Trump's 'bromance' with Russia's Putin
appears to be cooling
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[March 03, 2017]
By Matt Spetalnick
WASHINGTON (Reuters) - With his
administration on the defensive over investigations into alleged Russian
meddling in last year's election, U.S. President Donald Trump is no
longer tweeting praise for his Kremlin counterpart.
Less than five weeks after he took office, the chances of a spring thaw
in relations between Washington and Moscow – once buoyed by an apparent
"bromance" between Trump and President Vladimir Putin during the U.S.
political campaign – are looking much dimmer, U.S. officials say.
His top foreign policy advisers have started talking tougher on Russia,
and the apparent cooling of Trump's approach follows the resignation
last month of his first national security adviser, Michael Flynn, a
vocal advocate of warmer ties with Moscow. He was replaced by Army
Lieutenant General H.R. McMaster, who is more hawkish on Russia and
allied with Defense Secretary Jim Mattis, a retired Marine Corps
general.
In one other sign of a stiffening attitude, two officials said the
administration had offered the job of top Russia adviser at the National
Security Council to Russia scholar Fiona Hill, a leading Putin critic.
Her books include "Mr. Putin, Operative in the Kremlin", an allusion to
the Russian leader's past as a KGB officer. It was not immediately known
whether she had accepted the post.
Pressure also has come to bear from Trump's fellow Republicans in
Congress, long wary of his campaign overtures to Putin, and from
European allies anxious over any sign that the president might
prematurely ease sanctions imposed on Russia after its annexation of
Crimea and support for pro-Russian rebels in Ukraine.
Posing fresh obstacles to rapprochement with Russia, analysts say, is
mounting evidence that Attorney General Jeff Sessions, the president's
son-in-law Jared Kushner, and other members of Trump's team communicated
with Russian officials during and after the presidential campaign.
The mushrooming inquiry - which is now focused on Sessions and his
contacts with Moscow's ambassador to Washington - has fueled calls for
expanded investigations into allegations that Moscow sought to sway the
election's outcome.
"There is so much panic in the U.S. political establishment over Russia
right now that Trump will be boxed in on what he can do," said Matthew
Rojansky, a Russia expert at the Wilson Center think tank in Washington.
White House officials say there were no improper contacts, and Russia
denies any meddling.
NO SWIFT WARMING OF TIES EXPECTED
While Trump has yet to lay down his Russia policy, most signs suggest no
swift changes in the relationship, which sank to a post-Cold War low
under his predecessor Barack Obama, mostly due to bitter differences
over Syria and Ukraine.
Mattis sought to reassure NATO allies during a visit to Europe last
month, telling them there would be no military cooperation between the
United States and Russia in the near future.
U.S. Ambassador to the United Nations Nikki Haley this week denounced
Russia for casting a veto to protect the Syrian government from Security
Council action over accusations of chemical weapons use, and also
recently insisted the United States would not recognize Russia's seizure
of Crimea.
Trump's openness to closer ties to Russia and his emphasis, particularly
during the campaign, on fighting terrorism sparked concerns among
current and former U.S. officials that he might trade away U.S.
interests in other areas in exchange for military and intelligence
cooperation against groups such as Islamic State.
Trump's language on Russia now has shifted somewhat from campaign days,
when he tweeted his admiration for Putin as a strong leader, and the
Russian president paid him compliments.
[to top of second column] |
Russian President Vladimir Putin speaks during a news conference at
the Kremlin in Moscow, Russia, January 17, 2017. REUTERS/Sergei
Ilnitsky/Pool/File Photo
Trump told a news conference in mid-February that, "I would love to
be able to get along with Russia," but added that, "It's possible I
won't be able to get along with Putin."
Two senior European officials this week told reporters in Washington
they discerned an evolution in the Trump administration's stance
toward Russia, saying there appeared to be no desire to engage in
such a "grand bargain" in which, for example, Ukraine-related
sanctions might be eased in return for Russian action on other
issues.
"What we consider reassuring is that, at least during our meetings,
nobody came with this idea of a grand bargain, with the idea of a
big deal," said one senior European official on condition of
anonymity.
Said a second senior European official: "Vis-a-vis Russia, to be
frank I have the impression that the analysis and the positions of
this administration are probably now closer to our position than
(they) may have been two or three months ago."
Recent Russian actions have created new complications, including a
stepped-up offensive by pro-Russian separatist forces in eastern
Ukraine and what the Pentagon described as the bombing this week by
Russian and Syrian aircraft of U.S.-backed Syrian rebels – something
Moscow denied had happened.
For its part, the Kremlin said on Wednesday it was patiently waiting
for "some kind of actions" from the Trump administration so that it
could understand what the future holds for relations.
"We have heard different statements from President Trump," Dmitry
Peskov, Putin's spokesman, told reporters.
U.S. Senator Marco Rubio, a Republican member of the Foreign
Relations Committee and former 2016 presidential candidate, had
words of caution for Trump about future dealings with Putin.
"We have had two presidents - a Republican and a Democrat - previous
to the current president who thought they could do such a deal with
Vladimir Putin," he said on the Senate floor on Wednesday.
"Both of them fell on their face because they did not
understand what they were dealing with. It is my sincerest hope that
our current President doesn't make the same mistakes," Rubio said.
(This version of the story corrects defense secretary's first name,
paragraph 3.)
(Additional reporting by Patricia Zengerle and Arshad Mohammed in
Washington, Michelle Nichols in New York and Aleksandar Vasovic and
Maria Tsvetkova in Moscow; Editing by Andrew Hay)
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