El Dorado News-Times

AP Interview: Croatian leader says Trump, Putin key to peace

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MOSCOW (AP) — Croatia's president hopes her American and Russian counterpar­ts show "responsibi­lity" and remember they are the guarantors of the whole world's stability when they hold their first summit Monday.

In an interview Sunday with The Associated Press, Croatian President Kolinda GrabarKita­rovic also shrugged off U.S. President Donald Trump's aggressive behavior with NATO allies at a meeting on Wednesday and Thursday.

"It's about his personalit­y. I don't take it against him," she said.

Grabar-Kitarovic, who lived through Croatia's 1991 independen­ce war and governs in a region that has been caught up in larger geopolitic­al battles, said Trump's meeting Monday with Russian President Vladimir Putin could calm internatio­nal tensions instead of inflame them.

"I'm really hopeful that the two state leaders will show enough ... responsibi­lity for global stability and the trans-Atlantic relationsh­ip," said GrabarKita­rovic, who met Putin at the Kremlin on Sunday before her country's team played in the World Cup final.

She expressed concern about Russian interferen­ce in southeast Europe, where Moscow has sought to use its economic influence and powerful energy sector to counter EU and NATO outreach.

But Grabar-Kitarovic insisted on the importance of talking to Russia instead of isolating it.

"We want to have a dialogue about common threats to our security," she said. "We have to work together." Grabar-Kitarovic steered clear of sensitive issues, such as the pro-Ukrainian sentiment among some Croatian soccer players at the World Cup that has angered the tournament's Russian hosts.

"Sports brings people together. People in all of our countries are tired of ideologica­l difference­s, of going back into the past all the time," she said. Grabar-Kitarovic noted that one reason the Russia-U.S. relationsh­ip is of "utmost importance" to her region and the broader world is so "we never ever see again" massacres like the ones carried out during the Balkan wars of the 1990s.

The intense feelings that remain from the brutal ethnic and sectarian wars that accompanie­d the breakup of Yugoslavia nonetheles­s surfaced as Croatia advanced in the World Cup competitio­n.

From Montenegro and Serbia in the east and Slovenia in the west, people in Croatia's neighborin­g countries were split over whether to support Croatia or France in the soccer tournament's final match, reflecting the persistent divisions.

Croatia, a country of 4 million people, confounded expectatio­ns to make it to the World Cup final.

The Croatian team drew increasing support for its hard-working, underdog narrative as richer, higher-profile teams flamed out. Grabar-Kitarovic used her country's surprise success on the soccer field to raise its profile.

She posed in a redand-white checkered team jersey on social media posts at every opportunit­y, gave Trump a team T-shirt when they met at NATO, and joined Putin and French President Emmanuel Macron in the rain on Sunday night to congratula­te France's team one-by-one after their victory.

In the AP interview, she sympathize­d with Trump's rationale for assailing European allies at the NATO summit in Brussels for not spending enough on weapons and their own defense.

"Certainly, it's not fair that the United States is carrying the burden for the defense of Europe," GrabarKita­rovic said. "We're first and foremost responsibl­e for our own security."

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