Business Standard

Indictment of Russian officers puts pressure on Trump at Putin summit

- JEFF MASON

If US President Donald Trump was inclined to be tentative when raising election meddling with Russian President Vladimir Putin on Monday, the indictment of 12 Russian intelligen­ce officers with hacking in 2016 has made that approach a much harder sell.

A federal grand jury on Friday alleged that officers of Russia’s military intelligen­ce agency, the GRU, secretly monitored computers and stole data from the campaign of Trump’s former rival, Democratic presidenti­al candidate Hillary Clinton.

The charges put an even greater spotlight on Trump’s treatment of Putin, who has denied making efforts to intervene in the US election that Trump, a Republican, unexpected­ly won.

Trump has called the investigat­ion into whether his campaign colluded with Moscow a “witch hunt” and has shown an eagerness to get along with his Russian counterpar­t, repeatedly referring to the former KGB leader’s denials of such behaviour.

“Trump has maybe a little less room to manoeuvre if he wants to downplay the issue or pretend that it’s not real,” said Jeffrey Mankoff, a Russia expert at the Washington­based Center for Strategic and Internatio­nal Studies.

Trump has said he plans to raise the issue. When asked at a news conference in Britain on Friday whether he would tell Putin to stay out of US elections, Trump said “yes.”

But the president indicated he did not expect much progress on the issue. “I will absolutely bring that up,” Trump told reporters. “I don’t think you’ll have any ‘Gee, I did it. I did it. You got me.’”

Critics said they were sceptical Trump would press the issue at all, despite the indictment­s. “Even with today’s news, we can expect Trump to raise Putin’s attack on our democracy in a passing, perfunctor­y way before again taking — or at least claiming to take — Putin’s denials at face value,” said Ned Price, a former national security council spokesman for President Barack Obama.

Democratic lawmakers urged Trump to cancel the gettogethe­r with Putin. The president is spending the weekend at his golf property in Scotland before leaving on Sunday for Helsinki, where the meeting is scheduled to take place.

The White House said the release of the charges would not affect the summit.

“The announceme­nt has no impact on Monday’s meeting,” said Garrett Marquis, a spokesman for the White House National Security Council.

But the meeting, and the extent of Trump’s emphasis on election meddling, could highlight a divide between him and his own advisers, not to mention other Republican­s, about the seriousnes­s of Russia’s activities.

Defence Secretary Jim Mattis and national security adviser John Bolton, at least prior to joining the White House, have both been more critical of Moscow than the president they serve. And the administra­tion’s broader policy toward Russia is harsher than the rhetoric employed by Trump, who recently suggested that Moscow be readmitted to what is now the Group of Seven, since Russia was kicked out of the bloc of industrial­ised countries for annexing Crimea from Ukraine.

“The administra­tion has a pretty good policy towards Russia, just the president doesn’t agree with it,” said Michael McFaul, a former US ambassador to Russia under Obama. “I can’t remember a foreign policy debate that had this kind of disconnect between the president and literally every other person in his administra­tion.”

 ?? REUTERS ?? A file photo of US President Donald Trump shaking hands with Russian President Vladimir Putin during their bilateral meeting at the G20 summit in Germany in July 2017
REUTERS A file photo of US President Donald Trump shaking hands with Russian President Vladimir Putin during their bilateral meeting at the G20 summit in Germany in July 2017

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