Friday, November 15, 2019

Russian President Putin Hopes That President Trump Will Visit Moscow On V-Day

FILE PHOTO: Donald Trump and Vladimir Putin meet in Helsinki, Finland, 2018 © Reuters / Kevin Lamarque

RT: Trump’s V-Day visit to Moscow would be ‘the right thing to do’ even during election season – Putin

As Russia prepares to celebrate the May 2020 anniversary of the defeat of the Nazis in World War II, President Vladimir Putin said that a visit from Donald Trump would be “the right thing to do,” even during an election campaign.

Trump’s re-election campaign will be in full swing next May, when Russia marks the 75th anniversary of the Soviet and allied victory over the Nazi Germany. While the US president’s opponents will likely still be hammering him on his “friendliness” with Vladimir Putin, the Russian leader told reporters on Thursday that a visit from Trump would be fitting.

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WNU Editor: For Russia V-Day is a big day. The symbolism behind a President Trump visit will be huge.

16 comments:

Anonymous said...

Trump should go.

James said...

Yes, he should go.

Anonymous said...

Parrot says: why not. It is an important anniversary

Anonymous said...

He should go.

The Russian people are okay. Their rulers at any pone time not so much.

I view the Russian contribution, The Great Patriotic War, as the Russian people fighting for survival not in terms of the idiot communists.

Roger Smith said...


Along with news of us informing Russian security of impending terror attacks this indeed would be a very uplifting gesture.
A visit in remembrance of when more of the world's countries worked together. Myself I would visit the Kursk area. And insist on a surprise visit to a hole in the wall eatery in some small town away from Moscow.

Anonymous said...

US and Russia are co-operating in Syria so the mil-to-mil work is working. So surprising that we are co-operating with Russia as it sends troops all along NATO stalwart Turkey's southern border. Back in the Cold War that would mean fighting.
In exchange for a visit, Trump ought to ask for Russia to explain its bribery of the Clinton family and other Dem luminaries. Do it in a press conference setting so Putin can answer questions.

Anonymous said...

She said allegations that she was out to get Mr. Trump are untrue, and said she never even met Hunter Biden.

"Also untrue are unsourced allegations that I told unidentified embassy employees or Ukrainian officials that President Trump's orders should be ignored because 'he was going to be impeached' -- or for any other reason. I did not and would not say such a thing," she testified.

"The Obama administration did not ask me to help the Clinton campaign or harm the Trump campaign, nor would I have taken any such steps if they had," she added.

Yovanovitch also swatted down allegations that she distributed a list of people not to prosecute in Ukraine.

"I want to reiterate that the allegation that I disseminated a 'Do Not Prosecute' list is a fabrication," she testified. -

Anonymous said...


And Fred screaming in bold font again at 11:08.

Anonymous said...

Screenshot Zvezda TV

Russia landed attack helicopters and troops at a sprawling air base in northern Syria vacated by U.S. forces, the Russian Defense Ministry’s Zvezda TV channel said on Friday.

Armed Russian military police were shown in footage aired on Zvezda flying into the Syrian air base in northern Aleppo province near the border with Turkey and fanning out to secure the area.

The move comes after U.S. President Donald Trump abruptly ordered the withdrawal of U.S. troops from parts of Syria last month.

Anonymous said...



Look the parrot learned a new trick. No he is spamming with italic font

Bob Huntley said...

Perhaps it was a subtle hint to Trump that it was time to take up on the offer of refuge while he still can.

Anonymous said...

moron anon: i was twitting you, asshole

Anonymous said...



Federal prosecutors in New York are investigating whether Rudy Giuliani stood to personally profit from a Ukrainian natural-gas business pushed by two associates who also aided his efforts there to launch investigations that could benefit President Trump, people familiar with the matter said.

Mr. Giuliani’s associates, Lev Parnas and Igor Fruman, pitched their new company, and plans for a Poland-to-Ukraine pipeline carrying U.S. natural gas, in meetings with Ukrainian officials and energy executives this year, saying the project had the support of the Trump administration, according to people briefed on the meetings. In many of the same meetings, the two men also pushed for assistance on investigations into Democratic presidential candidate Joe Biden and alleged interference by Ukraine in the 2016 U.S. election, some of the people said.

In conversations that continued into this summer, Messrs. Parnas and Fruman told Ukrainian officials and others that Mr. Giuliani was a partner in the pipeline venture, which was a project of their company, Global Energy Producers, one of the people said. Another person said the men considered Mr. Giuliani a prospective investor in their company more broadly, but said the pitch was unsophisticated and exaggerated.

Anonymous said...


And Parrot immediately goes to insults.

Does 6 years of college to habituate a person to using cuss words at the drop of a hat?

Or maybe it is the Sheepskin that had PhD printed on it.

Andrew Jackson said...

NO!

Anonymous said...

Why not He served in the Army twice...he is old. He can say what he wants. Trump does, doesn't he?

The federal deficit reached $134 billion in October, the first month of fiscal 2020, according to data the Treasury Department released Wednesday.
--That figure is about 34 percent higher than last October, a sign of a steadily increasing gap between federal spending and revenue.
--As a candidate, President Trump had promised to wipe out the nation’s deficit during his time in office, but deficits have only grown since his inauguration.
--The Treasury estimated that the deficit for the 2020 fiscal year would surpass $1 trillion for the first time since 2012. The figure came in just below that milestone in fiscal 2019, hitting $984 billion.