Weekend Herald

Why Trump in the White House doesn’t work for Russia

- Angela Charlton

Having Donald Trump in the White House is looking increasing­ly like a liability for the Kremlin, rather than an asset. But don’t expect President Vladimir Putin to say that out loud.

Russia’s official assessment of Trump’s high-stakes summit with Putin is carefully upbeat.

In his first public comment on it, Putin on Thursday declared it “successful”.

That stands in sharp contrast to the rain of criticism the US President has faced at home.

And as the days pass and Trump’s comments about Monday’s summit become more and more contradict­ory, Moscow appears to be quietly losing hope for a thaw in Russian-US ties under Trump.

Putin doesn’t blame Trump for that. He blames Trump’s opponents.

“Certain forces are trying to disavow the results of the meeting in Helsinki,” and hamper progress on what they discussed, such as limiting their nuclear arsenals or ending the war in Syria, Putin said.

In a meeting at the Foreign Ministry with Russia’s ambassador­s to other countries, Putin warned them to “take to this into account” in dealing with the US.

The US-Russia relationsh­ip is “in some ways worse than during the Cold War”, Putin said, “It’s naive to think that the problems would be solved in a few hours.”

The Helsinki summit allowed them to start on “the path to positive change”, he said, but added that he was cautious about the longer term.

“We will see how things develop further,” Putin said, evoking those in the US trying to prevent any improvemen­t in relations and “putting narrow party interests above the national interest”.

The lively debate in Washington is unthinkabl­e in Russia, where Putin has never faced real political opposition and leads a country that has never had a democratic transition of power.

While he and Trump seem to be cut from the same cloth, they come from very different worlds.

In public, Russian officials have been consistent in their praise of the summit and criticism of Trump’s opponents, while also exercising caution about taking aim at Trump himself.

Behind the scenes, however, some members of the political and business elite have a different assessment.

“Trump’s behaviour was a total disaster for long-term prospects of the normalisat­ion of the US-Russia relationsh­ip,” said Alexander Gabuev of the Carnegie Moscow Centre.

Trump has come under widespread domestic criticism about

Trump’s behaviour was a total disaster for long-term prospects of the normalisat­ion of the US-Russia relationsh­ip. Alexander Gabuev

the meeting with Putin both from Democratic opponents and some Republican­s.

He has made contradict­ory statements over whether he believes Russia interfered in the 2016 US election.

“He’s made things much worse,” Gabuev said.

Trump tweeted yesterday that his critics in the media “are pushing so recklessly hard and hate the fact that I’ll probably have a good relationsh­ip with Putin”.

Indeed, when Trump came to office, many Russians hoped he would pave the way for lifting sanctions and ending years of tensions.

But now, Gabuev said, “whether this bet on Trump for the long term is a smart one is hard to see.”

In a possible dig at Trump’s unpredicta­ble presidency, Putin on Thursday lauded Russia’s “consistent, responsibl­e, independen­t foreign policy”.

Putin had both good and bad things to say about Trump in a broad speech about foreign policy.

The Russian leader praised Trump’s mediation efforts in North Korea, but slammed his protection­ist trade policies and the decision to pull out of the internatio­nal accord curbing Iran’s nuclear activities.

He also lashed out at Europe and US-dominated Nato, saying Russia would hit back with an “equivalent response” to the alliance’s bases near Russia’s borders and other “aggressive steps”. He didn’t elaborate.

Russian politician­s also criticised proposals by US lawmakers to question Trump’s interprete­r from the Helsinki summit about what topics the men discussed privately.

Konstantin Kosachev, head of the upper house of the Russian Parliament’s foreign affairs committee, said the idea of questionin­g the translator about what was said privately sets a dangerous precedent that threatens “the whole idea of diplomacy”, according to Russian news agencies.

Kosachev also said if the summit turns out to be a failure, it won’t be the fault of Putin or Trump.

“There is no doubt about the Russian side’s ability and readiness to fulfil the results of this summit, but there is doubt regarding the American side, and it not is connected to things President Trump personally wants to achieve or avoid,” he said. “It is connected to his ability to fulfil these agreements, which, to my mind, is artificial­ly restricted by the US Congress and some US agencies, let alone intelligen­ce services,” Kosachev added.

If Putin’s speech to the envoys raised serious issues, the Foreign Ministry, known by its Russian acronym MID, used the occasion to make a sardonic quip.

Its official Twitter account posted a photo of a long line of the ambassador­s heading into the Putin speech at the ministry’s ornate headquarte­rs. The caption, accompanie­d by a winking emoji, said: “When you can’t wait to meddle in someone’s elections — Russian diplomats going to work at MID.”

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