Daily Times (Primos, PA)

Kremlin: Sessions controvers­y an impediment to new relations

- By Jim Heintz

MOSCOW >> The intense attention being given to the new U.S. attorney general’s meetings with Russia’s ambassador could obstruct improved Washington-Moscow relations, the spokesman for Russian President Vladimir Putin said Thursday.

The spokesman, Dmitry Peskov, told reporters he did not know about the meetings last year between Ambassador Sergei Kislyak and Jeff Sessions, who at that time was a U.S. senator. Sessions also was a policy adviser to President Donald Trump’s campaign.

News of the two meetings has added fuel to the controvers­y over whether Russia was improperly involved with Trump’s campaign. It spurred calls in Congress for Sessions to recuse himself from an investigat­ion into alleged Russian interferen­ce in the U.S. presidenti­al election.

Peskov said it was normal for Russian diplomats to meet with U.S. lawmakers. Sessions’ office has said the meetings were in his capacity as a senator rather than as a Trump campaign adviser.

He characteri­zed the reaction to the news of the Sessions meetings as “an emotional atmosphere (that) leads to resistance to the idea of some kind of U.S.-Russia dialogue.”

A spokeswoma­n for the Russian Foreign Ministry, Maria Zakharova, told The Associated Press that the Russian Embassy would not comment on meetings with American political figures, but she also said they were part of the embassy’s “everyday business.”

Zakharova echoed Peskov’s assessment in a briefing on Thursday, saying U.S. news media were overreacti­ng to suggestion­s of improper contacts between Russia and Trump’s circle.

“What is happening now in the West, particular­ly in the U.S. media, it’s just the manifestat­ion of some kind of media vandalism,” she said.

Trump has repeatedly said that he wants to improve relations between Moscow and Washington. But Moscow appears frustrated by the lack of visible progress, as well as by the support from Trump administra­tion officials for continuing sanctions imposed on Russia for its interferen­ce in Ukraine.

Some Russian news media have cast the controvers­ies over Trump and Russia as attempts by the Democratic Party to undermine the Republican Trump’s agenda.

But others suggest that Moscow may have been overly hopeful for a swift reversal of longstandi­ng U.S.-Russia tensions.

“You still want to stay in this sweet dream called ‘Trump,’ always pushing away unpleasant news from across the ocean like you fumble for an incessant alarm clock and try to turn it off without opening your eyes and staying under the covers,” commentato­r Sergei Strokan wrote in the businessfo­cused newspaper Kommersant.

 ?? ALEXANDER ZEMLIANICH­ENKO — THE ASSOCIATED PRESS ?? Matryoshka­s, traditiona­l Russian wooden dolls, including a doll of U.S. President Donald Trump, top, are displayed for sale in Moscow, Russia, Thursday. Trump has repeatedly said that he aims to improve relations with Russia, but Moscow appears...
ALEXANDER ZEMLIANICH­ENKO — THE ASSOCIATED PRESS Matryoshka­s, traditiona­l Russian wooden dolls, including a doll of U.S. President Donald Trump, top, are displayed for sale in Moscow, Russia, Thursday. Trump has repeatedly said that he aims to improve relations with Russia, but Moscow appears...

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