Los Angeles Times

Bolton plans Trump-Putin talks

The summit will probably take place in Europe in mid-July, a Kremlin aide says.

- By Sabra Ayres Ayres is a special correspond­ent. Times staff writer Tracy Wilkinson in Washington contribute­d to this report.

MOSCOW — A much-anticipate­d summit between President Trump and Russian President Vladimir Putin will probably take place in mid-July in a European capital, a Kremlin aide said Wednesday.

Trump’s national security advisor, John Bolton, met with Putin on Wednesday to discuss the details of a potential summit that was largely seen here as a significan­t step toward improving relations between Moscow and Washington.

Yuri Ushakov, a Putin advisor who focuses on U.S. relations, told reporters after Putin’s meeting with Bolton that Russia and the U.S. had been ruled out as locations for the summit.

The meeting would coincide with Trump’s upcoming visit to Europe. He is expected to attend a North Atlantic Treaty Organizati­on summit in Brussels on July 11-12, and then make a visit to the United Kingdom.

Both Vienna and Helsinki, Finland, have been suggested as venues, with dates that would allow Putin to attend the July 15 final match of the World Cup, which Russia is hosting this year.

In Washington, Trump said Wednesday that he was awaiting Bolton’s full report but confirmed the likely timing of the summit.

“It would look like we will probably be meeting in the not-too-distant future, and I’ve said it from Day One, getting along with Russia and China and with everybody is a very good thing,” Trump told reporters at the White House.

The meeting would be the first time the two presidents have met outside an internatio­nal summit. Putin and Trump met on the sidelines of the Group of 20 summit in 2017 in Germany and again briefly shook hands at the Asia-Pacific Economic Cooperatio­n summit in November.

Whether the two men have met before Trump became president is unclear. Trump has said that he was still a businessma­n when he first met Putin, but he has also denied knowing him.

Bolton’s meeting at the Kremlin was aimed at laying the groundwork for the meeting at a time when relations between the nations have deteriorat­ed.

The U.S. has accused the Kremlin of trying to interfere in the 2016 presidenti­al election in favor of Trump’s campaign. The U.S. and many of its allies, including the European Union, have placed sanctions on Russian businesses and individual­s in retaliatio­n for Moscow’s annexation of Crimea in 2014, and subsequent Russian backing of a separatist war in eastern Ukraine.

“Your arrival in Moscow has given us hope that we can make the first steps to reviving full relations between our government­s,” Putin told Bolton in scenes shown on Russian state TV.

Scheduling a meeting with the Kremlin leader has been fraught with criticism, particular­ly as the investigat­ion into possible collaborat­ion between Trump’s campaign and the Kremlin continues.

Trump, who has advocated better relations with Russia, has repeatedly tried to cast doubt on the widely accepted intelligen­ce on Russian interferen­ce in the election, lest it raise doubts about the legitimacy of his victory.

Putin blamed the sorry state of relations between Washington and Moscow on “the acute internal political battle in the U.S.”

Trump has been at odds with other Western leaders about a united stance on Russia.

He has bucked most of world opinion — and contradict­ed members of his administra­tion — by appearing to defend Putin’s annexation of Crimea. He has been loath to criticize Putin and on several occasions has praised him.

At the Group of 7 summit in Canada this month, Trump announced that he believed Russia should be brought back into the group of industrial­ized nations, returning it to the G-8. Trump’s statement shocked other G-7 leaders, particular­ly those from Europe pushing for a stronger stance against Moscow.

The issue of Kremlin interferen­ce in the 2016 U.S. presidenti­al election was raised during the meeting with Bolton, Ushakov said.

Russia has “clearly stated that the Russian state did not interfere and does not interfere in domestic political processes in the United States, and most certainly did not interfere in the 2016 election,” Russian media quoted Ushakov telling reporters.

Bolton, long a hawk on Russia, later refused in a news conference to say how he answered Putin’s denials. The topic will surely be raised during the TrumpPutin summit, he told reporters.

Other topics that came up in Bolton’s meeting with Putin included Syria, the ongoing war in eastern Ukraine, North Korea and the U.S. withdrawal from the landmark 2015 nuclear treaty with Iran.

The U.S. ambassador to Moscow, Jon Huntsman, and Trump’s National Security Council officials Fiona Hill and Joe Wang also attended the meeting. Putin was flanked by his foreign minister, Sergei Lavrov, and defense minister, Sergei Shoigu, as well as advisor Ushakov.

In three of Russia’s major newspapers Wednesday, Bolton’s visit was cautiously received. One paper, Kommersant, labeled him the “chief hawk of the White House,” citing his previous statements calling Russia’s alleged meddling in the 2016 election an “act of war.”

Bolton pushed back at reporters’ suggestion­s that there were doubts the upcoming Trump-Putin summit could be a success in improving relations between the two countries.

“Both President Trump and President Putin think they may be able to find constructi­ve solutions,” Bolton said Wednesday evening at a news conference in Moscow. “I’d like to hear someone say that’s a bad idea.”

Bolton, however, did not rebuff Putin’s suggestion that the reason for the delay in a U.S.-Russia summit was related to internal American politics.

“I think a lot of people have said or implied over time a meeting between President Trump and President Putin would somehow prove some nexus between the Trump campaign and the Kremlin, which is complete nonsense,” Bolton said. “I think the president recognizes that there may be some criticism of this decision to have the meeting.”

He added that Trump believes that the summit with Putin “is something that he needs to do and will do regardless of political criticism at home.”

 ?? Alexander Zemlianich­enko AFP/Getty Images ?? VLADIMIR Putin greets U.S. national security advisor John Bolton in Moscow.
Alexander Zemlianich­enko AFP/Getty Images VLADIMIR Putin greets U.S. national security advisor John Bolton in Moscow.

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