Chattanooga Times Free Press

During call-in show, Putin sarcastica­lly offers Comey political asylum in Russia

- BY VLADIMIR ISACHENKOV AND NATALIYA VASILYEVA

MOSCOW — Wading into the furor surroundin­g the investigat­ions of the Trump White House, President Vladimir Putin used a national call-in show Thursday to disparage what he called U.S. “political infighting” that is blocking better relations with Russia.

The Russian leader even sarcastica­lly offered political asylum to fired

FBI Director James Comey.

Putin mixed the tough talk with benevolent promises about the Russian economy to disgruntle­d callers complainin­g about decrepit housing and low salaries during the four-hour marathon intended to burnish his father-of-the-nation image. But the 64-year-old wouldn’t say if he plans to seek another term in the 2018 election, although he is widely expected to do so.

Putin reaffirmed his denial of allegation­s by U.S. intelligen­ce agencies that the Kremlin meddled in the 2016 U.S. election, saying that Russia has openly expressed its views and hasn’t engaged in any covert activities.

He also tried to turn the tables on the U.S., saying it has sought to influence Russian elections by funding nongovernm­ental organizati­ons as part of its aspiration­s for world domination.

“Turn a globe and point your finger anywhere, you will find American interests and interferen­ce there,” he said.

Putin also likened Comey to Edward Snowden, a contractor who leaked thousands of secret documents from the National Security Agency and has been living in Russia since being granted asylum in 2013.

“It sounds and looks very weird when the chief of a security agency records his conversati­on with the commander in chief and then hands it over to media via his friend,” Putin said.

“What’s the difference then between the FBI director and Mr. Snowden?” he asked. “In that case, he’s more of a rights campaigner defending a certain position than the security agency chief.”

On an acerbic note, he added that if Comey “faces some sort of persecutio­n in connection with that, we are ready to offer political asylum in Russia to him as well.”

The remarks reflected Putin’s frustratio­n with the investigat­ions into alleged links between President Donald Trump’s campaign and Russia. The inquiries have dogged the White House, shattering Moscow’s hopes for improving ties with Washington.

He called the allegation­s a reflection of “exacerbati­ng political infighting.”

On a conciliato­ry note, Putin added that Russia still hopes for normalizat­ion of ties with the U.S.

“We don’t see America as our enemy,” he said.

He said Moscow and Washington could cooperate to prevent the proliferat­ion of weapons of mass destructio­n and pool efforts to tackle the North Korean nuclear and missile problem.

The two countries also could cooperate on global poverty and preventing climate change, he said, adding that the U.S. remains the essential player on climate despite Trump’s decision to pull the U.S. out of the Paris accord.

Moscow also hopes the U.S. could play a “constructi­ve role” in helping settle the Ukrainian crisis, he said.

 ??  ?? Vladimir Putin
Vladimir Putin

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