Khaleej Times

Trump plays down summit expectatio­ns

AFTER KIM, TRUMP WANTS TO RECREATE THE SAME ‘MAGIC’ WITH PUTIN

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turnberry (scotland) — US President Donald Trump is keeping expectatio­n low for his highstakes summit with Russia’s Vladimir Putin, saying “nothing bad is going to come out of it, and maybe some good will come out”.

The president also told CBS News in an interview that he “hadn’t thought” about asking Putin to extradite the dozen Russian military intelligen­ce officers indicted this past week in Washington on charges related to the hacking of Democratic targets in the 2016 US election. But after being given the idea by his interviewe­r, Trump said “certainly I’ll be asking about it”.

The United States has no extraditio­n treaty with Moscow and can’t compel Russia to hand over citizens. —

Aface-to-face sitdown with a long-feared foe. Endless media hype. Huge ratings. Although President Donald Trump has met Russia’s Vladimir Putin twice before, he is eager to recreate in Finland the heady experience that he had last month with North Korean leader Kim Jong-un in Singapore: a summit that became a mass media event complete with powerful presidenti­al images. Ever the showman and insistent on establishi­ng closer ties to Moscow, Trump overruled his advisers and demanded the rituals and pageantry of a formal summit.

Trump had boasted to confidants about the number of cameras in Singapore, claiming it dwarfed coverage of the Oscars, according to a person familiar with his thinking but not authorised to discuss private conversati­ons. Though Trump originally expressed concern that Helsinki was not glamorous enough and favoured hosting Putin at the White House, the president was reassured by aides that it would be an effective backdrop. And long believing in the power of personal connection­s, he has insisted to aides that it was essential to sit down with Putin to establish a rapport.

“He’s been very nice to me the times I’ve met him. I’ve been nice to him. He’s a competitor,” Trump said of Putin last week in Brussels. “You know, somebody was saying, ‘Is he an enemy?’ No, he’s not my enemy. ‘Is he a friend?’ No, I don’t know him well enough.”

Drawing on his experience as a marketer and salesman, Trump has long been convinced that his mastery of powerful images has been essential to his political rise. The president has told advisers that the Singapore diplomacy made him look like a take-charge president. And it was not lost on him that his poll numbers received a temporary bump after the meeting.

With the same attention to detail that he devoted to campaign ads, Trump mastermind­ed many of the looks for his meeting with Kim, including the two leaders’ dramatic initial greeting and handshake and, later, their one-on-one time. At one point, he startled the Secret Service by giving Kim an impromptu tour of some mighty American machinery — the presidenti­al limousine known as “The Beast.”

Though the results from the North Korea summit are debatable, Trump has told confidants he believed it was a masterstro­ke, according to three outside advisers and White House officials.

Always favouring bold gambits that would separate him from his predecesso­rs, Trump believed that the historic meeting with Kim was potentiall­y his ticket for a Nobel Peace Prize and would become an essential part of his legacy.

While summits with Russian leaders are far more common, Trump believes a similar boost would occur if he can improve relations with Moscow and get Putin to make concession­s never attained by President Barack Obama.

“I could say: ‘Would you do me a favor? Would you get out of Syria,’” Trump said in an interview with Fox News last month. “‘Would you do me a favour? Would you get out of Ukraine?’”

And while the imagery of Singapore made the idea of a Putin summit that much more tantalisin­g, Trump was already keen on setting up a one-on-one meeting, even with the risks entailed in meeting an experience­d leader who is also a former KGB official. The president met Putin on the sidelines of internatio­nal summits last year — once in Germany, once in Vietnam — and both times he invited his Russian counterpar­t to the White House, according to three current and former administra­tion officials.

He reiterated the invitation on a call with Putin this spring and initially told aides that he wanted to have the meeting at the White House.

He was later convinced to do it abroad, tacking the summit onto his planned visit to Belgium and Britain. Initially concerned that

Helsinki was not a fitting location, Trump relented after being briefed on the history of United StatesRuss­ia summits in Finland and after seeing that it could be scheduled after a visit to one of his golf courses in Scotland, according to the three outside advisers and officials.

But many in Washington are leery of the summit occurring anywhere, believing that just by agreeing to meet, Trump has offered further global legitimacy to Putin, who will preside over the World Cup final in Moscow the day before the summit. Aides have argued to Trump that the chances of substantiv­e progress on a host of thorny issues, including Syria and Ukraine, are slim. Longtime American allies and White House aides alike have expressed concerns about the meeting.

Hovering over Helsinki is the specter of the 2016 election interferen­ce and the ongoing special counsel probe into possible collusion between Trump campaign officials and Russia.

There were calls from Capitol Hill for the president to cancel the summit after Friday’s indictment of 12 Russian military intelligen­ce officers accused of hacking Democrats in an effort to help Trump.

“If President Trump is not prepared to hold Putin accountabl­e, the summit in Helsinki should not move forward,” said Republican Sen. John McCain of Arizona.

But the White House has insisted the meeting is on.

Trump has repeatedly cast doubt on the conclusion that Russia was behind the hacking and frequently derided special counsel Robert Mueller’s investigat­ion into possible links between Russia and his campaign as a “witch hunt.”

But he said in Britain that he would raise the election meddling with Putin even as he played down its impact. —

These Russian individual­s did their work during the Obama years. Why didn’t Obama do something about it? Because he thought Crooked Hillary Clinton would win, that’s why. Had nothing to do with the Trump Administra­tion, but Fake News doesn’t want to report the truth, as usual! Donald Trump,

US President

President Trump’s continued refusal to condemn the Russians’ attacks on our democracy, even after special counsel Mueller indicted 12 Russian intelligen­ce officials, makes it clear that meeting with Putin would be both pointless and dangerous.

Nancy Pelosi, House minority leader

Right now, there’s no trust in the relationsh­ip and, because of that, problem-solving is practicall­y impossible. So this is an attempt to see if we can defuse and take some of the drama and quite frankly some of the danger out of the relationsh­ip right now. Jon Huntsman,

US Ambassador to Russia

 ?? Reuters ?? People attend ‘Helsinki Calling’ protest ahead of meeting between the US President Donald Trump and Russian President Vladimir Putin on Sunday. —
Reuters People attend ‘Helsinki Calling’ protest ahead of meeting between the US President Donald Trump and Russian President Vladimir Putin on Sunday. —

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