Vance calls Russia an American adversary but won't label Moscow as an
enemy
Send a link to a friend
[October 28, 2024]
By AAMER MADHANI
WILMINGTON, Del. (AP) — Republican vice presidential nominee JD Vance
says Russia is a U.S. adversary but suggests it's counterproductive to
approach Moscow as an enemy.
The Ohio senator also said Donald Trump is committed to NATO, the
transatlantic military alliance seen as the bulwark preventing further
Russian aggression in Europe, although the former president has pledged
to “finish the process we began under my administration of fundamentally
reevaluating NATO’s purpose and NATO’s mission.”
Vance, in a series of television interviews that aired Sunday, nine days
before the election, made clear that Trump, if back in the White House,
would press European members to spend more on defense and that their
administration would work to quickly wind down Moscow's war in Ukraine
that began in February 2022 when Russian President Vladimir Putin
ordered troops across the border.
“We’re not in a war with him, and I don’t want to be in a war with
Vladimir Putin’s Russia,” Vance said when pressed during an interview
with NBC's “Meet the Press” on whether Russia is an enemy. Vance said
"we have to be careful about the language that we use in international
diplomacy. We can recognize, obviously, that we have adversarial
interests with Russia."
U.S. officials this past week confirmed that North Korea has sent 3,000
troops to Russia for training before potentially being deployed in
Ukraine. U.S. officials say Russia has ramped up a disinformation
campaign aimed at sowing distrust in the results in U.S. election on
Nov. 5.
Officials on Friday confirmed Moscow’s role in creating a video that
appears to show the destruction of mail ballots in Pennsylvania, in what
was the latest effort linked to Russia on spreading false information on
social media.
Democratic presidential nominee Kamala Harris has argued that Trump is
too cozy with Putin and that Trump's return to the White House would be
calamitous for Ukraine and America's European allies.
Vance was circumspect about supporting further sanctions against Russia,
saying the Biden administration's use of the tool for Russia's invasion
of Ukraine has been as effective as a “wet firecracker.”
“I don’t think that we should overreact to anything. What we should do
is encourage our fellow Americans to be careful,” Vance told CBS' “Face
the Nation.” “Don’t trust everything that you see on social media. And
of course, we should push back where appropriate. But that’s the big
question is, what is an appropriate response to a country making social
media videos? I’m not going to make a commitment to that sitting right
here.”
[to top of second column]
|
Republican vice presidential nominee Sen. JD Vance, R-Ohio, applauds
the crowd after speaking at a campaign event at Penn State Behrend
Erie Hall, Saturday, Oct. 26, 2024, in Erie, Pa. (AP Photo/Matt
Freed)
Trump has boasted of having had an effective relationship with Putin
when Trump was in office. The former president has praised the
Russian leader, suggested cutting U.S. money for Ukraine and
repeatedly criticized NATO.
The former president has said he would not defend NATO members that
failed to meet defense spending targets, and warned he would
“encourage” Russia “to do whatever the hell they want” to alliance
countries that he considered "delinquent.”
Vance underscored that a Trump administration would continue to
support NATO but that it would lean on Europe to increase defense
spending.
NATO announced in June that a record 23 of the 32 member nations
were reaching the alliance’s defense spending target, 2% of GDP,
this year. That's a nearly fourfold increase from 2021, when only
six nations were meeting the goal.
“Of course, we’re going to honor our NATO commitments,” Vance said.
“But I think it’s important ... that we recognize that NATO is not
just a welfare client. It should be a real alliance.”
Former Wyoming Rep. Liz Cheney, a prominent Republican critic of
Trump who has endorsed Harris, said Trump’s approach to Putin
demonstrates “a total lack of understanding of the importance of our
allies in keeping the peace.
Trump “talks about our allies as though he were a mafia boss,”
Cheney said on CNN’s State of the Union. “He seems to completely
fail to understand that, in order to keep peace, we have to have
allies with us.”
In the wide-ranging interviews, which included with CNN, Vance also
played down recent comments by Trump about ending the federal income
tax.
Trump said in a Fox News appearance last week “there is a way, if
what I’m planning comes out” to do away with it. He told podcaster
Joe Rogan on Friday that he was serious about replacing revenue the
income tax by raising tariffs.
Trump has pledged to also end taxes on tips, Social Security and
overtime pay if elected.
“He’s talking aspirationally about something that he himself thinks
is less of a focus than cutting taxes on tips,” Vance said of
Trump's call to eliminate the federal income tax.
All contents © copyright 2024 Associated Press. All rights reserved
|