Dayton Daily News

Trump isn’t first president to try cozying up to Putin

- MarcA.Thiessen Hewrites for the Washington Post.

The definition of insanity is doing the same thing again and again and expecting a different result, which is one of the many reasons President Trump’s news conference with Russian President Vladimir Putin seemed so insane. Trump is trying to do something that both of his immediate predecesso­rs tried to do: turn over a new leaf with Russia. They both failed, and so will he.

Recall that GeorgeW. Bush entered the White House promising to end the “dead ideologica­l rivalry” of the ColdWar. At a 2001 summit with Putin in Slovenia, Bush declared, “I looked the man in the eye. I found him very straightfo­rward and trustworth­y....” President Barack Obama tried to appease Putin by giving in to the Russian leader’s demands that we cancel our missile-defense plan with Poland and the Czech Republic — and did it on the 70th anniversar­y of the Soviet invasion of Poland.

It is now Trump’s turn to learn the hard way that Russia is an adversary, not a competitor. His summit with Putin was a moment that called for presidenti­al strength. It came on the heels of the indictment of 12 Russian intelligen­ce agents for intervenin­g in the 2016 election and of Russia’s brazen use of a banned chemical weapon on British soil. But instead of condemning these actions, Trump refused to acknowledg­e or denounce Russia’s election interferen­ce, and he publicly sided with Putin over his own intelligen­ce community. It was a position he wisely retracted on Tuesday, declaring what he should have said standing next to Putin: “I accept our intelligen­ce community’s conclusion that Russia’s meddling in the 2016 election took place.”

Yet, as cringewort­hy as Trump’s news conference was, unlike Obama, he didn’t throw U.S. allies under the bus to appease Putin or take any of the actions many feared — such as lifting sanctions or recognizin­g Putin’s annexation of Crimea. Unlike his rhetoric, Trump’s Russia policy has actually been a dramatic improvemen­t over that of his predecesso­r. Trump expelled 60 Russian diplomats, approved a $47 million arms sale to Ukraine, continued the deployment of NATO forces to the Baltic states, posted troops to Poland’s border with Russia and levied new sanctions against Moscow for violating the Intermedia­te-Range Nuclear Forces Treaty. If Putin was looking for a more pro-Moscow policies from the U.S., his election interferen­ce backfired in a bigway.

Critics say, words matter — and they are right. But if words matter, then Trump’s critics should be careful what they say. In many cases, their responses to Trump’s news conference have matched the president in absurdity. John Brennan, the CIA director under Obama, tweeted: “Donald Trump’s press conference performanc­e in Helsinki rises to & exceeds the threshold of ‘high crimes & misdemeano­rs.’ It was nothing short of treasonous.”

As always, Trump’s critics bail him out by overplayin­g their hands. A news conference is not an impeachabl­e offense. And conspiracy theories aside, there is a simple explanatio­n for Trump’s performanc­e in Helsinki: He is deeply wrong on Russia. He thinks he can charm Putin into behaving like a normal leader. He’ll learn that Putin is KGB to his core.

When should we be worried? When Trump’s actions match his rhetoric. Until then, Trump’s summit was simply an embarrassm­ent, not a disaster.

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