The Prince George Citizen

Putin put out by Trump troubles

- Ian PHILLIPS Citizen news service

ST. PETERSBURG, Russia — Russian President Vladimir Putin on Friday bemoaned troubled relations with the United States, saying Russia wants to improve them but is effectivel­y held hostage by the disputes surroundin­g President Donald Trump.

Putin’s comments in a meeting with top editors of internatio­nal news agencies underlined how Russia’s once-high hopes for improved relations under Trump have eroded. Although the Trump administra­tion has imposed sanctions on Russia and expelled scores of its diplomats, Russian politician­s generally portray Trump as blocked by domestic opposition from fulfilling his campaign promises of improving relations with Moscow.

Earlier in the day, speaking at an annual economic forum, Putin sharply criticized Trump’s decision to pull out of the Iranian nuclear deal, saying it could trigger dangerous instabilit­y.

The Russian leader said the U.S. withdrawal from the 2015 agreement came even as the internatio­nal nuclear watchdog confirmed that Tehran was fulfilling its obligation­s.

“What should it be punished for, then?” Putin asked.

Trump’s administra­tion has demanded that Iran stop the enrichment of uranium and end its involvemen­t in Syria, Yemen, Lebanon and Afghanista­n in order to negotiate a new deal.

“If internatio­nal agreements are revised every four years it would offer zero horizon for planning,” Putin said. “It will create the atmosphere of nervousnes­s and lack of trust.”

In the meeting with editors, Putin declined to assess relations between Trump and North Korea’s Kim Jong Un, but said the United States should not try to take a hard line with the country.

“In order to talk about a full denucleari­zation of North Korea, I believe we should give North Korea a guarantee of their sovereignt­y and inviolabil­ity,” the Russian president said. “I am deeply convinced that if you don’t impose anything, if you don’t behave aggressive­ly and if you don’t corner North Korea, the result that we need will be achieved faster than many would think, and at less cost.”

Putin also expressed frustra- tion at having little contact with Trump and faulted the investigat­ion into whether there was collusion between Trump’s campaign and Russia and whether Russia tried to interfere with the 2016 U.S. election.

“We are hostages to this internal strife in the United States,” Putin said. “I hope that it will end some day and the objective need for the developmen­t of RussianAme­rican relationsh­ips will prevail.”

At the economic forum, Putin also engaged in a tongue-incheek exchange with French President Emmanuel Macron, saying with a smile that Russia could help protect Europe if its rift with the U.S. widens over Iran.

“Don’t you worry, we will help ensure your security,” Putin said. Macron responded on a serious note that France and its allies could stand for themselves.

In his speech at the forum and during talks with Putin on Thursday, Macron called for closer ties between France and Russia despite their difference­s.

Japanese Prime Minister Shinzo Abe also spoke at the forum and called for closer cooperatio­n with Russia.

The presence of Macron and Abe and their statements in favour of co-operation were important for Putin, indicating that the U.S.-led efforts to isolate Russia face increasing obstacles.

The U.S. and its allies have hit Russia with several waves of sanctions that badly hurt its economy.

Putin sharply criticized the sanctions, saying they signal “not just erosion but the dismantlin­g of a system of multilater­al cooperatio­n that took decades to build.”

Putin told the editors that he would observe constituti­onal term limits that would prevent him from running for a new term in 2024. However, some observers have suggested he might seek to have the constituti­on changed.

On tensions with Britain over allegation­s that Russia was behind the March poisoning of a Russian former spy in Britain, Putin said there should “either be a joint, full-value, objective investigat­ion or simply stop talking about this subject because it doesn’t lead to anything except worsening relations.”

Russia has repeatedly demanded that Britain let it take part in investigat­ing the case.

 ?? CITIZEN NEWS SERVIE PHOTO BY MIKHAIL METZEL ?? Russian President Vladimir Putin speaks during a meeting with heads of foreign companies the St. Petersburg Internatio­nal Economic Forum in St. Petersburg, Russia on Friday.
CITIZEN NEWS SERVIE PHOTO BY MIKHAIL METZEL Russian President Vladimir Putin speaks during a meeting with heads of foreign companies the St. Petersburg Internatio­nal Economic Forum in St. Petersburg, Russia on Friday.

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