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		Trump says he is only in early stages of 
		considering lifting Russia sanctions 
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		 [January 28, 2017] 
		By Steve Holland and Elizabeth Piper 
 WASHINGTON (Reuters) - U.S. President 
		Donald Trump said on Friday he is only in the early stages of 
		considering whether to lift U.S. sanctions on Russia, as British Prime 
		Minister Theresa May, other foreign officials and U.S. lawmakers 
		cautioned that such a move would be premature.
 
 With Trump expected to speak by phone on Saturday with Russian President 
		Vladimir Putin for the first time since taking power a week ago, 
		speculation has been rife that he is close to lifting sanctions imposed 
		by then-President Barack Obama over Moscow's annexation of Ukraine's 
		Crimea Peninsula in 2014.
 
 Such a move would likely cause consternation among European allies as 
		well as many in the U.S. Congress who are also troubled by Russia's 
		intervention in the Syrian civil war and by U.S. intelligence agencies' 
		finding that Moscow meddled in the U.S. election campaign.
 
 "As far as the sanctions, (it is) very early to be talking about that," 
		Trump said, while insisting that he wanted to follow through on his 
		campaign pledge to pursue better relations with Russia.
 
 His caution on the Russian sanctions came in response to a question at a 
		joint news conference at the White House with May, the first foreign 
		leader to visit the president since his inauguration.
 
 May made clear Britain wants to continue sanctions until Putin carries 
		out the requirements in a ceasefire agreement arranged in Minsk, 
		Belarus, in 2014. This view is shared by European allies who fear Putin 
		could become more expansionist if he feels Trump will not intervene.
 
		
		 
		"We believe the sanctions should continue until we see the Minsk 
		agreement fully implemented. And we’ve been continuing to argue that 
		inside the European Union," May said.
 The boisterous Trump and reserved May took pains to demonstrate a 
		readiness to maintain the "special relationship" between the United 
		States and Britain, something that is particularly important for May as 
		she steers Britain out of the European Union.
 
 They posed for photos before a bust of Winston Churchill in the Oval 
		Office and Trump accepted an invitation from Queen Elizabeth to visit 
		Britain later this year.
 
 The two leaders held hands briefly as they walked down the White House 
		colonnade to their news conference in the East Room. Later, they lunched 
		on beef shortribs in the State Dining Room.
 
 At the news conference, Trump showed flashes of the pugnacious 
		willingness to dispense with formality that helped him win the Nov. 8 
		election, registering his displeasure when a British reporter asked him 
		what he had to say to those who are "worried about you becoming the 
		leader of the free world."
 
 "This was your choice of a question?" Trump said with a half smile. 
		Then, nodding toward May as laughter erupted, he added: "There goes that 
		relationship."
 
 On ties with Moscow, Trump has long bucked establishment Washington 
		thinking by voicing a belief that, as he said on Friday, it would be a 
		"tremendous asset" to have a positive relationship with Russia.
 
		'RECKLESS COURSE'
 A long-time Putin critic, U.S. Senator John McCain, who like Trump is a 
		Republican, urged Trump not to lift the sanctions, saying that he should 
		"reject such a reckless course."
 
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			President Donald Trump greets British Prime Minister Theresa May in 
			the White House Oval Office in Washington, U.S., January 27, 2017. 
			REUTERS/Kevin Lamarque 
            
			 
			"If he does not, I will work with my colleagues to codify sanctions 
			against Russia into law," said McCain, a long-time Putin critic.
 House of Representatives Speaker Paul Ryan, the top U.S. elected 
			Republican, told Politico of the sanctions that "I think they should 
			stay."
 
 Former NATO chief Anders Fogh Rasmussen, now an adviser to Ukrainian 
			President Petro Poroshenko, urged caution against reversing 
			sanctions without winning concessions from Moscow, saying that, 
			"easing sanctions will only embolden Russia’s aggression in the 
			region, putting the security interests of Ukraine and the United 
			States in jeopardy."
 
 The White House encounter between Trump and May was heavily 
			scrutinized for signs on how the relationship would develop between 
			the leaders of two key members of the NATO alliance, who are 
			markedly different in style but who both owe their rise to power to 
			a tide of anti-establishment feeling in their countries.
 
 “I’m not as brash as you might think,” Trump said at the news 
			conference. “I’m a people person and I think you are too, Theresa. I 
			think we're going to have a fantastic relationship."
 
 Trump, a wealthy real estate developer and former reality TV star, 
			had never held public office when he was elected in November. May 
			stepped in to lead Britain after the June referendum Brexit vote to 
			leave the EU that prompted her Conservative predecessor, David 
			Cameron, to resign.
 
 It was notable that Trump did not give much in the way of vocal 
			support for NATO, which he has previously declared obsolete. It was 
			left up to May to issue support for NATO in her opening remarks at 
			their news conference, and to encourage Trump's backing.“On defense 
			and security cooperation, we are united in our recognition of NATO 
			as the bulwark of our collective defense,” she said.
 
 "Today we’ve reaffirmed our unshakeable commitment to this alliance 
			– Mr. President I think you confirmed that you are 100 percent 
			behind NATO."
 
 (This version of the story has been refiled to clarify in 14th and 
			15th paragraphs on McCain's remark on Trump and lifting of sanction; 
			clarifying to show that comment "if he does not" refers to rejection 
			of "a reckless course."
 
 (Writing by Steve Holland and Jeff Mason; Editing by Frances Kerry)
 
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