The Mercury News

White House, Kremlin agree on time and place

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MOSCOW » Signaling a growing rapprochem­ent between the United States and Russia, the White House and the Kremlin tday will announce the date and location of a summit meeting between President Trump and Russian President Vladimir Putin.

Both men have pursued the tête-à-tête in hopes of soothing tensions over Russia’s interferen­ce in the 2016 U.S. presidenti­al election and its aggression in Ukraine and elsewhere, despite retaliator­y actions taken by both of their government­s earlier this year.

Plans for the Trump-Putin summit were finalized here in Moscow on Wednesday by national security adviser John Bolton, who held marathon meetings in the Russian capital that included talks with Putin himself at the Kremlin.

Trump has long sought to cultivate a warm friendship with his Russian counterpar­t as a means to solving intractabl­e problems around the world, and has said he admires the strength of Putin’s authoritar­ian rule. Bolton said Wednesday that Trump “believes so strongly” that now was the time for a new level of personal engagement — and that Putin agreed.

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

Bolton said the summit’s time and place would be announced simultaneo­usly

today in Washington and Moscow. The summit is expected to take place in mid-July somewhere outside Russia, during Trump’s trip to Europe for a previously scheduled NATO summit meeting July 11 and 12 in Brussels and a visit to Britain on July 13. There is speculatio­n that Trump and Putin could meet in Helsinki or Vienna, but neither U.S. nor Russian officials have confirmed the location.

Looking ahead to his Putin meeting, Trump told reporters Wednesday, “I’ve said it from day one, getting along with Russia and China and with everybody is a very good thing.” The president praised the Russians for doing “a fantastic job” hosting the World Cup, compliment­ing the quality of the venues and saying the matches have been “exciting even if you are not a soccer fan.”

Thomas Wright, director of the Center on the United States and Europe at the Brookings Institutio­n, said the summit announceme­nt “is a sign of Trump unbound.”

“He wants to work with Putin. This is what he’s told people he’s going to do and he’s not listening to any objections,” Wright said, noting that Trump “was always a reluctant participan­t” in implementi­ng sanctions and other tough measures against Russia.

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