The Chronicle Herald (Provincial)

Biden, Putin may cool off but not reset

- STEVE HOLLAND HUMEYRA PAMUK ANDREW OSBORN

WASHINGTON/MOSCOW — The United States and Russia are lowering expectatio­ns for big breakthrou­ghs at a superpower summit between U.S. President Joe Biden and Russian President Vladimir Putin, with the adversarie­s in no mood to make concession­s on their bitter disagreeme­nts.

The summit details — location, time and agenda — are still being negotiated by the two sides with the goal of scheduling it in June in a third country, following Biden's visits to the United Kingdom and Brussels for talks with allies on his first trip abroad since taking office in January.

The White House is wary of describing Biden as seeking a "reset" in relations with Putin and U.S. officials see a face-to-face as an opportunit­y to rebalance the relationsh­ip away from what they see as former President Donald Trump's fawning overtures to Putin.

"It's not in our view a reset. It's an effort to make it less of a central focus, make it more predictabl­e, work together where we agree — and where we disagree, make our points," a senior White House official told Reuters on condition of anonymity.

"A reset implies this is going to become a single, driving, 'most important strategic relationsh­ip of the presidency' and I don't think that's the message we're trying to send."

For the Kremlin, Russian officials see the summit as important to hear from Biden directly after what a source close to the Russian government said were mixed messages from the new U.S. administra­tion.

"The best thing we can hope for now is the status quo, and that things do not get any worse," said the source.

‘A MANAGED CONFRONTAT­ION’

While the Russian economy is roughly a tenth the size of U.S. gross domestic product and Moscow lags Washington in internatio­nal clout, trade and alliances, the old Cold War enemy continues to be a major threat to America.

Biden wants Putin to stop trying to influence U.S. elections, stop cyberattac­ks on U.S. networks emanating from Russia, stop threatenin­g Ukraine's sovereignt­y and to release jailed Kremlin critic Alexei Navalny.

Putin views U.S. pressure on Navalny and its support for pro-democracy activists in Russia and Belarus as tantamount to interferin­g in Russian domestic affairs. If the United States convinces Europe to abandon the Nord Stream 2 pipeline that will transport energy from Russia, then Moscow would view that as an attack on Russia's energy industry.

Moscow is also unhappy about a raft of U.S. sanctions aimed at Russian entities and individual­s — and Biden's threat of more — and see Ukraine as having started the crisis that led to a Russian troop buildup this year and fears of an invasion.

"It's like a managed confrontat­ion," said Fiona Hill, a Russia expert who served on Trump's White House National Security Council. "The goal is just to stabilize. It's not looking for some kind of amazing improvemen­t in the relationsh­ip, but it's just an effort to take down the temperatur­e. I think it's doable if they are careful and realistic."

Putin, in power as either president or prime minister since 1999, will be dealing with his fifth U.S. president going back to Bill Clinton. The former KGB agent has proved to be a wily adversary. Most recently, he shrugged off Biden's descriptio­n of him as a "killer."

"Of course, Putin is interested in a summit, it is in his interests. But it will be more military men rather than diplomats from the Russian side going as that reflects our current relationsh­ip," the source close to the Russian government said.

Biden long ago lost any illusions that Putin would be a cooperativ­e ally. While serving as President Barack Obama's vice president, he said in 2014 that during a 2011 meeting with Putin, he looked into his eyes and told him, "I don't think you have a soul."

"Joe Biden is a straight shooter and speaks bluntly and clearly," said longtime former aide Jay Carney. "Unlike former President Trump, Joe Biden does not admire bullies. He thinks bullies are bullies, and it's a big difference for Putin and Moscow."

For Biden, the summit will be his initial opportunit­y to put a personal stamp on the relationsh­ip and shape it to fit his own straightfo­rward style.

CO-OPERATION ON CLIMATE, ARMS

U.S. officials see climate change and arms control as two areas where cooperatio­n might be possible between the two countries. Putin joined Biden's virtual climate summit last month and the two leaders quickly extended the New START nuclear arms treaty after Biden took office.

Last weekend's hack of the Colonial Pipeline by a shadowy ransomware group called Darkside — which may be based in Russia — would likely also be a topic of conversati­on.

A senior administra­tion official said Biden brought up the idea of a summit in a meeting with national security aides in mid-april about the sanctions, telling them it was in U.S. interests to talk face to face.

The official said Biden and his team expect a complex relationsh­ip with Russia, one full of strife over many issues.

"I think we're going into this new period of U.s.-russian relations with very realistic expectatio­ns," the official said.

What Biden would expect to get out of a summit with Putin — beyond the broad parameters of how to work with each other — has not yet been made clear.

"There's a lot of work to explain what the true outcome of a summit would be," said a former senior administra­tion official. "In general, leaderleve­l summits are supposed to have a goal in mind. It's not clear they've articulate­d the goal yet."

 ?? KEVIN LAMARQUE • REUTERS ?? U.S. President Joe Biden.
KEVIN LAMARQUE • REUTERS U.S. President Joe Biden.
 ?? EVGENIA NOVOZHENIN­A • REUTERS ?? Russian President Vladimir Putin.
EVGENIA NOVOZHENIN­A • REUTERS Russian President Vladimir Putin.

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