Trump jokes to Putin: ‘Don’t meddle in the election’
With a smirk and a finger point,
President Donald Trump dryly told Russia’s Vladimir Putin “Don’t meddle in the
election” in their first meeting since the special counsel concluded that
Moscow extensively interfered with the 2016 campaign.
The tone of the president’s comment
did little to silence questions about Trump’s relationship with Russia in the
aftermath of special counsel Robert Mueller’s conclusion that he could not
establish a criminal conspiracy between Trump’s campaign and Russia.
The moment at the Group of 20 summit
in Osaka echoed one of the most defining moments of Trump’s presidency in
Helsinki, Finland. There, he pointedly did not admonish Putin about election
interference and did not side with U.S. intelligence agencies over his Russian
counterpart.
Trump and Putin traded brief remarks
Friday, the first time they sat together since Helsinki, about issues they
planned to discuss when a reporter asked Trump if he would warn Putin not to
meddle in the 2020 election.
“Of course,” the president replied.
Then he turned to Putin and facetiously said, “Don’t meddle in the election.”
He playfully repeated the request while pointing at Putin, who laughed.
Trump said he enjoyed a “very, very
good relationship” with Putin and said “many positive things are going to come
out of the relationship.” The Kremlin says Putin has invited Trump to visit
Russia next year to mark the 75th anniversary of the allied victory in World
War II.
Putin has repeatedly dismissed the
Mueller report’s conclusion that Russia had systemically interfered in the 2016
U.S. election, telling the Financial Times earlier this week that it was
“mythical interference.”
Putin said that what really happened
was that Trump saw changes in American society and took advantage of them.
Putin, who has highlighted national
populist movements in Europe and America, told the newspaper that he thinks
liberalism — the main political ideology in the West since the end of World War
II — is dead.
He praised Trump for trying to stop
the flow of migrants and drugs from Mexico.
“This liberal idea presupposes that
nothing needs to be done — that migrants can kill, plunder and rape with
impunity because their rights as migrants have to be protected,” Putin said in
the FT interview.
“Every crime must have its
punishment. The liberal idea has become obsolete. It has come into conflict
with the interests of the overwhelming majority of the population.”
While Trump has long placed a
premium on establishing close personal ties with Putin, his administration has
increased sanctions and other pressures on the Russian government.
The United States and Russia also
are on opposing sides of the escalating crisis with Iran, which shot down an
American drone last week. Trump nixed a possible retaliatory air strike and
stressed Friday that “there’s no rush” to ease tensions with Tehran.
At a summit last November in
Argentina, Trump didn’t meet with Putin after Russia seized two Ukrainian
vessels and their crew in the Sea of Azov. Those crew members remain detained,
yet Trump opted to forge ahead with the Osaka meeting. Trump said Friday
alongside Putin that the fate of the sailors had yet to be discussed.
The leaders also have announced
their withdrawal from a key arms control pact, the 1987 Intermediate-Range
Nuclear Forces Treaty. It is set to terminate this summer, raising fears of a
new arms race. Another major nuclear agreement, the New Start Treaty, is set to
expire in 2021 unless Moscow and Washington negotiate an extension.
The White House said after Friday’s
meeting that the leaders agreed to keep talking about a “21st century model of
arms control,” which Trump said needs to include China. In addition to Iran,
the two leaders also discussed Syria, Venezuela and Ukraine. The U.S. and
Russia are on opposing sides on those three issues too.
But the backdrop of U.S.-Russia
relations remains Moscow’s 2016 election interference.
Though the meeting occurred in the
early morning hours back in the United States, some were quick to denounce the
president’s comments. Michael McFaul, who was U.S. ambassador to Russia under
Barack Obama, tweeted that he found Trump’s conduct “depressing.”
“Trump’s admiration and appeasement
of Putin is so bizarre,” he wrote. “I can’t think of one concrete U.S. interest
that has been advanced by Trump’s behavior.”
The sit-down with Putin came amid a
gauntlet of negotiations on international crises and trade wars. The president
is to meet on Saturday with Chinese President Xi Jinping. Trump said he
believed there was “a very good chance” they could make progress toward ending
their trade dispute.
Trump also is keeping an eye on the
race to replace him back home. Ten Democrats met in Miami, Florida, as part of
the first debates of the 2020 presidential race.
“I just passed a television set on
the way here. I saw that health care and maximum health care was given to 100%
of the illegal immigrants coming into our country by the Democrats,” Trump
said, telling German Chancellor Merkel during their meeting that a debate the
previous night “wasn’t very exciting.”
“So I look forward to spending time
with you rather than watching,” he said. Merkel did not react.
Later, while meeting with Brazil’s
president Jair Bolsonaro, Trump segued from a discussion on the crisis in
Venezuela to declare that he had heard a rumor that the Democratic Party will
change its name to the Socialist Party. “I’m hearing that, but let’s see if
they do it,” Trump said.
There have been no such rumors.