Trump open to visiting Moscow after Putin invite: White House

WASHINGTON/JOHANNESBURG (Reuters) - President Donald Trump is open to visiting Moscow, the White House said on Friday after Russian President Vladimir Putin said he had invited the American leader.

U.S. President Donald Trump arrives to deliver remarks on the South Lawn of the White House in Washington, U.S., July 27, 2018. REUTERS/Carlos Barria

Despite the uproar in the United States after the two met in Helsinki last week, Putin said another summit with Trump was still on the agenda.

“Regarding our meetings, I understand very well what President Trump said. He has a desire to have further meetings,” Putin told reporters in South Africa, where he was attending a summit meeting of large emerging economies.

“I am ready for that,” Putin said. “We need for the appropriate conditions to exist, to be created, including in our countries.”

The White House said Trump was enthusiastic about another Russia summit.

“President Trump looks forward to having President Putin to Washington after the first of the year, and he is open to visiting Moscow upon receiving a formal invitation,” White House press secretary Sarah Sanders said in a statement.

Separately, Trump’s defense chief, Jim Mattis, said he was considering the possibility of the first talks in years between the defense chiefs of the United States and Russia.

Following the backlash in the United States over Trump’s cordial public tone with Putin in Helsinki, U.S. and Russian officials backed away from Trump’s proposal to schedule a follow-up meeting in Washington in the fall.

The White House on Wednesday postponed that invitation until next year after the federal probe into Russian election meddling is over.

Following the Helsinki summit, Trump was criticized at home for failing to confront Putin publicly over Moscow’s interference in the 2016 presidential election, and for seeming to contradict his own intelligence agencies on the threat from Russia.

Trump defended his conduct at the summit and the White House said no agreements were reached at the one-on-one meeting other than having national security teams meet. Mattis said on Friday no policy changes came out of the summit.

ROCKY RELATIONS

The last time Trump was in the Russian capital was in 2013, to attend a Miss Universe beauty pageant.

That visit surfaced in the FBI investigation of Russian election activities after an intelligence dossier detailed an alleged 2013 encounter involving Trump and prostitutes in Moscow. Trump has denied there was such an encounter.

Referring to the proposal for a meeting in the United States, Putin said: “I am ready to go to Washington. I repeat once again, if the right conditions for work are created.”

Putin said that, in the meantime, it was possible that he and Trump would meet on the sidelines of the Group of 20 summit in Argentina in November or at another international event.

In an apparent reference to the backlash in the United States after Trump’s performance in Helsinki, Putin said: “Despite the difficulties, in this particular case difficulties linked to the internal political situation in the United States, life goes on and our contacts continue.”

Relations between Russia and the United States have been fraught because of disputes over Russia’s annexation of Crimea and allegations - denied by Moscow - of interference in American elections.

Both Trump and Putin have said they are determined to improve relations. However, efforts to achieve detente have been fiercely resisted by U.S. lawmakers, including some in Trump’s own Republican Party, who accuse him of being too friendly toward Putin.

U.S. intelligence agencies concluded last year that Moscow waged an influence campaign to help Trump win the White House by hacking into Democratic Party computers and using fake social media accounts to denigrate Democratic candidate Hillary Clinton.

Trump has repeatedly denied his campaign colluded with Russia and has characterized the investigation by Special Counsel Robert Mueller as a witch hunt.

The president on Friday denied knowing about a 2016 meeting his son Donald Trump Jr. and other campaign staff held at Trump Tower with a group of Russians who offered damaging information about Democratic rival Hillary Clinton. A CNN report said his longtime lawyer Michael Cohen planned to tell Mueller that Trump did know of the meeting.

Reporting by Roberta Rampton and Denis Pinchuk; Writing by Tom Balmforth, Christian Lowe, Doina Chiacu; Editing by Kevin Liffey and Jonathan Oatis

Our Standards:The Thomson Reuters Trust Principles.

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