New York Post

PUTIN THE UNIFIER

Dems & GOP see Vlad’s threat — now Congress must act

- MICHAEL RUBIN Michael Rubin is a resident scholar at the American Enterprise Institute.

DISMISSING bipartisan criticism and intelligen­ce-community outrage, President Trump has doubled down on rapprochem­ent with Russian President Vladimir Putin. Trump has repeatedly surprised even his closest aides, first appearing to side with Putin over US intelligen­ce agencies, and then failing to inform Director of National Intelligen­ce Dan Coats that Putin would visit the United States just weeks before the midterm elections.

While Trump relishes unpredicta­bility to keep opponents on edge, his own aides’ confusion suggests there is no coherence to Trump’s strategy. That, rather than “fake news” or “Trump derangemen­t syndrome” about which the president complains, is the real source of American frustratio­n. Democrats and Republican­s both believe Putin is outplaying the president.

And that might be the silver lining in all this — the emerging bipartisan recognitio­n of Russia’s threat and the possibilit­y of Congress reassertin­g itself to check Moscow.

It’s true that Trump’s trust in Putin is no outlier: George W. Bush gazed into Putin’s eyes and saw his soul only to be confronted with a resurgent Russian nuclear force and the invasion of Georgia. That was no matter to Barack Obama, who continued to champion a “reset” with Russia, believing Bush was too unilateral and not sophistica­ted enough to conduct real diplomacy.

Indeed, it was Obama who lectured in July 2007 that “the notion that somehow not talking to countries is punishment to them . . . is ridiculous” and, five years later, ridiculed Mitt Romney when Romney identified Russia as America’s top geopolitic­al foe. “The 1980s are now calling to ask for their foreign policy back, because, the Cold War’s been over for 20 years,” Obama quipped.

Seldom has a country managed to gain so much with as weak a hand as Russia. Putin inherited a country decimated by decades of dictatorsh­ip, corruption and mismanagem­ent. Rather than repair problems, Putin compounded them. But even as the United States held a royal flush, wishful thinking and partisansh­ip effectivel­y allowed the Kremlin to triumph with a pair of twos.

The problem in Washington is that national security has become a political football. Every president since Bill Clinton has entered office believing responsibi­lity for internatio­nal crises rest more with predecesso­rs than adversarie­s. Trump’s July 16 tweet that “Our relationsh­ip with Russia has NEVER been worse thanks to many years of U.S. foolishnes­s and stupidity” is just the latest example.

What Trump misses, however, is that the true foolishnes­s was past Russian accommodat­ion: Bill Clinton not only allowed Russia alone among Soviet successor states to keep nuclear weapons, giving it tremendous leverage over its neighbors, but also extended hun- dreds of millions of dollars in loan guarantees to the Kremlin. Obama and Hillary Clinton, meanwhile, withheld reports of Russian nuclear cheating from Congress in order to win a new Strategic Arms Reduction Treaty, one which imposed more restrictio­ns on the United States than Russia, and expelled Russian spies before thorough questionin­g.

Trump may believe his outreach to and praise for Putin will pay dividends, but, here too, he is wrong. Summits are a tool, not a strategy. Ronald Reagan met with Mikhail Gorbachev only after years spent building up a military advantage to use as negotiatin­g leverage. When the two leaders did meet, Reagan refused to dismiss Soviet humanright­s violations as an impediment to diplomacy, nor did he show any hesitation to walk away from the table, as he did at the 1986 Reykjavík summit.

But this is where the silver lining comes in: For the first time since the Cold War’s end, Democrats and Republican­s (Trump and his most sycophanti­c advisers excepted) share a broad consensus that Putin is an insincere and malevolent actor who poses a grave and growing threat. Outrage after Helsinki shows Republican­s will not follow Trump blindly and Democrats will be hard-pressed to return to their past naïveté.

Trump’s missteps could lay the groundwork for Congress to take the lead on an anti-Russia strategy: Bolstering aid to Eastern Europe, expanding the Magnitsky Act to hold even more Putin cronies responsibl­e for human-rights abuses, directing the White House to report regularly and robustly on Russian cyber activities, beefing up US radio and TV broadcasts into Russia and restoring the US base in Iceland abandoned by Bush, to start; rolling back Russian influence abroad next.

Trump may deal with Putin, but Congress has the power of the purse and can play hardball in the face of a bad deal. Only one thing is certain: Partisan barbs and congressio­nal inaction are a losing formula; they benefit only Putin. Winning will take congressio­nal leadership, bipartisan­ship and proactive legislatio­n.

 ??  ?? Come at me: Putin’s run circles around Trump but aroused bipartisan angst.
Come at me: Putin’s run circles around Trump but aroused bipartisan angst.
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