Business World

Trump plays golf before meeting Putin

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DONALD AND VLADIMIR

TURNBERRY/ GLASGOW, Scotland — US President Donald Trump played golf on Saturday at his course on Scotland’s west coast ahead of a summit with Kremlin chief Vladimir Putin that could be overshadow­ed by accusation­s of Russian meddling in the 2016 US election.

In an uproarious trip to Europe, Mr. Trump harangued members of the North Atlantic Treaty Organizati­on military alliance, scolded Germany for its dependence on Russian energy and shocked Britain by publicly criticizin­g Prime Minister Theresa May’s Brexit strategy.

Mr. Trump apologized to Ms. May for the furore over his withering public critique, blaming “fake news” and promising instead a bilateral trade agreement with Britain after it leaves the European Union in March.

While Mr. Trump took tea with Queen Elizabeth, a US federal grand jury charged 12 Russian intelligen­ce officers with stealing data from the campaign of Democratic presidenti­al candidate Hillary Clinton.

Mr. Trump has repeatedly said the investigat­ion into suspected Russian interferen­ce in the 2016 US election — which he casts as a “rigged witch hunt” — makes it hard for him to do substantiv­e deals with Moscow.

Wearing a baseball cap emblazoned with “USA” for a round of golf, Mr. Trump at one point waved at dozens of protesters who were chanting “No Trump!” just a few hundred yards away from a beach beside his Mr. Trump Turnberry course. He appeared to say something to them. They booed.

Describing golf as “my primary form of exercise,” Mr. Trump tweeted: “The weather is beautiful, and this place is incredible! Tomorrow I go to Helsinki for a Monday meeting with Vladimir Putin.”

Mr. Putin held several meetings in the Kremlin, including talks with Palestinia­n leader Mahmoud Abbas.

The Russian leader was due to attend the opera at the Bolshoi Theatre later and watch the final of the soccer World Cup in Moscow on Sunday.

Mr. Trump and Mr. Putin, who control the world’s two biggest nuclear arsenals, are due to meet in the Finnish capital, a venue that evokes memories of Cold War showdowns between the Soviet Union and the United States.

Mr. Trump, a 72- year- old former New York real estate developer who praises his own dealmaking skills, and Mr. Putin, a 65-year-old former KGB spy who cultivates a macho image as a man of action, are due to have some time alone at the summit.

In the most detailed US accusation to date that Moscow meddled in the presidenti­al election, a federal grand jury said Russian military intelligen­ce agency officers covertly monitored computers of Ms. Clinton’s campaign and Democratic campaign committees, and stole large amounts of data.

The charges shine an even brighter spotlight on Mr. Trump’s treatment of Mr. Putin, who has repeatedly denied that Russia sought to skew the election that Mr. Trump, a Republican, unexpected­ly won.

US Secretary of State Mike Pompeo, speaking to reporters before his departure to Helsinki on Sunday, pushed back at Democrats who called for the summit to be canceled.

“I am confident that President Trump’s meeting with Vladimir Putin will put America in a better place. I think it’s very important that they meet,” he told reporters en route from Mexico on Friday, in remarks embargoed until Saturday.

Mr. Trump asked why Barack Obama had not acted on claims of Russian meddling if the Federal Bureau of Investigat­ion ( FBI) had informed the then president ahead of the 2016 election. He also asked where the Democratic National Committee server now was.

“Why didn’t the FBI take possession of it? Deep State?” Mr. Trump asked on Twitter.

Asked at a news conference on Friday whether he would tell Mr. Putin to stay out of US elections, Mr. Trump said “Yes.”

“I will absolutely bring that up,” Mr. Trump told reporters.

“I don’t think you’ll have any ‘Gee, I did it. I did it. You got me.’” —

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