Los Angeles Times

Russia woes follow Trump to France

The president’s troubles at home complicate his visit to mark Bastille Day.

- By Brian Bennett and Tracy Wilkinson brian.bennett @latimes.com tracy.wilkinson @latimes.com

WASHINGTON — President Trump arrives in Paris on Thursday for a hastily planned visit to meet with France’s new, young president and attend Bastille Day celebratio­ns, his first public appearance­s after four days that have been dominated by mounting questions over what he knew about Russian efforts to assist his campaign.

Trump has been out of sight since returning Saturday from last week’s Group of 20 summit of world leaders in Germany.

The unusual four-day stretch without a public appearance came as Trump’s administra­tion tried to cope with the most threatenin­g news to date in the long-running Russia inquiry: his eldest son’s attempt last year to get damaging informatio­n on Hillary Clinton from a Russian lawyer who was described to him as connected to the Kremlin.

Trump’s aides had initially planned to have the president spend much of this week pressing Congress to act on his imperiled healthcare initiative. Beyond two tweets from the president on Monday, the healthcare push was not evident.

Instead, on Monday, a group of evangelica­l pastors and religious leaders prayed with Trump in the Oval Office, with some laying their hands on the president, their heads bowed, according to photos posted online.

And on Wednesday he gave an interview to the conservati­ve televangel­ist Pat Robertson, host of “The 700 Club” program, on Robertson’s Christian Broadcasti­ng Network.

The moves highlighte­d the White House’s strategy of solidifyin­g support among evangelica­l conservati­ves, a core constituen­cy.

In the CBN interview, Trump spoke for the first time about his lengthy sitdown with Russian President Vladimir Putin at the G-20 in Hamburg last week.

“I think we get along very, very well. We are a tremendous­ly powerful nuclear power, and so are they. It doesn’t make sense not to have some kind of a relationsh­ip,” Trump said, pointing to a cease-fire in a section of Syria the two leaders negotiated during that meeting.

Trump also asserted, contrary to what is indicated by his son’s emails and the conclusion­s of the U.S. intelligen­ce community, that Putin really would have preferred to see Clinton win the 2016 election.

“Why would he want me?” Trump said, citing his support for more money for the U.S. military and energy production.

Judging from his daily tweets, Trump has spent much of this week stewing in frustratio­n over the nonstop media coverage of Donald Trump Jr.’s meeting with the Russian lawyer and his emails related to it.

“I think that the president is, I would say, frustrated with the process of the fact that this continues to be an issue,” White House Deputy Press Secretary Sarah Huckabee Sanders told reporters. “And he would love for us to be focused on things [like] … the economy, on healthcare, on tax reform, on infrastruc­ture.”

The focus on the Russia investigat­ion has undoubtedl­y complicate­d Trump’s stalled legislativ­e agenda. But his quick and hastily assembled Paris visit isn’t likely to advance that program.

Trump was invited by French President Emmanuel Macron just two weeks ago to see the French national day parade on the city’s grand boulevard, the Champs-Elysees, and mark the 100th anniversar­y this year of U.S. troops coming to France’s aid in World War I.

Now, questions about how much Trump knew about the Russian government’s effort to help his campaign will probably overshadow the pomp and circumstan­ce of the trip, which was initially designed to bring together Macron and Trump, both surprise winners in their countries’ recent elections.

The White House has agreed that Trump, who broke with tradition and avoided the media at the G-20 summit, will hold a joint news conference with Macron after the two leaders meet privately to discuss ways to combat terrorism and cooperate on the next steps in Syria. It would be the first time he’s faced reporters since his son’s controvers­ial emails were released.

Macron had hoped the visit would be a chance to showcase his own diplomatic skills, especially with an American president nearly twice his age, and to assert France’s prominence on the world stage.

“This is a risky political maneuver for Macron,” given Trump’s high unfavorabl­e ratings in France and Europe, “but it adds to his luster as someone who breaks the mold, and, by stepping up, it raises France’s game,” said Charles Kupchan, a senior fellow at the Council on Foreign Relations.

Although Macron has a reputation as an anti-establishm­ent maverick, having ridden to political power with a party he recently founded, he has numerous centrist, establishm­ent-oriented viewpoints.

On immigratio­n, Macron has at times sounded more like Trump than some other European leaders such as Germany’s Angela Merkel, who welcomed more than a million refugees to her country. Although France has never proposed a ban on Muslims, Macron on Wednesday said on Twitter that it was crucial to distinguis­h between political refugees and economic immigrants, suggesting the latter need not receive the same favorable reception.

The final G-20 communique last week borrowed some of Trump’s language on immigratio­n, saying that a country’s “sovereignt­y” had to be respected in admitting refugees. French officials said this week they were “comfortabl­e” with the language.

There is less agreement on other issues, such as Syria and Iran. France is much more insistent on the removal from power of Syrian President Bashar Assad. And France is enthusiast­ically supportive of the landmark arms control agreement with Iran that limits Tehran’s ability to build nuclear weapons. Trump has said it was a terrible deal and threatened to walk away from it.

Those issues are not likely to dominate the conversati­ons, aides say.

For Trump, the Paris visit is something of a “do-over” where Europe is concerned. His two previous visits, to Italy and Brussels for summits in May and to Germany last week for the G-20, were marked by awkward moments that exposed Trump’s growing isolation.

“The difference between France and all the other European countries in its relation to the United States is that since the election campaigns, there hasn’t been as much open criticism from either side,” said Boris Toucas, a French visiting fellow in the Europe Program at the Center for Strategic and Internatio­nal Studies.

That gives Macron and Trump “more room to maneuver,” he said.

 ?? Bertrand Guay AFP/Getty Images ?? PRESIDENT Emmanuel Macron invited his U.S. counterpar­t to Paris for the national day parade.
Bertrand Guay AFP/Getty Images PRESIDENT Emmanuel Macron invited his U.S. counterpar­t to Paris for the national day parade.

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