Truro News

Kremlin: Trump’s wiretap claim a ‘domestic issue’

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Claims by President Donald Trump that his phones were wiretapped by his predecesso­r, Barack Obama, during the 2016 election campaign are a purely domestic matter for the United States, the spokesman for Russian President Vladimir Putin said Monday.

The claim came amid revelation­s about contacts between Trump aides and Russia’s ambassador to the U.S., both during and after an election that U.S. intelligen­ce agencies alleged Russia had meddled in.

When asked about Trump’s allegation­s, made without evidence on Twitter, Putin spokesman Dmitry Peskov told reporters that the Kremlin “should not be in any way linked to U.S. domestic issues” and “doesn’t have the slightest inclinatio­n or intention to be associated with these affairs.”

In the past, Russian officials have come to Trump’s defence, decrying his opponents for resisting efforts to improve relations between Washington and Moscow.

Trump has been dogged for months by questions about his campaign’s ties to Russia. Disclosure­s about contacts with Russian Ambassador Sergei Kislyak cost Michael Flynn his job as national security adviser.

Flynn’s resignatio­n became a watershed moment for Russian officials. State media in recent weeks has switched from detailed coverage of Trump to largely ignoring the U.S. turmoil around his perceived ties to Russia.

State media last week largely ignored the questions surroundin­g Attorney General Jeff Sessions’ contacts with Kislyak.

Well into the second half of his almost two-hour program Sunday night on the statecontr­olled Rossiya channel, commentato­r Dmitry Kiselyov blamed the mainstream U.S. media for not allowing Trump even to talk about improving ties with Russia.

“We’re witnessing a massive battle in the U.S. right now: the oligarch media against the U.S. president and his new administra­tion,” he said. “He is afraid not just to raise his head and talk about Russia – he’s afraid to utter the very word, and for the members of his team any mention of Russia is a high political risk.”

Kiselyov also suggested that “intransige­nt radical liberals” who oppose Trump are “plotting a revolution” against the U.S. president.

Popular publicatio­ns also indicated that Russia’s infatuatio­n with Trump is waning.

 ?? AP PHOTO ?? President Donald Trump speaks in the Roosevelt Room of the White House in Washington.
AP PHOTO President Donald Trump speaks in the Roosevelt Room of the White House in Washington.

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