Thursday, December 20, 2018

Highlights Of Putin's Year-End Presser: Kerch Strait To Meeting With Trump





Russian President Vladimir Putin held his 14th annual end-of-the-year press conference on 20 December, having touched upon a wide array of issues, including relations with the US and Ukraine, anti-Russia sanctions, and arms control.
Arms Control
During the press conference that lasted almost four hours, President Vladimir Putin answered 66 questions, including on arms control.
The president pointed to the fact that the arms control regime was falling apart across the world.
The repercussions of the US decision to withdraw from the Intermediate-Range Nuclear Forces (INF) Treaty were unpredictable and could lead to a global catastrophe, the president stressed.
Putin has elaborated that today there’s a trend of lowering the threshold for the use of nuclear weapons, but Russia knows how to ensure its own security.
During the press conference that lasted almost four hours, President Vladimir Putin answered 66 questions, including on arms control. 
The president pointed to the fact that the arms control regime was falling apart across the world.


In early December, US Secretary of State Mike Pompeo announced that Washington would suspend its obligations under the 1987 INF Treaty within 60 days if Russia didn’t return to full compliance. Moscow, in turn, has repeatedly stated that the accusations of violations of the accord on its part were baseless.




US Withdrawal From Syria
Dwelling on President Donald Trump’s earlier announcement that all 2,000 US troops would leave Syria following their victory over Daesh*, Putin said that he was not sure of the terms of the withdrawal, because the US has maintained its presence in Afghanistan for over 17 years, and has consistently said that it was pulling the military out of the country. But they are still present there.
“We don’t see any indication of the US withdrawing troops as of yet but I accept that it may be happening”.



Meeting With Trump
Although their second full-fledged meeting that was expected to be held on the sidelines of the G20 summit in Argentina was called off by Trump, Putin said that he was ready for another rendezvous – if the other side wished to have one.


Anti-Russia Sanctions
According to President Putin the main goal behind the West’s relentless sanctions is to undermine Russia as a competitor and to stop it from developing.
The head of state stressed that there was no logic in imposing sanctions on Russia over the so-called Skripal case, while doing nothing in relation to the killing of Jamal Khashoggi, a Washington Post journalist:
"[Jamal] Khashoggi was obviously killed – everyone agrees with that – and [Sergei] Skripal is alive, thank God. Nevertheless, sanctions have been piled on Russia, while nothing was done in the former case, total silence. It is a politically-motivated Russophobe approach. It [Skripal case] was only a pretext for another attack on Russia… The goal is to contain Russia as a potential competitor", he said.

At the same time, the president stated that Russia’s economy had already adapted to these restrictions.




Kerch Strait
Reflecting on the question about the naval incident in the Kerch Strait when three Ukrainian warships illegally crossed Russia’s maritime border, President Putin dismissed it as a provocation aimed at aggravating the situation.

He stated that the provocation ahead of the election in Ukraine had been somewhat successful because Ukrainian President Petro Poroshenko’s ratings seemingly increased.
The Russian president suggested that the Ukrainian government had sent those sailors to the area hoping that they would die.

On 25 November, two gunboats and a tugboat violated the Russian maritime border, sailing toward the Kerch Strait, the entrance to the Sea of Azov, ignoring the legal demands to stop and leave the area. Russia seized the Ukrainian vessels and detained 24 crew members; the investigation into the case is underway.



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