Gulf News

Trump congratula­tes Putin on win, fails to mention meddling

UPBEAT CHARACTERI­SATION FIVE DAYS AFTER ADMINISTRA­TION IMPOSED SANCTIONS ON RUSSIA

-

President Donald Trump on Tuesday called to congratula­te President Vladimir Putin of Russia on his re-election, but did not raise with him the lopsided nature of his victory, Russia’s meddling in the 2016 presidenti­al election or Moscow’s role in a nerve-agent attack on a former Russian spy and his daughter living in Britain.

Instead, Trump kept the focus of the call on what the White House said were “shared interests” — among them, North Korea and Ukraine — overruling his national security advisers, who had urged him to raise Russia’s recent behaviour.

“We had a very good call,” Trump told reporters in the Oval Office, where he had just welcomed Crown Prince Mohammad Bin Salman of Saudi Arabia. “We will probably be meeting in the not-too-distant future.”

The president’s upbeat characteri­sation came five days after his administra­tion imposed sanctions on Russia for its interferen­ce in the election and for other “malicious cyberattac­ks,” the most significan­t action it has taken against Moscow since Trump took office. The United States also joined Britain, France and Germany in denouncing the Russian government for violating internatio­nal law for the attack on the spy, Sergei V. Skripal, and his daughter Yulia.

Both actions highlighte­d a contradict­ion at the heart of the Trump presidency: the administra­tion’s steadily tougher stance towards Russia and Trump’s own stubborn reluctance to criticise Putin.

Trump, a senior official said, signed off on the sanctions and the harsh language in the administra­tion’s statements. But he was determined not to antagonise Putin, this person said, because he believes his leaderto-leader rapport is the only way to improve relations between the two countries.

That strategy has put Trump at odds with his own advisers: In preparing the president for the call, aides advised him to raise the nerve-agent attack and wrote on his briefing materials, “DO NOT CONGRATULA­TE.” The Washington Post first reported these details.

Briefing cards

A second official, however, said that while Trump’s briefing cards did contain those suggestion­s, he spoke to his aides by phone and never saw the cards.

The White House also insisted that it was not the place of the United States to question how other countries conduct their elections — a contention that is at odds with years of critical statements about foreign elections by the United States, as well as recent statements by the Trump administra­tion about elections in Venezuela and Iran.

“What we do know is that Putin has been elected in their country, and that’s not something we can dictate to them how they operate,” said the press secretary, Sarah Huckabee Sanders. “We can only focus on the freeness and fairness of our elections, something we 100 per cent fully support.”

Echoing the president, she went on to rail against the investigat­ion of the special counsel, Robert Mueller, into links between the Trump campaign and Russia. “To pretend like going through this absurd process for over a year would not bring frustratio­n seems a little bit ridiculous,” she said.

Sanders noted that other foreign leaders, including Chancellor Angela Merkel, of Germany, had called Putin. Merkel’s office released a terse account of their call, saying she had told the Russian president, “Today, it is more important than ever to continue the dialogue with one another and to foster relations between our states and peoples.”

Republican lawmakers, even those who have resisted criticisin­g Trump, faulted him for congratula­ting Putin. “When I look at a Russian election, what I see is a lack of credibilit­y in tallying the results,” said the Senate majority leader, Mitch McConnell of Kentucky.

 ?? AP ?? ■ President Donald Trump with Russian President Vladimir Putin at the G-20 Summit in Germany in July. The Kremlin said Trump called Putin to congratula­te him on re-election.
AP ■ President Donald Trump with Russian President Vladimir Putin at the G-20 Summit in Germany in July. The Kremlin said Trump called Putin to congratula­te him on re-election.

Newspapers in English

Newspapers from United Arab Emirates