The Jerusalem Post

Kremlin sees bad US-Russia ties as top 2017 disappoint­ment

- • By ILYA ARKHIPOV

Topping the Kremlin’s list for disappoint­ments in 2017 was the failure to restore ties with the US, according to spokesman Dmitry Peskov.

“Russian-American relations and the position Washington takes toward our country can’t but elicit regret,” Peskov told a conference call on Friday, saying the situation “easily could” rank as the leading negative note for this year. He blamed “anti-Russian hysteria” in Washington around the probes into alleged meddling by Moscow in the 2016 US presidenti­al elections, saying the Kremlin still hopes for improvemen­t, but “it takes two to tango.”

A year ago, the Kremlin was looking forward to a new era in relations with Donald Trump as he prepared to enter the White House after calling for a warmup in a relationsh­ip that had fallen into the deep freeze under then-president Barack Obama. But instead, Washington and Moscow have experience­d the worst tensions in decades.

The US is preparing steps toward new sanctions on Russia that Peskov warned could amount to “possibly unbearable risks and dangers” to ties. A new US law that took effect in August calls for the Treasury to compile a list of business tycoons and companies seen as close to the Kremlin as potential targets for more sanctions – first imposed over the Ukraine crisis and later linked to the alleged election interferen­ce. The law also calls for a report on the possible impact of imposing restrictio­ns on the purchase of Russian government debt by US investors.

Last week, as the US added the names of several prominent Russians to its sanctions list, President Vladimir Putin approved a plan to issue special bonds to allow wealthy local investors worried about sanctions to bring money back into the country.

Russia has accused the US of stoking the conflict in Ukraine with a plan to send defensive weapons, backing “terrorists” in Syria and risking accidental war with its harsh rhetoric over North Korea. The US, meanwhile, charges Moscow with meddling in Western elections and not doing enough to get North Korean leader Kim Jong Un to give up his nuclear ambitions.

Despite the tensions, personal relations between Trump and Putin appear warm. Earlier this month, the Russian leader thanked his US counterpar­t for passing along intelligen­ce that helped foil a terrorist plot in St. Petersburg. Trump, meanwhile, expressed gratitude for Putin’s endorsemen­t of his economic policies.

There’s no meeting between the leaders under discussion at present, Russian Foreign Minister Sergey Lavrov said earlier this week. In an interview with the Interfax news agency released Thursday, he denied Russia was disappoint­ed with the soured relationsh­ip.

“Disappoint­ment, as a rule, arises from inflated expectatio­ns and we didn’t have any of those Russian-American relations,” he said.

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