HELSINKI — Russian President Vladimir Putin told President Donald Trump Monday that he never meddled in the 2016 U.S. election, the Russian leader said Monday at a joint press briefing.
“Once again, President Trump mentioned the issue of the so-called interference of Russia with the American elections, and I had to reiterate things I said several times including during our personal contacts that the Russian state has never interfered and is not going to interfere into internal American affairs including election process,” Putin said during the conference alongside Trump.
Putin said that he was willing to work with the U.S. to “analyze together” any specific material related to election meddling.
“For instance, we can analyze them through the joint working group on cyber security, the establishment of which we discussed during our previous contacts,” he said.
The two leaders “spent a great deal of time,” talking about election meddling, Trump said at the briefing. Trump repeatedly denied that there was any collusion, saying at the briefing that “there was no collusion at all.”
“There was no collusion. I didn’t know the president. There was nobody to collude with,” Trump said. He added that he beat Hillary Clinton “easily.”
Trump has faced pressure to address Russia’s meddling in the 2016 U.S. presidential election. That pressure reached a new high on Friday after special counsel Robert Mueller indicted 12 Russian government officials, accusing them of hacking into computers belonging to the Democratic National Committee and Trump’s electoral rival Hillary Clinton.
When asked if Putin would extradite the 12 Russian intelligence officers to the U.S. to face charges, the Russian leader said at the briefing that he did not know the full extent of the issue.
The two leaders met at the Presidential Palace in Finland’s capital city on Monday for a bilateral talk that lasted more than two hours — longer than the 90 minutes that had originally been planned.
In his first comments after the meeting, Trump told reporters he believed the summit marked a “very good start.”
“I think it’s a good start, a very, very good start for everybody,” Trump said, speaking in the palace’s Hall of Mirrors immediately following the meeting.
Earlier Monday, Trump predicted that the two leaders would have an “extraordinary relationship.” The president said they would discuss “everything from trade, to military, to missiles, to nuclear to China.”
The summit between the two leaders — their first in a formal setting — followed a contentious week in which the president slammed NATO allies for what he has called inadequate defense spending, threatened to “kill” a trade deal with the U.K., and called the European Union a “foe.”
The series of events has prompted outcry from America’s allies, including Germany, one of America’s largest trading partners. Germany’s foreign minister Heiko Maas told a German newspaper group on Monday that the country “can no longer completely rely on the White House.”
Trump has faced increasing pressure to address election meddling with Putin from both Democrats and Republicans.
In a joint-address with the British Prime Minister Theresa May on Friday, the president said he would address the Russian meddling.
“Will we be talking about meddling? I will absolutely bring that up. I don’t think you’ll have any, ‘Gee, I did it, I did it, you got me.’ There won’t be a Perry Mason here I don’t think,” Trump said.
Deputy Attorney General Rod Rosenstein announced the new charges against the 12 Russian government officials hours later.
The president had gone back and forth over whether he would address meddling since he announced his plans to meet with Putin.
“You never know about meetings, what happens, right,” the president said told reporters in the Oval Office late last month in response to a question about whether he would raise the issue of election meddling.
The president has said that he would improve the United States’ relationship with Russia. Though, in a post on Twitter on Monday, the president wrote that the relationship “has NEVER been worse.”
“Our relationship with Russia has NEVER been worse thanks to many years of U.S. foolishness and stupidity and now, the Rigged Witch Hunt,” the president wrote.
The Russian ministry of foreign affairs quoted the president’s tweet, and wrote: “We agree.” State news agencies immediately picked up on the president’s comments. A headline in the government-controlled Sputnik News on Monday read: “Trump: Ties With Russia Have Never Been Worse Due to Years of ‘US Foolishness’”
A number of former government officials have cautioned that the summit could serve to bolster Putin’s domestic image while offering few chances for the U.S. to extract concessions.
“This is a great day for Vladimir Putin,” former CIA and NSA director Gen. Michael Hayden said on CNN Monday. “He added: “Just by agreeing to show up, I think Putin has pocketed almost everything he needs for the domestic audience at home.”
Michael McFaul, the former U.S. Ambassador to Russia, said Monday he believed Putin had reason to feel “pretty confident.”
“He has a firm grip on power at home. No challengers at home. He’s just had a fantastic world cup where the whole world saw Russia from a different side. And he’s now engaging with President Trump who is coming in at a very weak point,” McFaul said on MSNBC on Monday.
This is breaking news. Check back for updates.
Source: cnbc
Putin told Trump at summit: Russia never meddled in US election