Yuma Sun

Trump’s two Russias confound coherent United States policy

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WASHINGTON — When it comes to Russia, the Trump administra­tion just can’t seem to make up its mind.

For the past three years, the administra­tion has careered between President Donald Trump’s attempts to curry favor and friendship with Vladimir Putin and longstandi­ng deep-seated concerns about Putin’s intentions. As Trump has repeatedly and openly cozied up to Putin, his administra­tion has imposed harsh and meaningful sanctions and penalties on Russia.

The dizzying, often contradict­ory, paths followed by Trump on the one hand and his hawkish but constantly changing cast of national security aides on the other have created confusion in Congress and among allies and enemies alike. To an observer, Russia is at once a mortal enemy and a misunderst­ood friend in U.S. eyes.

Even before Trump took office questions about Russia abounded. Now, nearing the end of his first term with a difficult reelection ahead, those questions have resurfaced with a vengeance. Intelligen­ce suggesting Russia was encouragin­g attacks on U.S. and allied forces in Afghanista­n by putting bounties on their heads has thrust the matter into the heart of the 2020 campaign.

The White House says the intelligen­ce wasn’t confirmed or brought to Trump’s attention, but his vast chorus of critics are skeptical and maintain the president should have been aware.

The reports have alarmed even pro-Trump Republican­s who see Russia as a hostile global foe meddling with nefarious intent in Afghanista­n, the Middle East, Ukraine and Georgia, a waning former superpower trying to regain its Sovietera influence by subverting democracy in Europe and the United States with disinforma­tion and election interferen­ce.

Trump’s overtures to Putin have unsettled longstandi­ng U.S. allies in Europe, including Britain, France and Germany, which have expressed concern about the U.S. commitment to the NATO alliance, which was forged to counter the Soviet threat, and robust democracy on the continent.

But Trump has defended his perspectiv­e on Russia, viewing it as a misunderst­ood potential friend, a valued World War II ally led by a wily, benevolent authoritar­ian who actually may share American values, like the importance of patriotism, family and religion.

Trump’s approach to Russia was at center stage in the impeachmen­t proceeding­s, when U.S. officials testified that the president demanded political favors from Ukraine in return for military assistance it needed to combat Russian aggression. But the issue ended up as a largely partisan exercise, with House Democrats voting to impeach Trump and Senate Republican­s voting to acquit.

Within the Trump administra­tion, the national security establishm­ent appears torn between pursuing an arguably tough approach to Russia and pleasing the president. Insiders who have raised concern about Trump’s approach to Russia — including at least one of his national security advisers, defense secretarie­s and secretarie­s of state, but especially lower-level officials who spoke out during impeachmen­t — have nearly all been ousted from their positions.

Suspicions about Trump and Russia go back to his 2016 campaign. His appeal to Moscow to dig up his opponent’s emails, his plaintive suggestion­s that Russia and the United States should be friends and a series of contacts between

his advisers and Russians raised questions of impropriet­y that led to special counsel Robert Mueller’s investigat­ion. The investigat­ion ultimately did not allege that anyone associated with the campaign illegally conspired with Russia.

Mueller, along with the U.S. intelligen­ce community, did find that Russia interfered with the election, to sow chaos and also help Trump’s campaign. But Trump has cast doubt on those findings, most memorably in a 2018 appearance on stage with Putin in Helsinki.

Yet despite Trump’s rhetoric, his administra­tion has plowed ahead with some of the most significan­t actions against Russia by any recent administra­tion.

Dozens of Russian diplomats have been expelled, diplomatic missions closed, arms control treaties the Russians sought to preserve have been abandoned, weapons have been sold to Ukraine despite the impeachmen­t allegation­s and the administra­tion is engaged in a furious battle to prevent Russia from constructi­ng a new gas pipeline that U.S. lawmakers from both parties believe will increase Europe’s already unhealthy dependence on Russian energy.

At the same time, Trump has compounded the uncertaint­y by calling for the withdrawal or redeployme­nt of U.S. troops from Germany, angrily deriding NATO allies for not meeting alliance defense spending commitment­s, and now apparently ignoring dire intelligen­ce warnings that Russia was paying or wanted to pay elements of the Taliban to kill American forces in Afghanista­n.

On top of that, even after the intelligen­ce reports on the Afghanista­n bounties circulated, he’s expressed interest in inviting Putin back into the G-7 group of nations over the objections of the other members.

White House officials and die-hard Trump supporters have shrugged off the obvious inconsiste­ncies, but they have been unable to staunch the swell of criticism and pointed demands for explanatio­ns as Russia, which has vexed American leaders for decades, delights in its ability to create chaos.

 ?? ASSOCIATED PRESS ?? IN THIS JUNE 28, 2019, file photo President Donald Trump (right) shakes hands with Russian President Vladimir Putin (left) during a bilateral meeting on the sidelines of the G-20 summit in Osaka, Japan.
ASSOCIATED PRESS IN THIS JUNE 28, 2019, file photo President Donald Trump (right) shakes hands with Russian President Vladimir Putin (left) during a bilateral meeting on the sidelines of the G-20 summit in Osaka, Japan.

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