Waterloo Region Record

Trudeau slams Putin, not Trump

Prime minister must ‘walk a fine line’ between Canada’s interests and relationsh­ip with U.S.

- LEE BERTHIAUME

OTTAWA — Prime Minister Justin Trudeau levelled fresh condemnati­on at Vladimir Putin on Tuesday but refused to weigh in on the Russian president’s meeting with Donald Trump — underscori­ng what experts say is the difficult tightrope act the U.S. president is forcing Canada to walk on the world stage.

The tough words for Putin came during a news conference in Nova Scotia, where the prime minister was announcing new money for highway safety even as officials in Washington, Ottawa and many other capitals were still grappling with the previous day’s Trump-Putin summit in Finland.

“Canada has been unequivoca­l in our condemnati­on of Vladimir Putin and Russia,” Trudeau said in response to a reporter’s question before listing a host of Russian actions under Putin’s watch that Canada has opposed.

Those include Russia’s annexation of Crimea, its support for rebel forces in eastern Ukraine and for the Syrian government, as well as its alleged use of chemical weapons in Britain, which Moscow has denied.

Yet Trudeau noticeably avoided any mention of Trump, who offered warm words for the Russian president during the summit in Helsinki, while appearing to blame his own country for poor relations with Moscow and accept Putin’s denials of having interfered in the 2016 U.S. presidenti­al election.

The latter comment contrasted sharply with the assessment of various U.S. intelligen­ce agencies about what happened in the election that saw Trump become president, and sparked an uproar in the U.S. as officials and pundits blasted Trump for siding with Putin over American authoritie­s.

Asked specifical­ly about Trump’s comments during Monday’s joint news conference with Putin, Trudeau replied: “We condemn Russia and the way that Russia engages in internatio­nal affairs.”

Canadian officials were hard at work trying to get a better sense of what was said during the two-hour closed-door meeting between Putin and Trump — and what ramificati­ons, if any, the discussion would have for Canada.

The potential implicatio­ns are many, including in Latvia and Ukraine, where Canada has troops, and in terms of further election interferen­ce, said Fen Hampson, director of the global security and politics program at the Centre for Internatio­nal Governance Innovation in Waterloo, Ont.

“What we’re all worried about coming out of this summit is that Putin is going to feel emboldened,” he said. “The worry is that an emboldened Russia will do things that will increase the risk and security uncertaint­y.”

Even without a firm handle on what passed between Putin and Trump, experts say the meeting again saw the U.S. president throw long-standing convention­s and principles out the window — many of which have formed the basis of Canada’s approach to the world.

Some, such as former Canadian ambassador Ferry de Kerckhove, would like to see Trudeau work with allies to take a more assertive stand with Trump when it comes to defending shared values.

Yet the prime minister’s refusal to comment on the Trump-Putin meeting, despite Canada’s strong views on Russia, highlights the difficulty he continues to face when it comes to the U.S. president, says University of Ottawa Prof. Roland Paris, who served as Trudeau’s first foreign-policy adviser.

“The prime minister has to walk a fine line between standing up for Canadian principles and interests, and managing a relationsh­ip with a mercurial president.”

 ?? CHRIS RATCLIFFE BLOOMBERG ?? U.S. President Donald Trump, left, listens as Vladimir Putin, Russia's president, speaks during a news conference after the leaders met for two hours in Helsinki, Finland, on Monday.
CHRIS RATCLIFFE BLOOMBERG U.S. President Donald Trump, left, listens as Vladimir Putin, Russia's president, speaks during a news conference after the leaders met for two hours in Helsinki, Finland, on Monday.

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