Las Vegas Review-Journal

PUTIN SAID TO BE CANNY IN 1-ON-1 TALKS

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by the German chancellor, Angela Merkel, and other leaders for pulling out of the Paris climate accords and for his hard line on immigratio­n.

Trump’s team said he might bring up Russia’s documented meddling in the 2016 election, but he is unlikely to dwell on it: Doing so would emphasize doubts about the legitimacy of his election. Aides expect him to focus on Syria, including creating safe zones, fighting the Islamic State group and confrontin­g Putin’s unwillingn­ess to stop the government of President Bashar Assad from using chemical weapons against civilians.

A day before Trump was to leave Washington, the White House announced that the meeting with Putin would be a formal bilateral discussion, rather than a quick pull-aside at the economic summit meeting that some had expected.

The format benefits both. Putin, a canny one-on-one operator who once brought a Labrador retriever to a meeting with Merkel because he knew she was afraid of dogs, will be able to take the measure of Trump.

Trump’s aides are seeking structure and predictabi­lity. They hope that a formal meeting, with aides present and an agenda will leave less room for improvisat­ion and relegate Russia’s meddling in the campaign to a secondary topic, behind more pressing policy concerns that the president is eager to address.

“Nobody has found the slightest evidence of collusion, any evidence the vote was tampered with, so now they have turned their obsession to Russian ‘interferen­ce,’” said Kellyanne Conway, the president’s senior counselor and former campaign manager. “I don’t think that’s what the American people are interested in.”

Trump’s meeting with Putin is one of several charged encounters he will face in Hamburg. After North Korea’s announceme­nt Tuesday that it had successful­ly tested its first interconti­nental ballistic missile, his planned huddle with President Xi Jinping of China took on greater significan­ce, as Trump bristles at Beijing’s refusal to do more to confront the nuclear threat from North Korea and weighs his limited options for acting alone. He is also planning private discussion­s with Prime Minister Shinzo Abe of Japan and President Moon Jae-in of South Korea that are certain to center on the North’s continued provocatio­ns.

But the political stakes could not be higher for Trump in his meeting with Putin, as lawmakers in both parties press him to stand tough. They signaled their wariness last month with a 98-2 vote in the Senate to codify sanctions against Russia and require that Congress review any move by the president to lift them, a step the White House is resisting.

“Let’s be clear: The Russians interfered in our election and helped elect Donald Trump president,” said Sen. Jack Reed, D-R.I., the ranking member of the House Armed Services Committee. “There is a serious, ongoing criminal investigat­ion into this matter. And President Trump must refrain from any unilateral concession­s to Russia.”

Cognizant of the perils, the White House has planned Trump’s itinerary to counter the perception that he is too friendly with Moscow. In Warsaw today, he will deliver a major speech and meet with Central and Eastern European allies, activities calculated to demonstrat­e his commitment to NATO in the face of Russian aggression. But there, too, Trump will be under pressure to do what he refused to in Brussels during his first trip: explicitly endorse, on European soil, the Article 5 collective defense principle that undergirds NATO.

His advisers say that he is eager to meet with President Andrzej Duda of Poland, a center-right politician who shares Trump’s skepticism about migration from Syria, and that he sees a chance to make lucrative energy deals with Duda’s government — perhaps at the expense of Russia.

But the substance and body language of his encounter with Putin will draw the most scrutiny.

“I expect an Olympian level of macho posturing between these two leaders, who both understand the power of symbolism,” said Derek Chollet, a former assistant secretary of defense. “Putin will be very prepared for this meeting. He’s someone who is a master at manipulati­on.”

Putin has signaled that he will press Trump to lift sanctions imposed on Russia for its annexation of Crimea, its interferen­ce in Ukraine and its election meddling, and to hand over Russian diplomatic compounds on Long Island, N.Y., and in Maryland that the United States seized last year.

The potential pitfalls are more than theoretica­l. White House officials recall with dread the images that emerged from Trump’s May meeting with Foreign Minister Sergey Lavrov and Ambassador Sergey Kislyak of Russia in the Oval Office, which showed the president grinning, laughing and clasping hands with the Russian officials.

The biggest concern, people who have spoken recently with members of his team said, is that Trump, in trying to forge a rapport, appears to be unwittingl­y siding with Putin. Like Trump, Putin has expressed disdain for the news media, and he asserted in a recent interview that secretive elements within the U.S. government were working against the president’s agenda. Two people close to Trump said they expected the men to bond over their disdain for “fake news.”

“You don’t want to come out of there saying, ‘We’re friends, and the enemy is the deep state and the media,’” said Michael A. Mcfaul, a former ambassador to Russia. “If it were somebody else other than Trump, you could imagine a tough conversati­on about Ukraine and election meddling, but that’s probably too optimistic. Politics does constrain, I think, the parameters of the possible for any kind of major breakthrou­gh.”

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