Los Angeles Times

White House cautious on Putin summit

Moscow says Trump invited the Russian leader to Washington.

- By Noah Bierman

WASHINGTON — The Kremlin said Monday that President Trump invited Russian President Vladimir Putin to the White House when the two men spoke by phone last month, though the Kremlin and the White House both said that a summit was far from certain.

Trump alluded to the possibilit­y in remarks to White House reporters shortly after the call, which he made to congratula­te Putin on his controvers­ial reelection.

“We will probably get together in the not-too-distant future so that we can discuss arms, we can discuss the arms race,” Trump said March 20.

Neither side has announced specifics, including a date or a place.

The president drew bipartisan criticism for his call, both because he congratula­ted Putin after an election widely seen as a sham and because he didn’t mention either a recent nerve-agent attack in England blamed on Russia or its interferen­ce in the 2016 U.S. election campaign.

Nothing more was said about a meeting subsequent­ly, by either country, as the United States and some allies imposed additional sanctions and expelled Russian diplomats to punish Russia for election meddling and for the nerveagent poisoning of a British citizen who is a former Russian spy.

The Kremlin may be trumpeting the possibilit­y of a summit with Trump to deflect attention. The Russian state news agency, Tass, reported the newest statements on a potential meeting of the two presidents.

“During a telephone conversati­on between our presidents, Trump suggested that the first meeting could be held in Washington,” Russian presidenti­al aide Yury Ushakov said on Monday, according to the news agency.

Ushakov said no discussion­s had occurred since March 20.

“If everything goes well, I hope that the American side would not refuse its proposal to discuss the possibilit­y of organizing the summit talks,” he told journalist­s, and “that there would be an end to the steps the Americans have taken based on groundless allegation­s.”

Russia is eager to resume such discussion­s, Ushakov added.

After the Tass report provoked questions in Washington, White House Press Secretary Sarah Huckabee Sanders said in a statement:

“As the president himself confirmed on March 20, hours after his last call with President Putin, the two had discussed a bilateral meeting in the ‘not-too-distant future’ at a number of potential venues, including the White House. We have nothing further to add at this time.”

 ?? Evan Vucci Associated Press ?? PRESIDENT TRUMP congratula­ted Vladimir Putin on his reelection.
Evan Vucci Associated Press PRESIDENT TRUMP congratula­ted Vladimir Putin on his reelection.

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