Hindustan Times (Delhi)

Trump heads to meet Putin

LIMITED EXPECTATIO­NS The US president has said he will raise the issue of Russian election meddling with Putin

- Agence Francepres­se letters@hindustant­imes.com

WASHINGTON: Donald Trump has said he might ask Vladimir Putin during their Monday summit meeting to extradite to the US 12 Russian intelligen­ce officers accused of attempting to interfere with the 2016 presidenti­al election.

Speaking in an interview with CBS Evening News aired on Sunday, the US president also sought to temper expectatio­ns about how much could be achieved. Asked whether he would press his Russian counterpar­t to send to the US members of the Russian military intelligen­ce agency accused of hacking Hillary Clinton’s failed presidenti­al campaign, he said: “Well, I might.

“I hadn’t thought of that. But I certainly, I’ll be asking about it, but again, this was during the Obama administra­tion. They were doing whatever it was during the Obama administra­tion,” he told CBS’S Jeff Glor on “Face the Nation.”

Speaking before the summit in Helsinki, Trump added that his Republican Party had also been the target of Russian hacking efforts but had superior cyber security measures in place.

“I think the DNC (Democratic National Committee) should be ashamed of themselves for allowing themselves to be hacked,” he said. “They had bad defences and they were able to be hacked. But I heard they were trying to hack the Republican­s too. But -- and this may be wrong -- but they had much stronger defences.”

CNN reported in January last year that then-fbi Director James Comey told a Senate panel that “old emails” of the Republican National Committee had been the target of hacking -- but the material was not publicly released.

The indictment­s issued on Friday by special counsel Robert Mueller allege that the Russian hackers publicly released tens of thousands of stolen Democratic emails and documents using “fictitious online personas.” Mueller is investigat­ing possible collusion between Trump’s campaign and Russia.

While Trump blamed the administra­tion of former president Barack Obama, not Russia, after the indictment­s, US ambassador to Moscow Jon Huntsman said Sunday that “Russia is guilty of involvemen­t and mischief in our election this last go-around.”

He said the summit is important as the start of a dialogue, not only about election meddling but a range of issues. Huntsman said on “Fox News Sunday” that Trump “is genuinely looking forward to sitting across the table and trying to reduce the tension in a relationsh­ip where our collective blood pressure is off-thecharts high.”

The two presidents have shared personal bonhomie in the past, but beyond the alleged hacking of the US election, their countries are deeply divided on a host of other issues including Syria and Ukraine. Before coming to Europe, Trump predicted his meeting with Putin could be the “easiest” stage of a tour that included stops in Brussels and Britain.

But he told CBS that he was going into it with “low expectatio­ns.”

Trump also defended his decision to hold the meeting after opposition Democrats, and Republican Senator John Mccain, said the summit should be cancelled in the wake of the indictment­s.

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