Global Times

Putin has praise for Trump

Russian president holds annual news conference

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Russian President Vladimir Putin said on Thursday the United States was in the grip of a fabricated spymania whipped up by President Donald Trump’s opponents but he thought battered US-Russia relations would recover one day.

Putin also praised the US president for what he said were his achievemen­ts.

“I’m not the one to evaluate the (US) president’s work. That needs to be done by the voters, the American people,” Putin told his annual news conference in Moscow, in answer to a question.

“(But) we are objectivel­y seeing that there have been some major accomplish­ments, even in the short time he has been working. Look at how the markets have grown. This speaks to investors’ trust in the American economy.”

Trump took office in January, saying he was keen to mend ties which had fallen to a post-Cold War low. But since then, ties have soured further after US officials said Russia meddled in the presidenti­al election, something Moscow denies.

Congress is also investigat­ing alleged contacts between the Trump election campaign and Russian officials amid fears that Moscow may have tried to exercise improper influence.

Putin dismissed those allegation­s and the idea of a Russia connection as “fabricated.”

“This is all invented by people who oppose Trump to give his work an illegitima­te character. The people who do this are dealing a blow to the state of (US) domestic politics,” he added, saying the accusation­s were disrespect­ful to US voters.

Moscow understood that Trump’s scope to improve ties with Russia was limited by the scandal, said Putin, but remained keen to try to improve relations.

Washington and Moscow had many common interests, he said, citing the Middle East, North Korea, internatio­nal terrorism, environmen­tal problems and the proliferat­ion of weapons of mass destructio­n.

“You have to ask him (Trump) if he has such a desire (to improve ties) ... or whether it has disappeare­d. I hope that he has such a desire,” said the president.

“We are normalizin­g our relations and will develop (them) and overcome common threats.”

Putin, who is running for re-election in March, agreed with a questioner who said he faced no credible high-profile political opponents, but pledged to work to try to create a more balanced political system.

Putin said it was too early to set out his electoral program, but named priority issues as helping forge what he called a flexible political system, nurturing a high-tech economy, improving infrastruc­ture, healthcare, education and productivi­ty and increasing people’s real incomes.

Putin, 65, has been in power, either as president or prime minister, since the end of 1999.

 ??  ?? Russian President Vladimir Putin gestures as he speaks during his annual press conference in Moscow on Thursday.
Russian President Vladimir Putin gestures as he speaks during his annual press conference in Moscow on Thursday.

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