Trump delays Putin meeting
The White House has pushed to next year President Donald Trump’s planned meeting with Russian President Vladimir Putin, a move that comes amid intensifying criticism of Trump’s conflicting statements on Russian interference in US elections.
‘‘The president believes that the next bilateral meeting with President Putin should take place after the Russia witch hunt is over, so we’ve agreed that it will be after the first of the year,’’ national security adviser John Bolton said yesterday, referring to Special Counsel Robert Mueller’s probe into Russian interference in the 2016 presidential campaign.
Trump has sharply criticised the investigation and has maintained that there was no coordination between Russia and his presidential campaign.
Last week, the White House announced that Trump had asked Bolton to invite Putin to Washington in the fall for a follow-up meeting to their summit in Helsinki this month.
Trump has faced bipartisan pushback in Washington over what critics decry as his overly accommodating approach to Putin, who the US intelligence community determined personally ordered interference in the 2016 campaign aimed at helping the then-GOP nominee.
But Russia also did not immediately jump at the opportunity to schedule a second summit between the two leaders.
In Moscow, Kremlin foreign policy adviser Yuri Ushakov said on Wednesday that the Kremlin had received a second summit invitation from Bolton several days after the Helsinki meeting but that no preparations were in motion. Considering the current ‘‘atmosphere’’ in Washington, Ushakov told Russia’s Interfax news agency, ‘‘it seems to me that for now, it would be right to wait for the dust to settle before having a businesslike discussion of all issues, but not now.’’
Ushakov said that there were ‘‘other options’’ to consider for a bilateral meeting, including at the Group of 20 meeting, which both leaders are expected to attend, in Buenos Aires at the end of November.
Congressional Republicans, who have roundly rebuked Trump’s performance alongside Putin in Helsinki, have warned the president against repeating it with the Russian leader here in Washington.
‘‘The president believes that the next bilateral meeting with President Putin should take place after the Russia witch hunt is over . . . ’ John Bolton, national security adviser