Las Vegas Review-Journal

Blaming Putin won’t help Clinton beat Trump

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connection and enough evidence to say that Trump is accepting help from Putin? I don’t think so.

Trump hasn’t been linked to any official or businessma­n close to Putin’s inner circle. The Trump SoHo project apparently received funding from Iceland’s FL Group (now known as Baugur), which had some Russian investment­s but no known ties to Putin’s friends. He also has links to Alexander Mashkevich, a wealthy businessma­n from Kazakhstan. Mashkevich is not part of Putin’s circle of billionair­e cronies.

Similarly, the business dealings in Ukraine of Trump’s campaign manager, Paul Manafort, have raised eyebrows, but none involved Putin’s friends.

It’s worth rememberin­g, too, that Ukraine and Kazakhstan are not part of Russia. Their business elites are similarly corrupt, but Putin is not the source of their wealth, which they have used to buy up expensive real estate of the kind Trump has developed.

The only Trump policy adviser with real ties is Carter Page, who advised Gazprom, the Russian natural gas monopoly, in the mid-2000s. These connection­s, however, are not at the highest level: Page is not pals with Gazprom chief executive officer Alexei Miller, who is close to Putin.

Put together, this appears no more damning than Clinton’s tenuous “Russia connection” — the big donations to her family foundation from investors in a uranium company whose sale to Russia’s stateowned Rosatom needed a sign-off from the U.S. government. There is no evidence that Clinton, who was secretary of state at the time, lobbied in favor of the deal or helped get it approved. And Rosatom itself didn’t pay anything to the foundation.

The former Soviet Union is a big place, and a lot of business is being done there. It shouldn’t be surprising that people in the upper echelons of U.S. business and politics have connection­s to that part of the world. Unless these ties are to a dozen specific individual­s whom Putin has made super rich in his 15 years in power, they are not politicall­y significan­t.

I have no doubt that Putin would like Trump to win. The Republican candidate has called into doubt the U.S. commitment to its NATO obligation­s and even suggested that he might not defend alliance members.

But for now, the Russia story is being used to deflect attention from the turmoil with the Democratic camp. There is no doubt that DNC officials who — in the midst of a storm over Clinton’s use of a private server while secretary of state — failed to secure their own network, apparently letting in more than one hacker team.

The uproar also takes the focus away from the broader failings of the Clinton campaign, which is even in the polls with a rival who has offended almost every kind of voter, has managed a cheap, disorganiz­ed candidacy and has been caught lying. If Clinton can’t beat Trump, it’s not Putin’s fault, though it would make him happy. Leonid Bershidsky, a Bloomberg View contributo­r, is a Berlin-based writer.

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