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Russian President Vladimir Putin delivers a speech in Sochi, Russia, November 7 2024. Picture: MAXIM SHIPENKOV/REUTERS
Russian President Vladimir Putin delivers a speech in Sochi, Russia, November 7 2024. Picture: MAXIM SHIPENKOV/REUTERS

Sochi — Russian President Vladimir Putin on Thursday congratulated Donald Trump on winning the US election and said Moscow was ready for dialogue with the Republican president-elect.

In his first public remarks since Trump’s win, Putin said Trump had acted courageously during an assassination attempt while he was speaking at a campaign rally in Pennsylvania in July.

"He behaved, in my opinion, in a very correct way, courageously, like a real man," Putin said at the Valdai discussion club in the Russian Black Sea resort of Sochi. "I take this opportunity to congratulate him on his election."

Putin said remarks Trump had made during the election campaign about Ukraine and restoring relations with Russia deserved attention.

"What was said about the desire to restore relations with Russia, to bring about the end of the Ukrainian crisis, in my opinion this deserves attention at least," said Putin.

Trump said during campaigning that he could bring peace in Ukraine within 24 hours if elected, but gave few details on how he would seek to end the biggest land war in Europe since World War 2.

The 72-year-old Kremlin chief gave just one note of caution: "I do not know what is going to happen now. I have no clue."

Putin said he was ready to resume contact if a Trump administration wanted that, and was ready for discussions with Trump.

Russia and Trump have repeatedly dismissed as nonsense some claims in Western media that Trump was a sort of Russian agent of influence. Russian officials have said Trump was tough on Russia during his first term, from 2017 to 2021.

US special counsel Robert Mueller investigated allegations of collusion between Trump’s campaign and Russia in the 2016 US presidential election, but said in a 2019 report that he found no evidence of conspiracy.

Moscow has also repeatedly denied US assertions that Russia meddled in the 2024 and other presidential elections and had spread disinformation in an attempt to sow chaos.

War?

The two-and-a-half year war in Ukraine is entering what some Russian and Western officials say could be its final — most dangerous — phase after Moscow’s forces advance at their fastest pace since the early weeks of the conflict and the West ponders how the war will end.

Putin on June 14 set out his terms for an end to the war: Ukraine would have to drop its Nato ambitions and withdraw all of its troops from all of the territory of the four regions claimed by Russia.

Russia controls Crimea, which it annexed from Ukraine in 2014, about 80% of the Donbas — a coal-and-steel zone comprising the Donetsk and Luhansk regions — and more than 70% of the Zaporizhzhia and Kherson regions.

Speaking for several hours on Thursday, Putin railed against the "adventurism" of Western leaders whom he accused of pushing the world to a "dangerous line" by seeking to inflict a strategic defeat on Russia in Ukraine.

"It is useless to put pressure on us. But we are always ready to negotiate with full consideration of mutual legitimate interests," Putin said, just seconds after scolding the West for promising Ukraine and Georgia eventual Nato membership in 2008.

He said that the West had never accepted Russia as an equal partner since the 1991 fall of the Soviet Union, treating it as a defeated power and enlarging the Nato military alliance eastwards towards Russia.

Russia, Putin said, was ready to restore relations with the US but the ball was in Washington’s court. Putin also said that China was Russia’s "ally".

Asked about Kamala Harris’ warning that Putin would eat Trump for lunch, Kremlin spokesman Dmitry Peskov said: "Putin does not eat people."

Reuters

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