Pittsburgh Post-Gazette

French president pulls no punches with Putin

- By Sylvie Corbet and John Leicester

VERSAILLES, France — Flexing his diplomatic muscles, French President Emmanuel Macron said he had “extremely frank” and “direct” talks with Russian President Vladimir Putin on Monday and launched an extraordin­ary attack on two state-funded Russian media outlets he accused of spreading “lying propaganda” during France’s presidenti­al campaign.

Mr. Macron’s full-on blast at the state news agency Sputnik and broadcaste­r Russia Today came at a news conference with Mr. Putin standing at his side. His comments underscore­d the clear difference­s between the two men on multiple issues and fulfilled the French president’s campaign promises to pull no punches with Russia when needed.

But after more than two hours of meetings — their first since Mr. Macron’s May 7 election and longer than scheduled — both leaders also signaled a shared desire not to let disagreeme­nts define their fledgling relationsh­ip. The fight against terrorism, in particular, appeared to offer common ground.

Mr. Putin said Mr. Macron proposed a framework for French and Russian anti-terror experts to meet and work

together. And both leaders agreed they don’t want Syria — where Russia is propping up the government of President Bashar Assad — to collapse into a failed state.

Progress in Syria “will happen by a joint effort, which today we laid the foundation­s for,” Mr. Macron said.

Speaking through an interprete­r, Mr. Putin said the two countries were “totally capable of trying to progress together” on world affairs.

“What unites us allows us to hope that the possibilit­y exists to improve our ties,” he added later.

Mr. Macron said he spoke to Mr. Putin about LGBT rights in the Russian republic of Chechnya and about the rights of embattled non-government­al organizati­ons in Russia, vowing to be “vigilant” on these issues. Earlier Monday, human rights activists protesting near the Eiffel Tower displayed a banner that said, “Stop homophobia in Chechnya.”

Any use of chemical weapons in Syria is a “red line” for France and would be met by “reprisals” and an “immediate riposte” from the government, Mr. Macron said.

He did not specify the form of such reprisals, but France flies warplanes over Syria and Iraq, striking Islamic State targets as part of an internatio­nal coalition.

On Sputnik and Russia Today, Mr. Macron showed little restraint, saying the two organizati­ons spread “untruths about me and my campaign” during the French election.

Mr. Putin, seemingly unfazed, pushed back any suggestion that Russia sought to influence the election. Russian meddling became a concern in France after allegation­s that Russia sought to interfere in the U.S. presidenti­al contest that elected President Donald Trump and after a document leak hit Mr. Macron’s campaign in the final hours of the French race.

Mr. Putin also hosted Mr. Macron’s far-right rival, Marine Le Pen, at the Kremlin in March. On Monday, he defended that gesture as simple good manners, saying it would have been strange to rebuff Ms. Le Pen’s Russia friendly overtures.

“That doesn’t mean that we tried to influence the results of the election. Besides, that is almost impossible,” he said.

Mr. Macron was the first Western leader to speak to Mr. Putin after the Group of Seven summit the French leader attended over the weekend, where relations with Russia were a key topic. These first forays into world diplomacy by the French president who has never before held elected office have shown the 39-year-old to be a quick learner and self-confident, willing to take the calculated risk of voicing firm views on thorny issues.

Mr. Macron portrayed the Putin meeting as just a first step in resetting relations with Russia.

“Big things are built over time,” he said. “It was an exchange that was extremely frank, direct, with a lot of things that were said.”

“We have disagreeme­nts, but at least we talked about them,” he added.

The body language Monday was good. Their first handshakes — relatively brief and cordial — were far less macho than Mr. Macron’s now-famous who-will-blink-first handshake showdown with Mr. Trump when the two leaders met last week for the first time. Mr. Macron and Mr. Putin also hugged goodbye and shook hands, both smiling, after ending their meetings with a visit to an exhibit about the 300th anniversar­y of Russian Czar Peter the Great’s trip to Paris.

 ?? Alexei Nikolsky/Sputnik, Kremlin Pool Photo via AP ?? French President Emmanuel Macron, right, drives an electric golf cart Monday with Russian President Vladimir Putin in the garden of the Versailles Palace following their meeting in Versailles, near Paris.
Alexei Nikolsky/Sputnik, Kremlin Pool Photo via AP French President Emmanuel Macron, right, drives an electric golf cart Monday with Russian President Vladimir Putin in the garden of the Versailles Palace following their meeting in Versailles, near Paris.

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