The Borneo Post

Putin hopes a Trump win would change course for Russia

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President Vladimir Putin has no doubt he will secure another term in Russia’s election. The vote that leaves him in suspense, and could do more to change his policies, will occur eight months later in the United States.

Putin has publicly said he prefers US President Joe Biden to his predecesso­r and aspiring successor Donald Trump, a remark widely interprete­d to mean exactly the opposite, as the former KGB man hopes his notoriety will boost the Republican mogul.

Trump has voiced admiration for Putin, raged against NATO, the alliance founded to defend against Moscow, and boasted that he within one day would end the war in Ukraine, which Russia invaded two years ago.

Trump supporters in Congress, seizing on an unrelated dispute over migration, have held up approval of $60 billion in military aid for Ukraine, whose troops have faced the first battlefiel­d setbacks in months as ammunition runs scarce.

Biden in his annual State of the Union address lashed out at Trump for saying he would encourage Putin to “do whatever the hell you want” if a NATO member does not spend enough.

“My message to President Putin, who I’ve known for a long time, is simple,” Biden said. “I will not bow down.”

Leon Aron, a senior fellow at the American Enterprise Institute who studies US-Russia relations, expected Putin to wait for the US election before any significan­t new move, militarily or diplomatic­ally, on Ukraine.

“I don’t expect any Russian attempt at some sort of major offensive in Ukraine which would cost them several hundred thousand men. The reason is that Putin is waiting to get a good deal on the cheap,” Aron said.

He said Trump in a new term could block arms to Ukraine and “the only question-mark then would be how much Europe has been scared” into stepping up its own support to Kyiv.

In one of his most widely criticized moments as president, Trump, appearing awestruck at a meeting in Helsinki, took at face value Putin’s denial of US intelligen­ce findings that Russia interfered in the 2016 election to back Trump over Hillary Clinton.

Fiona Hill, a former White House adviser who has said she was so alarmed by the news conference that she considered faking a medical emergency to stop it, said Trump saw Putin as “an iconic figure.”

“He’s somebody who’s able to get his way and he looks like the ultimate strongman,” Hill, who testified in Trump’s first impeachmen­t, told a recent conference of conservati­ves opposed to Trump.

But Hill acknowledg­ed that Trump did not block many measures against Russia. She said his psychology was more that he did not want to feel “humiliated” in person by a “peer.”

Asked about the recent death in prison of Russian opposition leader Alexei Navalny, which Trump has made light of, Hill said that Trump’s reaction if Navalny had died during his administra­tion would depend “if it reflected on him or not.”

“If somebody had actually said that this was a sign of American weakness, that we couldn’t keep Navalny safe,” she said, “that would have changed Trump’s perception.”

“It’s just as capricious as that, I’m afraid.”

 ?? ?? Vladimir Putin
Vladimir Putin
 ?? ?? Donald Trump
Donald Trump

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