The Mercury News Weekend

Trump has record of siding with Putin on range of issues

Front-runner says he was “being sarcastic” about hacking DNC

- By Nataliya Vasilyeva

MOSCOW — Donald Trump has refused to condemn Russia’s military takeover of Ukraine’s Crimean Peninsula, saying if elected he would consider recognizin­g it as Russian territory, in the latest of a series of statements that have raised eyebrows about the Republican candidate’s intentions toward the Kremlin.

“We’ll be looking at that. Yeah, we’ll be looking,” Trump told reporters on Wednesday.

On Thursday, the GOP nominee for president said that he was being “sarcastic” about asking Russians to find Hillary Clinton’s missing emails from her tenure as secretary of state.

He also said that he didn’t know who had hacked into the Democratic National Committee’s emails.

“Of course I am being sarcastic,” Trump told Fox News’ Brian Kilmeade. “And they don’t even know frankly if it’s Russia. They have no idea if it’s Russia, if it’s China, if it’s somebody else. Who knows who it is.”

Trump set off a firestorm Wednesday when he encouraged Russia to hack into Clinton’s emails.

“Russia, if you’re listening, I hope you are able to find the 30,000 emails that are missing,” he said to a room full of reporters at Trump National Doral golf course.

“I think you will prob- ably be rewarded mightily by our press.”

Accepting Russia’s 2014 annexation of Crimea would be a radical departure from U.S. policy.

The United States and the European Union worked together to punish Russia by imposing economic sanctions and have shown no willingnes­s to lift them. Even Belarus, Russia’s closest ally and neighbor, did not recognize the annexation.

While Trump has sided with Putin on a wide range of issues, Putin has not openly backed the Republican nominee and the Kremlin denies interferin­g in the U.S. electoral process. Hillary Clinton’s campaign claimed that Russia was behind the hacking of Democratic National Com- mittee computers as part of an effort to undermine her candidacy.

Although the Russians “will keep their mouths tightly zipped until Election Day,” they clearly prefer Trump, said Wayne Merry, a senior fellow at the American Foreign Policy Council and former diplomat who spent six years at the U.S. Embassy in Moscow.

“They don’t know exactly what to expect from Donald Trump, but they think two things about him: One, that he has a number of advisers who they see as being relatively open-minded if not sympatheti­c about Russia. And second, they see him as a deal maker,” Merry said.

“When they look at Hillary Clinton they see somebody they really do not like.”

On the personal level, Clinton is not the type of leader that Putin likes to deal with, said Mikhail Zygar, a Russian journalist and author of “All the Kremlin’s Men.”

“We cannot imagine them sitting in the pub, drinking beer, or vodka, or whiskey or whatever,” he said of Clinton and Putin. “We cannot even imagine them going to the theater or cinema together: They have so little in common, they have no topics to chat about, and that’s the very important thing for Putin.”

“For him, it’s very important to be respected and to be treated as a world leader, and to have his own agenda.”

 ?? DAVID GOLDMAN/ASSOCIATED PRESS ARCHIVES ?? A woman wears a “Trump Putin ‘16” shirt while waiting for Donald Trump to speak at a campaign event in February at Plymouth State University in Plymouth, New Hampshire.
DAVID GOLDMAN/ASSOCIATED PRESS ARCHIVES A woman wears a “Trump Putin ‘16” shirt while waiting for Donald Trump to speak at a campaign event in February at Plymouth State University in Plymouth, New Hampshire.

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