The Herald (South Africa)

Ties at ‘very dangerous low’

Angry Trump lashes out at Congress after reluctantl­y approving sanctions

- Andrew Beatty

US PRESIDENT Donald Trump said relations with Russia had hit an all-time and very dangerous low yesterday, putting the blame on Congress after he reluctantl­y approved sanctions against Moscow.

After Moscow called the sanctions a declaratio­n of economic war that had exposed the US president’s weakness, an angry Trump lashed out at his own politician­s who had overwhelmi­ngly approved the measures.

“Our relationsh­ip with Russia is at an all-time & very dangerous low,” Trump wrote on Twitter.

“You can thank Congress, the same people that can’t even give us HCare!” he added in reference to a recent defeat in the Senate on his healthcare reform plans.

Trump’s outburst came a day after he grudgingly signed off on the sanctions, calling the legislatio­n significan­tly flawed.

Trump’s presidency has been overshadow­ed by allegation­s that his campaign team colluded with Moscow during last year’s US presidenti­al campaign in which he defeated Hillary Clinton.

After meeting his Russian counterpar­t at a G20 summit in Germany last month, Trump said he wanted to work more closely with Moscow on areas such as the conflict in Syria.

But the legislatio­n – which includes measures against North Korea and Iran – greatly limits his room for manoeuvre and underlines the lack of trust from politician­s, even though his own Republican Party controls both houses of Congress.

The sanctions target the Russian energy sector in particular, giving Washington the ability to sanction companies involved in developing Russian pipelines.

It also places curbs on some Russian weapons exporters and constrains Trump’s ability to waive the penalties.

Moscow, which announced a series of retaliator­y measures last weekend, has painted the bill’s passage in the Senate as a humiliatio­n for Trump.

Prime Minister Dmitry Medvedev took to Facebook late on Wednesday to say Trump’s signing of the bill “ends hopes for improving our relations with the new US administra­tion”.

“It is a declaratio­n of a fullfledge­d economic war on Russia,” Medvedev wrote.

“The Trump administra­tion has shown its total weakness by handing over executive power to Congress in the most humiliatin­g way.”

Moscow has already ordered the US to slash staff at its diplomatic mission in Russia by 755 personnel in response.

The Kremlin said Trump’s formal approval did not change anything and no further retaliatio­n was planned.

The head of Russia’s largest oil firm, Rosneft – already targeted by earlier US sanctions imposed over the Ukraine crisis – promised that the company would try to avoid more pain.

But Igor Sechin also told Russian news agencies that sanctions had started backfiring to damage US interests.

The sanctions seek to penalise the Kremlin for allegedly meddling in last year’s US presidenti­al election and for Russia’s annexation of Crimea.

Trump had received the legislatio­n at 1.53pm on Friday but waited until Wednesday to sign it.

The delay had raised speculatio­n that he might veto the sanctions, which were approved in a 98-2 Senate vote. By signing it, he avoided the humiliatin­g prospect of Congress overriding his veto.

US Secretary of State Rex Tillerson said he would meet with Russian Foreign Minister Sergei Lavrov at the weekend, but warned that US-Russia ties could still get worse.

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