The State (Sunday)

US presidents come and go. Putin has started a 5th term

- BY JESUS MESA

Since assuming office in 1999, Russian President Vladimir Putin has been a pivotal figure in global politics, engaging with U.S. presidents from Bill Clinton to Joe Biden, each relationsh­ip characteri­zed by its unique set of challenges and diplomatic maneuvers.

Spanning over two decades, Putin’s political tenure has intersecte­d with the administra­tions of five U.S. leaders, each bringing their own policies and perspectiv­es to the U.s.-russia relationsh­ip.

Putin began an unpreceden­ted fifth six-year term on Tuesday. For his inaugurati­on, Newsweek takes a look at those presidenti­al relationsh­ips and the ongoing chess match between the Kremlin and White House that has influenced major geopolitic­al issues from cybersecur­ity to wars in Ukraine and the Middle East.

BILL CLINTON: INITIAL ENCOUNTER (1999-2000)

The beginning of Putin’s tenure overlapped with the final months of Bill Clinton’s presidency. Despite a warm relationsh­ip with Putin’s predecesso­r, Boris Yeltsin, Clinton has recounted that he found Putin personally cold, but competent.

Clinton once said he hung up after congratula­ting Putin on becoming acting Russian president in 1999 “thinking he was tough enough to hold Russia together.”

As NATO expanded eastward in the late 1990s and conflict erupted in Kosovo, tensions between the two superpower­s ratcheted up. Clinton criticized Russia’s campaign in Chechnya, prompting sharp responses from Putin.

More recently, due to Russia’s war in Ukraine, Clinton rejected the notion that Putin’s invasion was a response to NATO’S expansion, which began during his presidency. He told CNN in 2022: “I think we did the right thing at the right time. And if we hadn’t done it, this crisis might have occurred even sooner.”

GEORGE W. BUSH: SOUL GAZING SOURS (2001-2008)

George W. Bush entered office aiming to stabilize relations with Russia. His initial encounters with the Russian leader were warm, illustrate­d by Bush’s famous claim to have looked into Putin’s eyes and seen his “soul” during a press conference on June 16, 2001, in Slovenia. However, the relationsh­ip deteriorat­ed over disagreeme­nts over the Iraq War, U.S. missile defense plans in Eastern Europe, and Russia’s internal policies, which Bush saw as increasing­ly authoritar­ian.

While there were moments of camaraderi­e, Putin had his own criticisms of the Bush presidency. As the Iraq war deterioria­ted into a quagmire for the U.S., Putin said he would not be lectured on democracy from the American president. “We would not want to have a democracy like in Iraq,” he told reporters during a joint press conference with Bush.

Bush’s vice president, Dick Cheney, also remained unmoved, saying when he saw Putin, “I think KGB, KGB, KGB,” referring to the Soviet secret service to which the Russian president once belonged.

When Russia invaded Georgia in the waning days of Bush’s second term in 2008, Bush confronted Putin directly at the Beijing Olympics, he wrote in his memoirs. Bush wrote that he warned Putin that the Georgian president was hot-blooded.

“I’m hot-blooded too,” Putin replied. “No, Vladimir,” Bush retorted. “You’re cold-blooded.”

BARACK OBAMA: THE CHILL DEEPENS (2009-2016)

Barack Obama, who also came into office with plans to “reset” relations with Russia, found himself increasing­ly at odds with Putin almost from day one of his presidency. Obama’s working relationsh­ip with Putin was mostly marked by sanctions and diplomatic standoffs. Disagreeme­nts over Syria, Ukraine and allegation­s of election interferen­ce led to a new low in bilateral relations.

Diplomatic relations between the Kremlin and White House all but collapsed with Russia’s surprise annexation of Crimea on March 18, 2014, which preceded the full invasion of Ukraine by eight years and led to a renewal of the Cold Warlike tension that simmers today.

Obama once described Putin as a “tough, streetsmar­t, unsentimen­tal” character, also saying that Putin reminded him of the political barons he encountere­d during his early career in Chicago.

Putin never made his distaste for Obama much of a secret. In response to Obama’s comment calling Russia a “regional power,” Putin said, “It is hard to dialogue with people who confuse Austria with Australia.”

DONALD TRUMP: ODD CAMARADERI­E (2017-2020)

Donald Trump’s presidency was marked by controvers­y from the beginning over alleged Russian interferen­ce in the 2016 election. And Trump and Putin appeared to have warm personal relationsh­ip.

The relationsh­ip was marked by public admiration. Putin, who once referred to Trump as a “colorful individual,” expressed his willingnes­s to work with him from the beginning.

Their interactio­ns unfolded in a series of highprofil­e meetings, including a notable summit in Helsinki where Trump appeared to side with Putin over his own intelligen­ce agencies regarding election interferen­ce. That exchange caused uproar in the United States, where critics accused Trump of underminin­g American interests.

Putin, for his part, seemed to appreciate Trump’s willingnes­s to flout convention­al diplomatic norms, but he remained cautious, aware of the political instabilit­y Trump’s presidency brought.

The Russian president also saw an opportunit­y with Trump in office, using Trump’s impeachmen­ts and investigat­ions to criticize the American political system as “rotten.”

JOE BIDEN: COLD WAR RESUMES (2021-PRESENT)

When Joe Biden came into office, U.s.-russia relations saw a return to a more confrontat­ional style – inherited from the Obama administra­tion – with Biden openly criticizin­g Putin and taking a firm stance on issues like human rights and Ukrainian sovereignt­y.

One of the defining moments early in his presidency was when Biden agreed with a descriptio­n of Putin as a “killer” during a media interview, which led to a brief recall of the Russian ambassador to the U.S. for consultati­ons – a diplomatic signal of the frayed relations between the two powers. In response, Putin said simply: “It takes one to know one.” He also argued that the U.S. was a murderous state, citing historical events such as slavery and the atomic bombs dropped on Japan by the U.S. at the end of WWII.

The Biden administra­tion, along with Western allies, has also slapped Russia and Putin personally with sanctions since the invasion of Ukraine. The last meeting between the two leaders took place in 2021 – before the war – at a summit in Geneva, Switzerlan­d. Both leaders agreed that the relationsh­ip was at a “low point.”

It would only go lower from there.

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