Saskatoon StarPhoenix

WE DON’T YET KNOW WHERE OR WHEN, BUT DONALD TRUMP AND VLADIMIR PUTIN WILL HOLD A SUMMIT MEETING THIS SUMMER. U.S. NATIONAL SECURITY ADVISER JOHN BOLTON SAID THAT FACT ALONE IS A SUCCESS.

IN THIRD COUNTRY

- Vladimir isachenkov

MOSCOW • A summit that brings together Russian President Vladimir Putin and U.S. President Donald Trump will be a success in itself regardless of the results, Trump’s national security adviser said Wednesday while in Moscow to lay the groundwork for the meeting.

National Security Adviser John Bolton spoke at a news conference after Putin’s foreign policy aide said the Kremlin and the White House would jointly announce Thursday the date and venue for a summer U.s.-russia summit.

Trump and Putin will meet in a third country, Bolton said without elaboratin­g.

“I think the fact of the summit itself is a deliverabl­e,” Bolton said after talks with Putin and other Russian officials. “There are a lot of issues to talk about that have accumulate­d, and I think this was one of the reasons why President Trump believed so strongly that it was time to have this kind of meeting. And as you can see, President Putin agreed.”

The summit would offer Putin a chance to try to persuade Washington to lift some of the sanctions imposed on Russia over its annexation of Crimea, interferen­ce in eastern Ukraine’s separatist fighting and alleged meddling in the 2016 U.S. presidenti­al election.

The Russian leader had two brief meetings with Trump on the sidelines of internatio­nal summits last year. He and Trump discussed their mutual desire for a full-fledged summit during a March phone call, but planning was delayed amid the investigat­ions of alleged collusion between Trump’s campaign and Russia.

Trump has consistent­ly called for improving relations with Russia, prompting criticism that he is willing to overlook Russian abuses. However, an array of new Russian sanctions has been imposed under his presidency.

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