Trump’s New Security Strategy Has Russian Interests, Kremlin Says

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The Kremlin on Sunday welcomed the President of the National Security of Donald Trump, the first time it was widely reported about the views of Russia, the first time when Moscow so praised the document of its cold war.
The National Security Strategy described Trump’s opinion as one of “changing realities” and pointed out that the US should revive the Monroe Doctrine of the 19th century, which was announced in the Western Hemisphere area that will have the influence of Washington’s torch.
The strategy, which was signed by Trump, also warned that Europe is facing “a complex structure,” that there was a desire to “create a basis for negotiating the intensification of the war in Ukraine and that Washington wanted to re-establish strategic intensification with Russia.”
“The changes we see are consistent in many ways with our vision,” Kremlin spokesman Dmitry Peskov told Television reporter Pavel Zarubin when asked about the new US strategy.
Such a Fulsome agreement between Moscow and Washington in world politics is rare, although they cooperated after the collapse of the Soviet Union in returning Soviet weapons to Russia.
The US envoy says that territorial claims remain a sticking point in the Peace Deal between Russia and Ukraine. The US-led meetings are over; Meanwhile, Russia launched a major strike in Central Ukraine earlier Sunday.
During the cold war, Moscow portrayed the United States as a capitalist state drawn from the history of Marxism, when we President Ronald Reagan in 1983 called the Soviet Union “
After the collapse of the Soviet Union, Moscow expressed hopes for cooperation with the West, but as Washington moved to support the expansion of the NATO strategy Allintoan, the first difficulty, the conflicts began to climb. They were pressed to break the point under Russian President Vladimir Putin, who rose to the top job of the Kremlin on the last day of 1999.
Asked about the pledge to the US Dwemidment to end “the perception, and prevent the reality, of the NATO Military Alliance as an enlarged Alliance,” said the Kremlin’s Peskov.
But Peskov also warned that what he said was a “deep state” that saw the world differently from Trump, who will refer to the network that is suspected of throwing those who challenge the status quo, including Trub himself.

Trump’s critics say there is no such thing as a “Deep State,” and that Trump and his allies are smuggling in a conspiracy to justify the prospect.
Since Russia’s 2014’s annexation of Crimea and its invasion of Ukraine, US strategies have singled out Moscow as an aggressor or threat that was trying to reverse the cold war order by force.
In comments to the state-run Tass News Agency, Peskov said he called for cooperation with Moscow in a strategy of resilience rather than describing Russia as a direct threat.
The Trump Strategy describes what it calls the Indo-Pacific as one of the “critical economic and geopolitical” battlegrounds, saying it will build the US and hold military forces to prevent a conflict with China in Taiwan.
Russia was discovered in Asia – and in China in particular – after being put under the control of the West in Russia through the war in Ukraine and Europe sought to bite Russian oil and gas.
Trump in March told FOX News that “as a student of history, what I watch — and I watch everything — the first thing you learn is that you don’t want to be together.”




