Sabtu, 29 Juni 2019

As G-20 concludes, Trump tells reporters he 'may or may not' meet with Kim in North Korea - Fox News

President Trump in a press conference Saturday said he doesn’t plan to add new tariffs on Chinese imports but he won’t be lifting the existing tariffs.

The president spoke from Osaka, Japan, where he met with several world leaders, including China's President Xi Jinping, Russia's President Vladimir Putin, Saudi Prince Mohammad bin Salman and Turkish President Recep Tayyip Erdoğan.

TRUMP-XI MEETING AT G-20 'WENT BETTER THAN EXPECTED,' US PRESIDENT SAYS

President Trump calls on a reporter to ask a question during a news conference following the G-20 summit in Osaka, Japan, on Saturday. (Associated Press)

President Trump calls on a reporter to ask a question during a news conference following the G-20 summit in Osaka, Japan, on Saturday. (Associated Press)

“These meetings have been great,” he told reporters. He said his meeting with Xi "went better than expected" and that U.S. negotiators would “start where they left off with China.”

“Trump also said he “may or may not see Kim Jong Un” when he makes his next stop, in South Korea to visit that nation's President Moon Jae-in. He told Fox News he would “feel very comfortable” stepping into North Korea if the meeting with Kim became possible, but he wasn't concerned if it couldn't happen.

President Donald Trump speaks during a news conference following the G-20 summit in Osaka, Japan, on Saturday. (Associated Press)

President Donald Trump speaks during a news conference following the G-20 summit in Osaka, Japan, on Saturday. (Associated Press)

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He also said he had “a great discussion” with Putin and hopes the U.S. will do more trade with Russia in the future.

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https://www.foxnews.com/politics/trump-says-he-may-or-may-not-meet-with-kim-in-north-korea

2019-06-29 08:20:29Z
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Trump defends remark to Putin, says meddling came up again 'after that' - CNN

"You have to take a look at the word. I did say it," Trump said during a news conference in Osaka.
On Friday, Trump lightheartedly told Putin, "Don't meddle in the election" when asked by a reporter if the topic would come up during their bilateral meeting. The offhand remark, perhaps an attempt at levity, drew swift criticism.
Trump said he had a "tremendous discussion" with the Russian leader, and suggested it came up again later in their meeting.
"I did say it, and I did discuss it a little bit after that, too," he said.
Trump gives Putin light-hearted warning: 'Don't meddle in the election'
When he made his playful admonishment against election interference, Putin sat beside him laughing. Trump's aides, including Secretary of State Mike Pompeo, also smiled.
It was hardly the serious confrontation that many of Trump's critics -- and even some officials in the US government -- have been hoping he'd make ahead of the 2020 contest, which could be vulnerable again to foreign meddling efforts.
Instead, it appeared to be Trump's way of injecting levity into what remains a deeply fractured Washington-Moscow relationship.
In the seven months since Trump last encountered his Russian counterpart, the Russians detained a former Marine on espionage charges and were accused by Mueller in his report of waging a "sweeping and systematic" influence campaign during the 2016 election.
After every meeting and phone call, Trump's critics have accused him of fealty to Putin. In part, their suspicions are rooted in the veiled nature of those sessions, which have sometimes occurred without aides or even American interpreters present.
It's also based on Trump's general unwillingness to criticize Putin, despite his efforts that butt against American interests from the Middle East to Ukraine to election security. As Trump was traveling to the G20 summit, he lobbed criticism at Japan, India and Germany over trade and defense matters -- but not toward Russia.

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https://www.cnn.com/2019/06/29/politics/trump-putin-election-meddling/index.html

2019-06-29 07:51:00Z
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Trump to allow U.S. firms to sell technology to Huawei and promises farmers they would win from new talks, in wide-ranging presser - The Washington Post

BREAKING: In a news conference that lasted more than an hour, President Trump said he agreed not to impose new tariffs against China but insisted he would not lift tariffs he has already put in place while talks are ongoing.

He also talked about the Democratic debates, journalist Jamal Khashoggi’s killing, former president Jimmy Carter and the possibility of crossing the North Korean border.

This story will be updated.

OSAKA, Japan — President Trump and Chinese leader Xi Jinping met Saturday and agreed to restart trade negotiations after more than a month of acrimonious fighting, though major issues remain and it’s unclear whether a long-term detente is within reach.

At a news conference after the meeting, Trump said he agreed not to impose new tariffs against China but insisted he would not lift tariffs he has already put in place while talks are ongoing.

“We discussed a lot of things and we’re right back on track,” Trump said at the Group of 20 summit. “We’ll see what happens. We had a really good meeting.”

He also said he agreed to lift some of the restrictions he had placed on Huawei, a major Chinese technology company, even though a number of Republican lawmakers had urged him not to. He said he would now allow U.S. companies to continue selling their products to the Chinese company.

“We had a very, very good meeting with China, I would say probably even better than expected. And the negotiations are continuing.”

">

It could not be learned what — if anything — Trump received in exchange for his agreement to hold off on imposing new tariffs aside from the agreement to begin negotiations again. He said at the news conference that China had agreed to purchase large amount of U.S. farm products, but he has said this before numerous times.

“We are going to give them lists” of farm products to buy, Trump said. He said there would be “tens of billions of dollars” coming in, but offered no specifics of what he was referring to.

The meeting was being watched closely by business groups, farmers and U.S. political leaders. Some feared a prolonged standoff between two of the world’s most powerful countries could damage the global economy.

Before the meeting, Trump had bemoaned how their previous effort to broker a trade deal appeared to unravel a month ago. He views a trade talks as a key part of his economic agenda, which he praised repeatedly during the news conference and said stands in sharp contrast to what Democrats want to do.

Trump has accused China of a range of unfair trade practices, including the theft of intellectual property, unfair subsidies and currency ma­nipu­la­tion, among other things. Some of his allegations aren’t backed up by data, but a range of experts and U.S. political leaders have agreed that China has violated trade rules to win an advantage over U.S. companies.

The future of these talks could have major economic consequences for both countries, and political consequences for Trump. The U.S. president has already had to dispatch more than $20 billion in payments to farmers to quell a rebellion from many who had alleged they were caught in the midst of the trade war.

Reading off a piece of paper when reporters were in the room, Xi was careful not to reveal his strategy in dealing with the U.S. leader.

“China and the United States both benefit from cooperation, and lose in a confrontation,” Xi said. “Cooperation and dialogue are better than friction and confrontation.”

Some White House officials had hoped the meeting would serve as a way to restart negotiations that had begun in earnest last year only to unravel more than a month ago when White House officials accused the Chinese of backtracking on some commitments. Chinese officials responded by saying they had not agreed to the things the White House officials had alleged.

Xinhua News, a state-run entity, reported after Trump’s meeting with Xi that the U.S. would hold off on imposing new tariffs because talks had resumed. Trump had threatened to slap a 25 percent tariff on more than $300 billion in Chinese imports, but he had suggested he might delay these if talks restart. Trump has already imposed tariffs on $250 billion in Chinese imports, a measure that other world leaders have alleged is damaging the global economy.

The meeting came on the sidelines of the Group of 20 summit, and neither leader appeared to be eager to soften their previous position to cut a deal. The two men also had dinner together Friday night, and Trump had expressed optimism that they might be able to come to an agreement.

“We’ll be discussing a lot of things,” Trump said shortly before the Saturday meeting. “I was with him last night. A lot was accomplished actually last night. As to whether or not we can make a deal, time will tell.”

A number of top White House officials sat in on the Saturday meeting, including U.S. Trade Representative Robert E. Lighthizer, Secretary of State Mike Pompeo, Treasury Secretary Steven Mnuchin and top trade adviser Peter Navarro.

Trump has accused China of ripping off U.S. intellectual property and stealing U.S. jobs, while the Chinese have countered that Trump is trying to bully them and not allowing the talks to be set on an equal footing. Chinese officials have also accused the White House of trying to strong-arm them to purchase billions of dollars in U.S. agriculture goods.

Trump’s decision to temporarily postpone — it’s unclear for how long — any new tariffs against Chinese imports could offer short-term relief to hundreds of U.S. businesses, which have petitioned the White House to be exempted because they say there would be massive costs to their companies.

Tariffs are a type of tax paid by companies that import products, and many firms have asked the Commerce Department to be exempted from new tariffs because they say they can’t import the products from elsewhere. Trump has said this hard-line tactic with China is the only way to try to force the country to change its trade practices, and he has also said the billions of dollars in tariff revenue that the United States has reaped in the past year validates his approach.

It’s unclear where the talks might go. Both leaders have shown a willingness to let the fight drag on for much longer, though Trump could face political pressure to wrap up the standoff soon, given concerns about the strength of the U.S. economy and his reelection bid next year.

Trump imposed tariffs on numerous Chinese goods last year, and these penalties grabbed the attention of Xi and others. During the G-20 summit in Argentina in December, Trump and Xi agreed to begin negotiations to resolve trade differences. While the two countries were negotiating, Trump agreed to hold off on further tariffs.

But talks broke down more than a month ago, and Trump swiftly moved to toughen tariffs and propose new ones. Trump’s existing tariffs on Chinese goods cover a range of business products, industrial equipment and many consumer goods. But his proposed tariffs would hit everything else, including many electronics and consumer products, and businesses have warned those costs would be passed along to U.S. consumers.

Trump last week said he was considering levying a 10 percent tariff on this final batch of products, which he estimated to cover more than $300 billion in goods. Trump has often threatened tariffs only to back down at the last minute, confusing business leaders as they try to plan investments.

Again and again during his presidency, Trump has turned to tariffs as a way to try to force other countries to cut a deal. He has called himself a “Tariff Man,” despite a long-standing GOP push to embrace free trade and reduce import and export barriers.

When the United States and China were negotiating the trade deal earlier this year, White House officials were focused on a 150-page document that they felt captured the necessary changes they wanted to see from the Chinese government to rebalance the economic relationship.

The document would have addressed China’s currency policy, its government support for private companies, its insistence that U.S. companies transfer technology to the Chinese, and the theft of intellectual property. The White House has also pushed China to stop dumping lower-cost products, such as steel and aluminum, on the world market in a way that depresses prices. And Trump wanted China to purchase many more U.S. products, particularly agriculture, to reduce what he views as a financial imbalance between the two nations.

Many Democrats and Republicans have agreed with Trump that China should change its behavior, but no U.S. leader has taken Trump’s approach before because of the complicated economic and security relationship between the two countries.

But Trump has used a much different strategy.

Just days after the China talks broke down earlier this year, the Commerce Department announced it was cracking down on Huawei in a way that could make it very hard to do business. White House officials said the crackdown was due to violations of U.S. law, but Trump has said publicly that he would be open to easing off the company as part of the trade talks.

There are still several people in the White House, including Navarro, pushing Trump to drive a hard bargain with the Chinese.

Navarro walked past reporters after the meeting with Xi Saturday afternoon. He was asked how it went and did not answer, but gave a shrug with both hands.

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https://www.washingtonpost.com/business/economy/trade-war-hangs-in-balance-as-trump-and-xi-finally-meet/2019/06/28/bb065eb2-9a02-11e9-830a-21b9b36b64ad_story.html

2019-06-29 07:01:10Z
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U.S. and China agree to restart trade negotiations following meeting between Trump and Xi at Group of 20 summit - The Washington Post

OSAKA, Japan — President Trump and Chinese leader Xi Jinping met Saturday and agreed to restart trade negotiations after more than a month of acrimonious fighting, though major issues remain and it’s unclear whether a long-term detente is within reach.

At a news conference after the meeting, Trump said he agreed not to impose new tariffs against China but insisted he would not lift tariffs he has already put in place while talks are ongoing.

“We discussed a lot of things and we’re right back on track,” Trump said at the Group of 20 summit. “We’ll see what happens. We had a really good meeting.”

He also said he agreed to lift some of the restrictions he had placed on Huawei, a major Chinese technology company, even though a number of Republican lawmakers had urged him not to. He said he would now allow U.S. companies to continue selling their products to the Chinese company.

“We had a very, very good meeting with China, I would say probably even better than expected. And the negotiations are continuing.”

">

It could not be learned what — if anything — Trump received in exchange for his agreement to hold off on imposing new tariffs aside from the agreement to begin negotiations again. He said at the news conference that China had agreed to purchase large amount of U.S. farm products, but he has said this before numerous times.

“We are going to give them lists” of farm products to buy, Trump said. He said there would be “tens of billions of dollars” coming in, but offered no specifics of what he was referring to.

The meeting was being watched closely by business groups, farmers and U.S. political leaders. Some feared a prolonged standoff between two of the world’s most powerful countries could damage the global economy.

Before the meeting, Trump had bemoaned how their previous effort to broker a trade deal appeared to unravel a month ago. He views a trade talks as a key part of his economic agenda, which he praised repeatedly during the news conference and said stands in sharp contrast to what Democrats want to do.

Trump has accused China of a range of unfair trade practices, including the theft of intellectual property, unfair subsidies and currency ma­nipu­la­tion, among other things. Some of his allegations aren’t backed up by data, but a range of experts and U.S. political leaders have agreed that China has violated trade rules to win an advantage over U.S. companies.

The future of these talks could have major economic consequences for both countries, and political consequences for Trump. The U.S. president has already had to dispatch more than $20 billion in payments to farmers to quell a rebellion from many who had alleged they were caught in the midst of the trade war.

Reading off a piece of paper when reporters were in the room, Xi was careful not to reveal his strategy in dealing with the U.S. leader.

“China and the United States both benefit from cooperation, and lose in a confrontation,” Xi said. “Cooperation and dialogue are better than friction and confrontation.”

Some White House officials had hoped the meeting would serve as a way to restart negotiations that had begun in earnest last year only to unravel more than a month ago when White House officials accused the Chinese of backtracking on some commitments. Chinese officials responded by saying they had not agreed to the things the White House officials had alleged.

Xinhua News, a state-run entity, reported after Trump’s meeting with Xi that the U.S. would hold off on imposing new tariffs because talks had resumed. Trump had threatened to slap a 25 percent tariff on more than $300 billion in Chinese imports, but he had suggested he might delay these if talks restart. Trump has already imposed tariffs on $250 billion in Chinese imports, a measure that other world leaders have alleged is damaging the global economy.

The meeting came on the sidelines of the Group of 20 summit, and neither leader appeared to be eager to soften their previous position to cut a deal. The two men also had dinner together Friday night, and Trump had expressed optimism that they might be able to come to an agreement.

“We’ll be discussing a lot of things,” Trump said shortly before the Saturday meeting. “I was with him last night. A lot was accomplished actually last night. As to whether or not we can make a deal, time will tell.”

A number of top White House officials sat in on the Saturday meeting, including U.S. Trade Representative Robert E. Lighthizer, Secretary of State Mike Pompeo, Treasury Secretary Steven Mnuchin and top trade adviser Peter Navarro.

Trump has accused China of ripping off U.S. intellectual property and stealing U.S. jobs, while the Chinese have countered that Trump is trying to bully them and not allowing the talks to be set on an equal footing. Chinese officials have also accused the White House of trying to strong-arm them to purchase billions of dollars in U.S. agriculture goods.

Trump’s decision to temporarily postpone — it’s unclear for how long — any new tariffs against Chinese imports could offer short-term relief to hundreds of U.S. businesses, which have petitioned the White House to be exempted because they say there would be massive costs to their companies.

Tariffs are a type of tax paid by companies that import products, and many firms have asked the Commerce Department to be exempted from new tariffs because they say they can’t import the products from elsewhere. Trump has said this hard-line tactic with China is the only way to try to force the country to change its trade practices, and he has also said the billions of dollars in tariff revenue that the United States has reaped in the past year validates his approach.

It’s unclear where the talks might go. Both leaders have shown a willingness to let the fight drag on for much longer, though Trump could face political pressure to wrap up the standoff soon, given concerns about the strength of the U.S. economy and his reelection bid next year.

Trump imposed tariffs on numerous Chinese goods last year, and these penalties grabbed the attention of Xi and others. During the G-20 summit in Argentina in December, Trump and Xi agreed to begin negotiations to resolve trade differences. While the two countries were negotiating, Trump agreed to hold off on further tariffs.

But talks broke down more than a month ago, and Trump swiftly moved to toughen tariffs and propose new ones. Trump’s existing tariffs on Chinese goods cover a range of business products, industrial equipment and many consumer goods. But his proposed tariffs would hit everything else, including many electronics and consumer products, and businesses have warned those costs would be passed along to U.S. consumers.

Trump last week said he was considering levying a 10 percent tariff on this final batch of products, which he estimated to cover more than $300 billion in goods. Trump has often threatened tariffs only to back down at the last minute, confusing business leaders as they try to plan investments.

Again and again during his presidency, Trump has turned to tariffs as a way to try to force other countries to cut a deal. He has called himself a “Tariff Man,” despite a long-standing GOP push to embrace free trade and reduce import and export barriers.

When the United States and China were negotiating the trade deal earlier this year, White House officials were focused on a 150-page document that they felt captured the necessary changes they wanted to see from the Chinese government to rebalance the economic relationship.

The document would have addressed China’s currency policy, its government support for private companies, its insistence that U.S. companies transfer technology to the Chinese, and the theft of intellectual property. The White House has also pushed China to stop dumping lower-cost products, such as steel and aluminum, on the world market in a way that depresses prices. And Trump wanted China to purchase many more U.S. products, particularly agriculture, to reduce what he views as a financial imbalance between the two nations.

Many Democrats and Republicans have agreed with Trump that China should change its behavior, but no U.S. leader has taken Trump’s approach before because of the complicated economic and security relationship between the two countries.

But Trump has used a much different strategy.

Just days after the China talks broke down earlier this year, the Commerce Department announced it was cracking down on Huawei in a way that could make it very hard to do business. White House officials said the crackdown was due to violations of U.S. law, but Trump has said publicly that he would be open to easing off the company as part of the trade talks.

There are still several people in the White House, including Navarro, pushing Trump to drive a hard bargain with the Chinese.

Navarro walked past reporters after the meeting with Xi Saturday afternoon. He was asked how it went and did not answer, but gave a shrug with both hands.

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https://www.washingtonpost.com/business/economy/trade-war-hangs-in-balance-as-trump-and-xi-finally-meet/2019/06/28/bb065eb2-9a02-11e9-830a-21b9b36b64ad_story.html

2019-06-29 06:11:14Z
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Elton John slams Vladimir Putin as hypocritical in open letter - CNN

In an interview with the Financial Times, the paper said the Russian President accused liberal governments of pursuing a mindless multiculturalism and embracing sexual diversity, among others things.
"I am not trying to insult anyone because we have been condemned for our alleged homophobia," Putin said in the interview published Thursday. "But we have no problem with LGBT persons. God forbid, let them live as they wish. But some things do appear excessive to us. They claim now that children can play five or six gender roles."
"Let everyone be happy, we have no problem with what," Putin told the outlet. "But this must not be allowed to overshadow the culture, traditions and traditional family values of millions of people making up the core population."
Elton fired back in a social media post Friday, saying he was "deeply upset" by the interview and strongly disagrees with Putin's view.
"I find duplicity in your comment that you want LGBT people to 'be happy' and that 'we have no problem in that'. Yet Russian distributors chose to heavily censor my film 'Rocketman' by removing all references to my finding true happiness through my 25 year relationship with David and the raising of my two beautiful sons," the singer said.
John said Putin's statement felt like "hypocrisy."
Elton John slams Russian distributor's censorship of 'Rocketman' gay sex scenes
"I am proud to live in a part of the world where our governments have evolved to recognize the universal human right to love whoever we want," John said.
Last month, the musician slammed Russian distributors for editing out gay sex scenes from his biopic "Rocketman." A distributor told state news agency TASS it cut the scenes to comply with Russian legislation.
John and the filmmakers said in a statement that they rejected "in the strongest possible terms the decision to pander to local laws and censor Rocketman for the Russian market."
In his statement Friday, John applauded government policies that allow LGBT people to legally marry.

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https://www.cnn.com/2019/06/29/entertainment/elton-john-slams-vladimir-putin-financial-times-interview-trnd/index.html

2019-06-29 05:59:00Z
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Jumat, 28 Juni 2019

Putin Makes a Splash at the G20 Summit - The New York Times

MOSCOW — President Vladimir V. Putin, already a well established geopolitical star, had a splashy day on the global stage at the Group of 20 summit meeting on Friday, even by his own standards.

First, Mr. Putin stirred things up in Europe by proclaiming, in an interview with the Financial Times, that the world’s liberal political order had “outlived its purpose.”

Within hours, he listened cheerily through an apparent joke by President Trump about rubbing out journalists in Russia.

Later, a video of Mr. Putin shaking hands with an extraordinarily glum-looking Theresa May, the British prime minister, touched off another media storm.

And over the course of the summit, a gathering of officials from the world’s wealthiest economies, he conducted a dozen or so meetings and found time to broker a deal with China claiming to cut out the use of dollars in bilateral trade, a longtime goal for Russia.

In the interview with the Financial Times, Mr. Putin said that the “liberal idea,” by which he meant the postwar dominance of democracy, human rights, multiculturalism and tolerance, had become “obsolete.”

Image
CreditPool photo by Andy Rain

“Liberals cannot simply dictate anything to anyone just like they have been attempting to do over the recent decades,” Mr. Putin said, according to a transcript.

Mr. Putin said that Chancellor Angela Merkel, Germany’s leader, had erred in allowing a million refugees, mostly Syrians, to settle in her country, and that Mr. Trump was correct in trying to halt immigrants and drugs from Mexico.

“This liberal idea presupposes that nothing needs to be done,” Mr. Putin said. “The migrants can kill, plunder and rape with impunity because their rights as migrants have to be protected.”

But “every crime must have its punishment,” he told the newspaper. “The liberal idea has become obsolete. It has come into conflict with the interests of the overwhelming majority of the population.”

In the interview, Mr. Putin also criticized what he cast as excessive tolerance for people of diverse sexual orientation and identity. “We have no problem with L.G.B.T. persons,” he said. “But some things appear excessive to us. They claim now that children can play five or six gender roles.”

Donald Tusk, the president of the European Council, responded on Twitter. saying: “I strongly disagree with President Putin that liberalism is obsolete. What I find really obsolete are authoritarianism, personality cults and the rule of oligarchs.”

Mr. Putin, a 66-year-old former K.G.B. agent who has been Russia’s de facto ruler for nearly 20 years, has long shown an understanding of the power of a provocative phrase, and at times flashed a sense of humor as black as coal.

Image
CreditErin Schaff/The New York Times

He rose to power in Russia after promising to “whack in the outhouse” his terrorist enemies in Chechnya, a turn of phrase that proved wildly popular in Russia.

Mr. Putin, who from time to time underscores in his speech that he is not a prudish man, once joked that communist labor had the same flaw as group sex, as it’s impossible to tell who is working and who is slacking off.

Faced with criticism over human rights abuses in the war in Chechnya early in his tenure, he once threatened at a news conference to castrate a reporter who asked a question about land mine victims.

In opening remarks before a bilateral meeting at the Group of 20 summit in Osaka, Japan, Mr. Trump, speaking with Mr. Putin in a spirit of bonhomie, had commented about reporters, “Get rid of them. Fake news is a great term, isn’t it? You don’t have this problem in Russia, but we do.”

Mr. Putin responded that “it’s the same” in Russia.

The Committee to Protect Journalists has documented the untimely deaths of 58 journalists in Russia in the post-Soviet period, many of them by murder or unexplained accidents.

In a conference call with Russian-based reporters Friday, Mr. Putin’s spokesman, Dmitry S. Peskov, clarified that Mr. Putin was not criticizing the liberal political order per se but what he saw as efforts by Western leaders to impose it to the exclusion of other political systems.

“Vladimir Putin, in my understanding, remains very close to the ideas of liberalism,” Mr. Peskov said.

“At the same time, if authoritarianism exists somewhere, this is a question of the people of these countries,” Mr. Peskov said. “We should not judge them and change the regime and government in these countries.”

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https://www.nytimes.com/2019/06/28/world/europe/putin-g20.html

2019-06-28 15:45:00Z
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How Donald Trump made a total mockery of Russia's election interference - CNN

In Japan at the G20 -- and sitting beside Vladimir Putin before the duo's first meeting since the release of special counsel Robert Mueller's report -- Trump was asked whether he would tell the Russian President not to meddle in future American elections.
"Don't meddle in the election, please," Trump said, smirking and wagging his finger at Putin.
Are. You. Kidding. Me.
The dismissiveness is dripping in Trump's comment. You want me to say the little thing to the nice man? I'll say it. You happy now? (Pats collective media on head).
He wants the media -- and everyone watching -- to know that he's just going through the motions, that he doesn't really believe that he needs to tell Putin not to involved Russia in future elections. He's checking a box, in the most sarcastic way possible.
Which is consistent with how Trump has responded to questions of late as to whether he will raise Russia's election interference with Putin at this G20 gathering. Over the weekend, NBC's Chuck Todd asked Trump about broaching the subject of Russia's role in the 2016 election with Putin. "I may if you'd like me to do it, I'll do that," Trump responded.
Here's why all of this is so appalling (if you don't already know): The United States intelligence community and the nearly two-year long Mueller investigation both affirmed this basic fact: Russia actively, aggressively and systematically sought to meddle in the 2016 election in order to help Trump and hurt Clinton. They took these actions because they believed Trump would be better for their interests than Clinton would be. They view the 2016 operations as a giant success and are extremely likely to pursue more attempts at interference in the 2020 election.
Fact check: Trump falsely accuses Mueller of crimes
These are facts -- affirmed by virtually every person in a position to know within the national security and intelligence communities.
The problem? Trump has never really believed them -- and has made that fact abundantly clear to anyone listening.
Remember Trump's statement regarding Russian election interference following his Helsinki summit with Putin in July 2018?
"I hold both countries responsible," Trump said. "I think that the United States has been foolish. I think we've all been foolish. ... And I think we're all to blame."
In other words: This is a feature, not a glitch of how Trump views Russia, Putin and the interference in the 2016 election.
If you think Trump's cavalier attitude about Russian meddling is just words, I'd like to point you to acting White House chief of staff Mick Mulvaney's warning to staffers not to raise the issue of how America is dealing with future attempts to interfere in our elections because Trump couldn't get beyond the idea that any talk of Russia meant people were saying he didn't win fair and square.
Or to the report in The New York Times that Pentagon officials weren't going into detail on operations against Russia with Trump for fear he might cancel the operations.
Impeachment backers say Mueller's testimony could be a game-changer
None of this is normal. And all of it has real geopolitical implications that will extend well beyond Trump's time in office -- whether that's four or eight years.
To mock the idea of telling a foreign power who has already sought to meddle in our election not to do it again is the height of irresponsibility by Trump. It also amounts to basically an open invitation for Russia to do it again.

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https://www.cnn.com/2019/06/28/politics/vladimir-putin-donald-trump-election-interference/index.html

2019-06-28 14:59:00Z
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