Trump-Putin summit opens without election talk

Trump-Putin summit opens without election talk

US President Donald Trump (left) and Russian President Vladimir Putin welcome each other at the Presidential Palace in Helsinki, Finland, on Monday. (Kremlin pool photo via AP)
US President Donald Trump (left) and Russian President Vladimir Putin welcome each other at the Presidential Palace in Helsinki, Finland, on Monday. (Kremlin pool photo via AP)

HELSINKI: President Donald Trump said he and Russian President Vladimir Putin have had a "good start" to their high-stakes summit in Finland.

Mr Trump called his meeting with Mr Putin "a good start, a very good start for everybody" as the two leaders and their top advisers sat across the table from one another during a luncheon.

'It followed more than two hours of one-on-one discussions involving just the US and Russian leaders, with only translators present.

Mr Trump was joined at the luncheon by Secretary of State Mike Pompeo, US ambassador to Russia Jon Huntsman and other top aides.

After the lunch, Trump and Putin will appear for a joint news conference in Helsinki.

With a wink and a slouch, respectively, Mr Trump and Mr Putin opened their long-awaited summit Monday as the American leader declared that "the world wants to see us get along" and predicted rosy future relations.

Mr Trump laid out a list of topics for discussion that notably did not include Russian meddling in the 2016 presidential election.

"We have not been getting along well for the last number of years,'' Mr Trump said as he and Putin sat down at the Presidential Palace in Finland's capital. "But I think we will end up having an extraordinary relationship. ... I really think the world wants to see us get along.''

Mr Putin, for his part, said he and Mr Trump have maintained regular contact through phone calls and meetings at international events but "the time has come to have a thorough discussion on various international problems and sensitive issues''. He added: "There are quite a few of them for us to pay attention to.''

Their opening one-on-one session ran well past the scheduled 90 minutes.

The summit, which is being closely watched around the world, was condemned in advance by members of Congress from both parties after the US indictment last week of 12 Russian military intelligence officers accused of hacking Democrats in the 2016 election to help Mr Trump's presidential campaign.

Mr Trump said last week that he planned to again raise the meddling issue with Mr Putin, but questions have been swirling about whether Mr Trump will sharply and publicly rebuke his Russian counterpart for the interference that prompted a special investigation probe that Mr Trump has repeatedly labelled a "witch hunt''.

Addressing reporters before the one-on-one meeting, Mr Putin struck a casual pose during Mr Trump's remarks, slouching in his chair with his legs wide and eyes low. He nodded along to some of Mr Trump's remarks before they were translated, showcasing his fluency in English.

Mr Trump leaned forward in his chair, his hands tented in front of him and frequently glanced over at the Russian president. At one point, he shot Putin a wink. After Mr Trump concluded his remarks, American reporters shouted several questions about whether he would bring up election meddling during his discussions with Mr Putin.

Mr Trump did not respond; Mr Putin appeared to smirk.

With that, the leaders gave a quick handshake and their private meeting in the opulent Gothic Hall was under way. Just the two of them, each with a translator.

They were to continue their discussions with an expanded group of aides and over lunch in the Hall of Mirrors, once the emperor's throne room. They'll conclude the summit by taking questions at a joint news conference.

On the streets, the summit attracted a grab-bag of protesters, with abortion-rights activists wearing artificially bulging bellies and Mr Trump masks, anti-fascist protesters bearing signs with expletive-laden insults, and free traders, anti-war Ukrainians and gay rights supporters making their voices heard.

The summit began just hours after Mr Trump blamed the United States -- and not Russian election meddling or its annexation of Crimea -- for a low-point in US-Russia relations. The drama was playing out against a backdrop of fraying Western alliances, a new peak in the Russia investigation and fears that Moscow's aggression may go unchallenged.

"Our relationship with Russia has NEVER been worse,'' Mr Trump tweeted Monday morning, blaming "many years of US foolishness and stupidity and now, the Rigged Witch Hunt!''

The Russian foreign ministry responded, first by liking Mr Trump's tweet and then replying: "We agree.''

The summit started late because Mr Putin arrived in Helsinki about a half hour behind schedule in another display of the Russian's leader famous lack of punctuality. Mr Trump seemed to return the favour by waiting until Mr Putin had arrived at the palace before leaving his hotel. Mr Putin has been late for past meetings with the pope and British queen, among many others.

Several dozen Trump supporters, many waving American flags and sporting "Make America Great Again'' caps, cheered Mr Trump near his waterfront hotel in Helsinki. Two held up a handwritten banner that read "God Bless D & M Trump.''

Mr Trump and his aides have repeatedly tried to lower expectations about what the summit will achieve. He told CBS News that he didn't "expect anything'' from Mr Putin, while his national security adviser said the US wasn't looking for any "concrete deliverables". Mr Trump told reporters during a breakfast Monday with Finland's president that he thought the summit would go "fine".

Observers have raised concerns about the fact that the leaders met alone during their first meeting, but for a pair of interpreters, meaning there will be no corroborating witnesses to accurately represent what was said during the conversation.

Mr Trump said he and Mr Putin would discuss a range of issues, from trade to the military, along with missiles and China. Not mentioned: Election meddling or Syria.

The Russian Foreign Ministry rejected last week's indictment as part of a "shameful comedy'' they claim has been staged to prevent the normalisation of Russia-US ties.

In tweets Monday, Mr Trump continued to undermine the investigation and blamed his predecessor, Barack Obama, for failing to stop Russia's efforts to sway the 2016 election in Mr Trump's favour. He claimed Mr Obama "was informed by the FBI about Russian Meddling, he said it couldn't happen, was no big deal, & did NOTHING about it''.

The Obama administration did, in fact, take action, including confronting Mr Putin in person, as well as expelling nearly three dozen Russian diplomats the US said were actually intelligence operatives and imposing new sanctions.

While Mr Trump was eager for a made-for-TV moment that will dominate headlines like his sit-down with North Korean leader Kim Jong Un last month, Mr Putin hopes the meeting, mere hours after he presided over the World Cup finals, will help him forge good personal ties with Mr Trump and focus on areas where Moscow and Washington may be able to find common ground, such as Syria.

Mr Putin will likely not be shooting for official recognition of Russia's 2014 annexation of Crimea or the easing of crippling US sanctions, aware that the US Congress would never allow such action. But he would welcome a symbolic end to Western protests over Crimea and Moscow's attempts to destabilise elections and traditional Western alliances and norms.

On Syria, a possible deal could see Moscow helping mediate the withdrawal of Iranian forces and their Hezbollah proxies from the areas alongside Syria's border with Israel -- a diplomatic coup that would reflect Russia's carefully cultivated ties with both Israel and Iran.

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