly false, forming part of a racketeering-like pattern of partisan interference, with Fusion GPS associates playing a central role in propagating the material to media outlets and government entities despite lacking corroboration.[106] The Oklahoma court dismissed the case in January 2019 for lack of personal jurisdiction over the defendants, ruling that Page failed to establish sufficient ties to the forum.[103] Undeterred, Page refiled a similar defamation action on January 30, 2020, in the U.S. District Court for the Northern District of Illinois, again targeting the DNC and Perkins Coie partners Marc Elias and Michael Sussmann for orchestrating the funding chain to Fusion GPS and enabling the spread of dossier claims.[104][105] U.S. District Judge Harry Leinenweber dismissed the 2020 suit on August 17, 2020, on grounds of insufficient minimum contacts for personal jurisdiction, deeming Perkins Coie "stateless" for diversity purposes and the claims too attenuated from Illinois activities.[103][107] The Seventh Circuit Court of Appeals affirmed the dismissal on June 21, 2021, emphasizing that Page's state-law tort claims did not invoke federal question jurisdiction and lacked adequate venue ties.[107] The U.S. Supreme Court denied certiorari on January 10, 2022, ending the litigation without reaching the merits of the defamation or conspiracy allegations.[108] Although procedural barriers precluded substantive rulings, the suits empirically documented the dossier's origins as DNC-funded opposition research via Perkins Coie to Fusion GPS, underscoring its partisan commissioning rather than independent verification, with Steele's memos relying on unconfirmed hearsay that targeted Page as a vulnerability in the Trump campaign.[105][109] This chain of custody revealed tactics centered on amplifying unvetted narratives to shape public and official perceptions during the election.[106]

Claims Against DOJ, FBI, and Officials

In November 2019, Carter Page initiated a Bivens action in the U.S. District Court for the District of Columbia against former FBI Director James Comey, former Deputy Director Andrew McCabe, and several other FBI officials, including Peter Strzok and Lisa Page, alleging malicious prosecution and Fourth Amendment violations stemming from the FISA surveillance warrants obtained against him in 2016 and 2017.[110] The complaint asserted that the defendants knowingly included false statements and omitted material exculpatory information in the FISA applications, resulting in unwarranted electronic surveillance and disclosure of private communications without probable cause, which the U.S. Department of Justice later conceded for the final two warrant renewals in a January 2020 filing to the Foreign Intelligence Surveillance Court.[8] Page sought compensatory and punitive damages, arguing the actions constituted intentional government overreach beyond qualified immunity protections.[111] The district court dismissed Page's second amended complaint in early 2023, ruling that his FISA unauthorized-disclosure and misuse claims were time-barred under the statute's two-year limit, that Bivens remedies did not extend to the alleged FISA and Patriot Act violations due to alternative remedial schemes and separation-of-powers concerns, and that the abuse-of-process claims failed to state a viable cause of action.[111] Page appealed to the U.S. Court of Appeals for the D.C. Circuit, which on May 23, 2025, affirmed the dismissal in a per curiam opinion, upholding the time-bar on FISA claims (accrued from warrant issuance dates in 2016–2017) and rejecting extension of Bivens liability for national-security surveillance contexts, while noting the complaint's allegations of procedural irregularities but deeming them insufficient for constitutional tort relief absent congressional authorization.[111][112] On September 30, 2025, Page filed an application with the U.S. Supreme Court for a 75-day extension to petition for a writ of certiorari, arguing that the FISA abuses—corroborated by the Foreign Intelligence Surveillance Court's findings of Woods Procedures violations and inaccurate certifications—warranted review to establish accountability mechanisms for executive-branch surveillance overreach lacking probable cause, potentially extending Bivens precedents like Carpenter v. United States to deter future constitutional infringements. The application emphasized that without judicial redress, officials face no personal consequences for misleading FISA courts, as evidenced by the government's admissions of deficiencies in the Page warrants. The extension was granted, and Page filed his petition for a writ of certiorari in December 2025 (docket 25-705). As of late March 2026, the petition remains pending, with government responses extended to April 22, 2026.[113][8] In related congressional oversight, a declassified December 2020 FBI FD-302 (interview summary) from an internal probe into Supervisory Intelligence Analyst Brian Auten alleged violation of FBI Offense Code 1.7 for "Investigative Deficiency - Misconduct Related to Judicial Proceedings" tied to Page FISA matters. The document, referenced in Sen. Chuck Grassley's March 15, 2026 letter to Attorney General Pam Bondi and FBI Director Kash Patel, includes whistleblower claims of political bias in Mueller's team, mishandling classified info, unnecessary FISA renewals, and resistance to corrections (e.g., "we can't send this to DOJ"). Grassley demanded related records by March 29, 2026. Auten, who vetted Steele dossier material for Page FISAs, faced prior scrutiny: FBI recommended suspension post-2019 IG report (appealed); placed on administrative leave in April 2025 under incoming Director Kash Patel. No criminal charges against Auten resulted from Durham probe or subsequent reviews, beyond Kevin Clinesmith's 2020 plea for email alteration. These developments add to documented FBI errors in Page surveillance but have not yielded compensation or new prosecutions as of March 2026.

Publications and Ongoing Advocacy

Scholarly and Policy Writings

Carter Page earned a PhD in international relations from the School of Oriental and African Studies (SOAS) at the University of London in 2012, with a dissertation examining the economic transitions of Central Asian states from communism to capitalism.[16] The work, initially submitted in 2008 and revised after examiners cited issues with verbosity and vagueness, analyzed post-Soviet market reforms, resource dependencies, and geopolitical implications for energy sectors in the region.[14] Page's thesis emphasized empirical data on trade patterns and investment flows, arguing that heavy-handed external interventions often exacerbated economic distortions rather than fostering sustainable growth.[31] In the 2010s, Page contributed policy-oriented articles to the Global Policy Journal, focusing on energy geopolitics and realist critiques of Western sanctions regimes. In a 2015 piece ahead of the Paris climate talks, he advocated for market-driven approaches to sustainable energy, critiquing supply-side restrictions as counterproductive to global resource allocation.[114] Another article that year, titled "New Slaves, Global Edition: Russia, Iran and the Segregation of the World Economy," applied first-principles analysis to U.S.-led sanctions, positing they segmented global markets and hindered efficient energy trade without achieving policy goals.[1] Page drew on primary trade data and historical precedents to contend that such measures reinforced state monopolies in sanctioned economies, echoing themes from his dissertation on interventionist pitfalls in transitioning markets.[5] Page's writings consistently reflected a realist orientation, prioritizing causal links between energy resources, state power, and international stability over ideological sanctions. In a post-2014 Ukraine analysis for Global Policy Journal, he attributed conflict dynamics to NATO expansion and energy disputes rather than unilateral Russian aggression, citing declassified diplomatic cables and commodity price indices as evidence.[5] This body of work demonstrated continuity in his empirical skepticism toward coercive economic tools, informed by granular data on Eurasian pipelines and investment flows, which he argued often backfired by entrenching adversarial alliances.[31]

Recent Developments and Public Commentary

In 2024, the U.S. Court of Appeals for the D.C. Circuit heard arguments in Page's lawsuit against former FBI Director James Comey and other officials, alleging violations of his privacy rights through flawed FISA surveillance applications, with judges appearing receptive to reviving the $75 million claim previously dismissed by a lower court.[115] On May 23, 2025, the D.C. Circuit issued an opinion affirming the district court's dismissal of Page's second amended complaint for failure to state a claim under the Privacy Act and related statutes, prompting Page to seek Supreme Court review.[111][116] By September 30, 2025, Page filed an application for an extension to petition the Supreme Court, framing the case as emblematic of unaddressed government overreach in warrant processes.[113] These developments highlight enduring disputes over accountability for intelligence abuses, with Page publicly positioning them as evidence of incomplete institutional reforms. Page has sustained advocacy via social media, using his X (formerly Twitter) platform to critique perceived shortcomings in post-Horowitz FBI restructuring, asserting that incremental measures like enhanced verification protocols do not sufficiently deter politicized investigations or restore constitutional safeguards.[117] His posts emphasize repairing trust through rigorous adherence to due process, often referencing the FISA errors in his surveillance as a cautionary example of broader "deep state" encroachments on civil liberties, without facing institutional repercussions for involved agents.[117] In this vein, Page has called for empirical scrutiny of reform efficacy, arguing that absent fundamental changes—such as mandatory independent audits of politically sensitive probes—recurrences remain probable based on historical patterns of non-compliance. Amid the ongoing Ukraine conflict, Page has reiterated data-informed realist perspectives on U.S.-Russia relations, contending that interventionist policies overlook verifiable geopolitical incentives and risk escalation without proportional strategic gains, drawing from prior analyses of energy dependencies and post-Cold War dynamics. This stance contrasts with prevailing narratives in mainstream outlets, which Page attributes to biased framing that downplays empirical failures in sanctions and proxy support efficacy, as evidenced by stalled territorial outcomes and economic interdependencies persisting into 2024.[118] His commentary underscores causal factors like Russia's resource leverage over Europe, advocating de-escalation grounded in observable bilateral trade data rather than ideological commitments.

References

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