President Donald Trump praised Russian President Vladimir Putin as ‘very, very strong’ after their press conference that resulted in both Republicans and Democrats expressing concern about his deferential attitude toward his Russian counterpart.
‘I thought that President Putting was very, very strong,’ Trump told Fox News Channel’s Sean Hannity.
‘I think it was great today,’ he said of his afternoon in Helsinki.
President Trump praised Vladimir Putin as ‘very, very strong’
Trump said he and Putin’s meeting went ‘great’
Trump faced swift and sweeping condemnation following his 45-minute press conference.
The White House has struggled to explain why Trump aligned so closely with Putin, and lawmakers in both major parties expressed concern with his suggestion that he believes Putin’s denial of interfering in the 2016 elections.
Trump, however, had a positive attitude toward the meeting.
He also echoed Putin’s argument that if the Russians had information on him it would have come out.
Putin ‘said as strongly as you can say it, they have no information on Trump. It was an interesting statement, too,’ Trump said.
‘One thing you know if they had it, it would have been out. And so, he said it’s nonsense. That’s right. And he also said there’s absolutely no collusion, which you know,’ he added.
The president taped the interview with Hannity in Helsinki shortly after his press conference with Putin.
The criticism of the president grew as he flew back to America. And Trump didn’t answer questions about his meeting upon his return to the White House Monday evening.
Republican Sen. John McCain said in a statement that ‘Today’s press conference in Helsinki was one of the most disgraceful performances by an American president in memory.’
House Speaker Paul Ryan said Monday there was ‘no question’ that Moscow interfered in the U.S. 2016 election and that President Donald Trump ‘must appreciate that Russia is not our ally.’
At the Helsinki event after their two-hour face-to-face talks, Trump said Putin’s denial of meddling in the election was ‘very powerful’.
‘I have President Putin, he just said it’s not Russia. I will say this. I don’t see any reason why it would be,’ Trump said, speaking to reporters about Russian election meddling as he stood side-by-side with the man U.S. intelligence says ordered it.
‘So I have great confidence in my intelligence people, but I will tell you that President Putin was extremely strong and powerful in his denial today,’
The president did reiterate his concern about global nuclearization and said it’s the ‘most important’ issue to him.
‘To me, the most important issue is the nuclear issue, because I know President Obama said global warming is our biggest problem, and I would say that no, it’s nuclear warming is our biggest problem by a factor of about five million,’ he said. ‘The nuclear problem we have to make sure, we have to be very careful. If you look at Russia and the United States, that’s 90 percent of the nuclear weapons.’
Trump met with North Korean leader Kim Jong-Un in Singapore in June to discuss the denuclearization of the Korean peninsula, an issue he said Putin promised him help with.
‘He also said he wants to be very helpful with North Korea. We’re doing well with North Korea, we have time. There’s no rush, it has been going on for many years,’ he said. ‘President Putin is very much in to making that all happen.’
President Trump also charged President Barack Obama with knowing about FBI agent Peter Strzok’s behavior during the time he was texting anti-Trump sentiments to an FBI agent with whom he was having an affair.
President Trump was criticized by both Republicans and Democrats for his deferential attitude toward Putin
The president did not answer questions from reporters upon his return from Helsinki
‘You have to find out who did Peter Strzok report to because it was (former FBI Director James) Comey and it was (former Deputy Director Andrew) McCabe, but it was also probably Obama,’ Trump said.
The president has sought to place blame for the Russian interference in the 2016 election on Obama and the Democrats. He has repeatedly decried a ‘witch hunt’ against him.
He resumed his criticism of Strzok, who testified before House lawmakers in an opening hearing last week, as a disgrace to the FBI.
‘He’s a disgrace to our country. He’s a disgrace to the great FBI, a disgrace, and how he’s still being paid is beyond belief,’ Trump said.
Strzok is on paid leave from the FBI. He and agent Lisa Page, who testified in closed session to lawmakers on Friday and Monday, were having an affair while they both worked on the investigation into Russia’s role in the presidential election.
Their anti-Trump texts have been used by the president and his allies to paint the investigation as tainted.