The Atlanta Journal-Constitution

Trump bars U.S. media, not Russia’s, from meeting

Photos show smiling president alongside Moscow officials.

- Julie Hirschfiel­d Davis

WASHINGTON — When President Trump met with top Russian officials in the Oval Office on Wednesday, White House officials barred reporters from witnessing the moment. They apparently preferred to block coverage of the visit as questions swirled about whether the president had dismissed his FBI director in part to squelch the investigat­ion into possible ties between his campaign and Moscow.

But the Russians, who have a largely state-run media, brought their own press contingent in the form of an official photograph­er. They quickly filled the vacuum with their own pictures of the meeting with Trump, Sergey Lavrov, the Russian foreign minister; and Sergey Kislyak, Moscow’s ambassador to the United States.

Within minutes of the meeting, the Foreign Ministry had posted photograph­s on Twitter of Trump and Lavrov smiling and shaking hands. The Russian embassy posted images of the president grinning and gripping hands with the ambassador. Tass, Russia’s official news agency, released more photograph­s of the three men laughing together in the Oval Office.

The White House released nothing.

The result was a public relations coup of sorts for Russia and Lavrov in particular, who not only received a collegial Oval Office welcome from the president but also the photograph­ic evidence to prove it. By contrast, when Secretary of State Rex Tillerson traveled to Moscow last month, President Vladimir Putin of Russia kept him waiting for hours before granting him an audience at the Kremlin. Then, too, Tillerson left his U.S. press contingent behind.

Kislyak has figured prominentl­y in the furor surroundin­g the Trump team’s contacts with Moscow. It was conversati­ons between the ambassador and Michael Flynn, the president’s former national security adviser, that ultimately led to Flynn’s ouster in February, ostensibly because he had lied to Vice President Mike Pence about whether the two had discussed U.S. sanctions on Russia. The White House had not divulged that Kislyak was to be present at Wednesday’s meeting.

Trump’s session with Lavrov was listed on his schedule as “Closed Press,” meaning the media would not have a chance to photograph or otherwise document the meeting.

“Our official photograph­er and their official photograph­er were present — that’s it,” a White House aide said, speaking on condition of anonymity.

The difference, of course, is that while official White House photograph­ers have broad access to the president, their presence is not considered a substitute for that of independen­t media, which routinely request and secure access to official presidenti­al movements and meetings so they can obtain their own images and produce their own reports. In Russia, where the independen­t media are severely limited, there is no such regular press access to government officials apart from state-controlled organizati­ons.

On Wednesday morning, when the U.S. press pool was assembled unexpected­ly in the West Wing, reporters thought that White House officials might have reconsider­ed and decided to allow a glimpse of Trump’s meeting with the Russians after all. But instead, they were allowed into the Oval Office for a few moments to cover another, previously undisclose­d meeting: between Trump and Henry Kissinger, the Nixon administra­tion’s secretary of state.

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