White House: No formal Trump-Putin meeting scheduled
White House: No formal Trump-Putin meeting scheduled
President Donald Trump and Russian President Vladimir Putin will not hold a formal meeting at the Asia-Pacific Economic Cooperation summit here in Vietnam, White House press secretary Sarah Sanders told reporters aboard Air Force One on Friday.
Citing "scheduling conflicts
on both sides," Sanders said no formal meeting will take place, but that
an informal interaction between the two world leaders was likely to
happen.
"Regarding
a Putin meeting, there was never a meeting confirmed, and there will
not be one that takes place due to scheduling conflicts on both sides,"
Sanders said. "There is no formal meeting or anything scheduled for
them."
She added: "Now, they're
going to be in the same place. Are they going to bump into each other
and say hello? Certainly possible, and likely. But in terms of a
scheduled, formal meeting, there's not one on the calendar and we don't
anticipate that there will be one."
Sanders' statement contradicts what the Russian side told reporters the day before.
The
possibility of a Trump and Putin meeting has hung over the economic
summit, with any interaction -- formal or informal -- threatening to
overshadow the President's lengthy trip through Asia.
Any
possible interaction, though, comes amid a series of investigations
into Russia's meddling in the 2016 election, an issue that has plagued
the Trump administration for months. In a recent swirl of action,
special counsel Robert Mueller's investigation issued his first
indictments last week, bringing charges against former top Trump campaign aides Paul Manafort and Rick Gates, who have pleaded not guilty.
Trump has long denied any collusion between his campaign and Russian operatives during the 2016 election. But US intelligence agencies concluded in a report released earlier this year that Russia ordered an "influence campaign" to harm Hillary Clinton's chances of winning the election.
The
delicateness of the Putin-Trump meeting was laid bare on Thursday --
before Sanders' statement -- when the two sides gave dramatically
different accounts on whether the two leaders would even meet in the
first place.
Russian presidential
aide Yuri Ushakov told state-run news organization Itar Tass that Putin
and Trump would meet on the sidelines of the Asia-Pacific summit on
Friday, adding that the two sides had already agreed to the time and
place.
While briefing reporters in
China, though, Secretary of State Rex Tillerson declined to say whether
Putin and Trump would meet in Vietnam, telling reporters that officials
are working to determine whether the two world leaders have sufficient
areas of substance to discuss.
"When the two leaders meet, is there something sufficiently substantive?" Tillerson said. "No conclusion has been made on that."
Given
the intense focus on any interactions between Trump, his associates and
Russian operatives, the meeting -- particularly what is said and not
said -- could overshadow the focus of Trump's trip to Vietnam, where the
President is set to discuss business, trade and security with an array
of Asian leaders.
One cause for concern on the American side is how Trump and Putin's first meeting on the sidelines of the G20 summit in Germany
caused a diplomatic dust-up over whether Trump accepted Putin's
assurances there was no Russian involvement in the 2016 American
election.
Trump opened his first
sessions with Putin by "raising the concerns of the American people
regarding Russian interference in the 2016 election," Tillerson told
reporters after the bilateral meeting. "The President pressed President
Putin on more than one occasion regarding Russian involvement. President
Putin denied such involvement, as I think he has in the past."
Tillerson
didn't say whether Trump accepted his denial. But while Tillerson was
briefing US media, Russian Foreign Minister Sergey Lavrov told reporters
that Trump accepted Putin's denial.
The
charge was immediately denied by a senior Trump administration
official, but the turnabout signaled that any diplomatic engagement
between the two countries would be complicated and fraught.
Aboard
Air Force One as he kicked off his five-country, 13-day trip throughout
Asia, Trump told reporters that he "expected" to meet with Putin on the
visit because the United States hopes to enlist Russia in the fight
against North Korea.
"We want Putin's help on North Korea," he said.
The
first half of Trump's trip through Asia has primarily focused on how to
deal with the rogue nation. Trump gave a direct and bellicose speech in
South Korea about Pyongyang, at one point speaking directly to North
Korean leader Kim Jong Un.
"North Korea is not the paradise your grandfather envisioned," he said. "It is a hell that no person deserves."
Trump
will continue to focus on North Korea in Vietnam, senior White House
officials tell CNN, but his time at the summit will primarily focus on
free trade.
"The President's
engagements at APEC will reinforce the US commitment to an equitable,
sustainable and rules-based international economic system based on
market principles," one official said.
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