Putin offers warm words to Trump while flexing his muscles on Syria
RUSSIAN President Vladimir Putin yesterday appeared to cosy up to America’s President-elect Donald Trump while stamping his authority as the key powerbroker in Syria.
At his annual end-of-year press conference, he praised Trump for tapping into the public mood in the United States to claim the Republican’s surprise win in the elections.
“He went to the end, though nobody believed that he would win except us,” Putin said.
Ties between Moscow and Washington have hit their lowest point since the Cold War under President Barack Obama due to the Ukraine crisis and Russia’s military intervention in Syria.
But the election of Trump, who praised Putin as a strong leader, has provided a surprise boost for the Kremlin, with the Russian economy still struggling due to Western sanctions and lower oil prices.
US officials have accused Russia of cyber attacks aimed at interfering with the American voting process, alleging Moscow sought to tip the balance in favour of Trump.
Putin, however, backed Trump’s rejection of the allegations, insisting “as the president-elect said entirely correctly, who knows who these hackers were?”
The Russian leader also sought to play down a potential nuclear stand-off with the future US president, a day after they both pledged to bolster their nuclear capabilities.
Putin insisted there was “nothing unusual” about Trump’s call in a tweet on Thursday to bolster America’s nuclear capability, hours after the Russian president had ordered his top brass to strengthen Moscow’s “nuclear potential.” “We will never look to be dragged into an armed race and to spend resources we can’t afford,” Putin said, after insisting he understood the US was the stronger military power but “we just say that we are stronger than any aggressor.”
While Putin was offering warm words for the incoming US leader, he was also flexing Russia’s muscles as the key powerbroker on Syria.
The Syrian army said on Thursday that it had retaken full control of Aleppo, scoring its biggest victory against opposition forces since the civil war erupted in 2011.
“The liberation of Aleppo from radical elements is a very important part of the normalization in Syria, and I hope, for the region overall,” Putin told Sergei Shoigu, defense minister, in a meeting aired just as the press conference was starting.
Putin said later during his marathon press conference that he hoped that fresh peace talks could get all sides in the conflict to agree to a nationwide cease-fire. “The next step must be the conclusion of a cease-fire agreement on all of Syria’s territory,” he said.
Putin said that the presidents of Turkey, Iran and Syria had agreed to take part in new peace talks, which Russia had proposed take place in the Kazakh capital Astana.
Moscow has been conducting an air campaign in Syria in support of long-time ally Syrian President Bashar Assad since September 2015 and has taken steps to boost its presence in the country.
Russia forged a deal with Turkey — which supports groups seeking to topple Assad — that saw rebel fighters and civilians leave Aleppo.
In another sign of strength, as he was addressing journalists, the Kremlin said Putin had signed an order to expand Russia’s naval facility in the Syrian city of Tartus.
Russia’s defense ministry said in October that Moscow was poised to transform the Tartus facility into a permanent base.
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