Hillary Clinton Uranium One Conspiracy Theory
Also known as: Uranium One scandal · Uranium One deal
The Hillary Clinton Uranium One Conspiracy Theory is a debunked political claim alleging that Hillary Clinton, as Secretary of State, personally approved the sale of 20% of America's uranium to Russia in exchange for $145 million in donations to the Clinton Foundation. The theory originated from Peter Schweizer's 2015 book *Clinton Cash* and became a fixture of conservative social media and Donald Trump's 2016 presidential campaign1. Multiple fact-checkers rated the claim false, noting Clinton was one of nine agency heads on the approval committee and lacked veto power over the deal2.
TL;DR
The Hillary Clinton Uranium One Conspiracy Theory is a debunked political claim alleging that Hillary Clinton, as Secretary of State, personally approved the sale of 20% of America's uranium to Russia in exchange for $145 million in donations to the Clinton Foundation.
Overview
Origin & Background
How It Spread
How to Use This Meme
The Uranium One conspiracy theory didn't follow a typical meme template format. Instead, it spread through:
Shareable text images on Facebook and Twitter, typically posing a rhetorical question to Clinton about selling uranium to Russia
Quote graphics pairing Clinton's photo with claims about the deal
Whataboutism responses in online political arguments, especially when Trump-Russia connections were discussed. Users would reply with some version of "What about Hillary's uranium deal?" to deflect
Comment section copypasta summarizing the conspiracy's core claims
Cultural Impact
Fun Facts
The deal occurred during the Obama administration's "reset" with Russia, a period when the U.S. was also buying helicopters from Russia for Afghanistan's army and rockets for satellite programs.
The U.S. produces very little uranium domestically. In 2015, American nuclear power plants imported 57 million pounds of uranium while the country produced only about 2 million pounds.
The alleged bribes uncovered by the FBI investigation totaled about $2 million and involved transport contracts for Russian nuclear material, not the uranium mine purchase itself.
By law, CFIUS cannot veto any transaction. Only the President of the United States has that power.
Two former State Department officials told Newsweek that Clinton would only have been notified of a CFIUS decision if there was disagreement among committee members, which there wasn't. The vote was unanimous.
Frequently Asked Questions
References (8)
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- 5Hillary Clinton as Secretary of Stateencyclopedia
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