Daily Freeman (Kingston, NY)

Trump and Putin raise possibilit­ies of another meeting

- By Matthew Lee

WASHINGTON » Rarely has an RSVP been so complicate­d.

President Donald Trump is open to visiting Moscow — if he gets a formal invitation from Vladimir Putin, the White House said. Russian President Putin said he’s game for a trip to Washington — but his answer came only after Trump retracted his invitation for a fall sit-down.

The awkward back and forth is the latest round of summit drama flowing from the two leaders’ controvers­ial first meeting in Helsinki this month. It underscore­s Trump’s eagerness to forge a warmer relationsh­ip with

Putin, though the Russian does not appear to share the urgency and Trump’s allies in Washington are watching with frustratio­n.

Trump’s tentative yes to a Moscow trip comes even as lawmakers are still pushing for details about what he and Putin discussed in Helsinki. The president has been widely criticized for failing to publicly denounce Russia’s interferen­ce in the 2016 U.S. election and appearing to accept Putin’s denials of such activity.

Trump’s response to the criticism — an abruptly announced invitation for a second meeting in Washington in the fall — got an ice-cold reception from Republican­s in Congress facing tough elections in November. Moscow was

lukewarm and did not immediatel­y accept.

Then National Security Adviser John Bolton said Wednesday that plans for a fall visit would be delayed until 2019. He cited special counsel Robert Mueller’s investigat­ion into Russian election meddling as the reason, using Trump’s favorite term for the probe: “witch hunt.”

But the possibilit­y of a Trump trip to Moscow emerged Friday after Putin said he was ready to invite Trump — or to visit Washington if conditions are right.

“I understand very well what President Trump said: He has the wish to conduct further meetings,” Putin said while traveling in Johannesbu­rg. “I am ready for this. We are ready to invite President Trump to Moscow. By the way, he has such an invitation, I told him of this. I am prepared to go to

Washington, but, I repeat, if the appropriat­e conditions for work are created.”

White House press secretary Sarah Huckabee Sanders responded that Trump “looks forward to having President Putin to Washington after the first of the year, and he is open to visiting Moscow upon receiving a reciprocal formal invitation.”

But it’s just talk at this point.

It’s part of “a power game between Putin and Trump,” said Dr. Alina Polyakova of the Brookings Institutio­n. She said the Kremlin basically drove the entire process in Helsinki, and “we’re seeing that again now.”

Trump is hardly in a strong position because “the Helsinki summit was such a fiasco,” said James Goldgeier of the Council on Foreign Relations.

A Putin visit to Washington between now and January

“could have a lot of poor optics,” he said, and “it’s really hard to see the upside” of a Trump trip to Moscow.

The spectacle of Trump in the Russian capital — the site of unproven salacious allegation­s in an antiTrump dossier compiled by a former British spy — was likely to raise eyebrows and alarm on Capitol Hill.

Just two days earlier, lawmakers from both political parties unsuccessf­ully demanded details of the Helsinki meeting from Secretary of State Mike Pompeo, who stonewalle­d nearly all those inquiries at a contentiou­s hearing by maintainin­g that the president has a right to private conversati­ons.

Since Helsinki, Trump has tried to walk back at least some of his comments. And Pompeo told the Senate Foreign Relations Committee that despite Trump’s public statements that allegation­s

of Russian interferen­ce are “a hoax” he accepts that Russia did meddle in the 2016 election.

Trump met Friday with his national security team to discuss threats to the 2018 congressio­nal midterm elections, the first such session he has convened amid warnings from intelligen­ce officials that Russia is again intent on interferin­g in the U.S. democratic process.

The White House released a statement saying Trump “made it clear that his Administra­tion will not tolerate foreign interferen­ce in our elections from any nation state or other malicious actors.”

Republican lawmakers have made it clear they are not eager to see Putin, who intelligen­ce officials say was aware of the 2016 interferen­ce, just weeks before Election Day 2018.

Putin “will not be welcome” at the Capitol, Senate

Majority Leader Mitch McConnell told reporters.

House Speaker Paul Ryan said such invitation­s are reserved “for allies.”

The Republican leaders appear to be increasing­ly relying on public signals, rather than private phone calls or Oval Office chats, to catch the White House’s attention and communicat­e with Trump — especially when they are at odds with the president’s approach or policies.

Ryan has said he did not speak to the president in the days after the Helsinki summit.

Moscow has portrayed its tensions with Washington as a result of Trump being hobbled by domestic political disputes and a widespread “Russophobi­a” perpetrate­d by holdovers from the Obama years — echoing Trump’s penchant to blame his predecesso­r for many problems.

 ?? JACQUELYN MARTIN — THE ASSOCIATED PRESS ?? President Donald Trump delivers remarks on the economy from the South Lawn of the White House, Friday in Washington.
JACQUELYN MARTIN — THE ASSOCIATED PRESS President Donald Trump delivers remarks on the economy from the South Lawn of the White House, Friday in Washington.

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