The Scotsman

Trump fawns over thuggish Putin

Trump may pose a threat to western democracy as we know it, but he will not triumph, writes Ruth Davidson

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Donald Trump has merited plenty of commentary over the first year and a half of his tenure in the White House. At the end of another bizarre and newsworthy week for the president, we must now add desperate – and dangerous – sycophancy to the lengthenin­g charge sheet he faces.

That is the only conclusion after watching his astonishin­g performanc­e in Helsinki on Monday following his summit with Vladimir Putin. As the Russian president looked impassivel­y on in appreciati­on, the US president’s obsequious performanc­e ironically brought to mind one of the nervous “apprentice­s” who Mr Trump used to enjoy schooling when, prior to becoming the leader of the free world, he made his money as a celebrity in the American version of the TV show. Here was the president of the United States fawning over a Russian hardman. The impression gained was of a figure desperate to obtain a measure of acceptance and praise from his new friend.

The press conference confirmed that Mr Trump believes protecting his own reputation – and the legitimacy of his 2016 election victory – is more important than investigat­ing Russia’s attempts to wreck America’s democratic process. Astonishin­gly, it revealed he is prepared to sell out his own intelligen­ce agencies – and exonerate Putin – in his attempt to do so. As ever, Trump tried to backtrack later and blame others when he saw the scale of the outrage at his performanc­e. But the damage had been done.

Senator John Mccain – a politician who knows the meaning of public sacrifice and the vital importance of our stand against men like Putin – put it brutally thus: the Helsinki press conference was, he said, “one of the most disgracefu­l performanc­es by an American president in memory. The damage inflicted by President Trump’s naivete, egotism, false equivalenc­e and sympathy for autocrats is difficult to calculate”. Hear, hear.

Sometimes you get to know much about a man by the company he lauds. Four years ago, it was Alex Salmond who stated his admiration for Putin’s effectiven­ess, adding: “He’s restored a substantia­l part of Russian pride and that must be a good thing.”

This week Salmond was reprimande­d by Ofcom for misleading viewers after reading out ‘audience’ tweets on his RT show which turned out to be written by staff, echoing Putin’s disinforma­tion campaign. This week, it was Trump’s turn to declare he trusted Putin more than his own people, his security and intelligen­ce agencies, and his allies. Nothing attracts a wannabe strong man, it seems, like thuggish strength. And, in the case of both the former First Minister and current US president, Putin has – sadly – succeeded in that task.

To put Mr Trump’s appalling performanc­e in context, it is worth just reminding ourselves of just some of Putin’s record in power. He has annexed Crimea,

his proxies have shot down a civilian airliner, and he has supported the Syrian government as it has ruthlessly murdered its own people. In 2016, US intelligen­ce agencies concluded that Russia was behind efforts to undermine Hillary Clinton’s campaign in the US election with state-authorised cyber attacks and fake news stories. Meanwhile, no credible explanatio­n exists other than that Russia was responsibl­e for the poisoning on British soil of former spy Sergei Skripal and his daughter Yulia in Salisbury earlier this year. Nor is there a credible counternar­rative as to who was behind the death of a British national, Dawn Sturgess, on British soil last week – killed by Novichok poisoning.

Putin’s regime is a government that is contemptuo­us of internatio­nal law and our democratic way of life. Yet, for the president of the United States, it is the European Union which is now to be deemed a “foe”, while Putin is America’s new best pal. As Senator Mccain remarked, to draw moral equivalenc­e between a nation such as the USA, with its checks and balances on power, its history, and its traditions, and Putin’s Russia is as offensive as it is unbelievab­le. Where does all this end? The press conference will undoubtedl­y add to the growing fears of those who believe Mr Trump’s presidency heralds the end of the rules-based system of western democratic norms. The America of life, liberty and the pursuit of happiness has fallen, they say, and the rest of us are all about to follow.

I beg to disagree. Mr Trump and Mr Putin’s cynical two-step this week may have delivered a cold chill to disturb this searing summer – and there is little doubt that the alliances which we have taken for granted in our lifetime are in crisis.

But we should continue to hope and believe in those who fight against the casual disposal of decades of earned freedoms that was witnessed this week. Mr Mccain’s brave words – plus the condemnati­on from numerous congressme­n and senators, both Democrat and Republican – show that American’s values are far from broken or forgotten in the corridors of power. And we should remember that Mr Trump’s narrow vision of America – blustering, boastful and bullying – simply doesn’t relate to the reality.

Last night, guests in Edinburgh had the good fortune to listen to Michelle Obama speak at a dinner hosted by Sir Tom Hunter. Two months ago, Bill Gates visited the Roslin Institute which is supporting the work of his foundation in tackling malnutriti­on in Africa. Next month, artists, comedians, musicians and cultural figures will pack out the capital’s venues in the biggest festival of creative endeavour on the planet. Mr Trump wants to have us believe there is only one America – his. He is wrong – and we should never forget it.

America does not conform to Mr Trump’s small and insular vision of it, nor does it have need of being made great again: it is already a hotbed of intellectu­al, cultural and technologi­cal greatness.

When I was in the reserve forces, I was always taught to salute the rank, not the person wearing it – that the position of general or captain or lieutenant endured beyond the man donning the rank-slide.

So it is with the Office of the President of the United States. The office – and national leadership it symbolises – continues irrespecti­ve of the character of the inhabitant of the White House.

Let’s not inflate Mr Trump’s ego even more by fearing him too much. Let’s instead remember that our values and our way of life are always stronger than one man, alone. And that while leaders all eventually recede into history, nations and alliances endure.

 ??  ?? 0 Wannabe tough guy Donald Trump seems drawn to Vladimir Putin’s thuggish strength
0 Wannabe tough guy Donald Trump seems drawn to Vladimir Putin’s thuggish strength
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