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Russia–United States relations

Russia and the United States maintain one of the most important, critical and strategic foreign relations in the world. Both nations have shared interests in nuclear safety and security, nonproliferation, counterterrorism, and space exploration.[1] Due to the 2022 Russian invasion of Ukraine, relations became very tense after the United States imposed sanctions against Russia. Russia placed the United States on a list of "unfriendly countries",[2] along with Taiwan, South Korea, Japan, Singapore, European Union members, NATO members (except Turkey), Australia, New Zealand, Switzerland, Micronesia and Ukraine.

U.S. President Joe Biden and Russian President Vladimir Putin at the 2021 Russia–United States summit in Geneva, Switzerland

After the dissolution of the Soviet Union in 1991, the relationship was generally warm under the Russian President Boris Yeltsin (1991–99). In the early years of Yeltsin's presidency, the U.S. and Russia established a cooperative relationship and worked closely together to address global issues such as arms control, counterterrorism, and the conflict in Bosnia. During Yeltsin's second term, U.S.-Russia relations became more strained. The NATO intervention in Yugoslavia, in particular, the 1999 NATO intervention in Kosovo, was strongly opposed by Yeltsin.[3][4][5][6] Although the Soviet Union had been strongly opposed by the Titovian flavour of independence, Yeltsin saw it as an infringement on Russia's latter-day sphere of influence.[citation needed] Yeltsin also criticized NATO's expansion into Eastern Europe, which he saw as a threat to Russia's security.[citation needed]

After Vladimir Putin became President of Russia in 2000, he initially sought to improve relations with the United States. The two countries cooperated on issues such as counterterrorism and arms control. Putin worked closely with U.S. President George W. Bush on the war in Afghanistan following the 9/11 attacks. Tensions began to rise as Putin became more authoritarian, and the U.S. pursued policies that Russia viewed as threatening to its security. The U.S. supported the pro-Western government in Georgia, which led to the Russo-Georgian War.

The U.S. missile defense system created another source of tension. Following Putin regaining control of the Russian government in 2012, relations between the two countries were significantly strained due to Russia's annexation of Crimea and the Russian military intervention in Ukraine. Deterioration continued with the Russian military intervention in the Syrian Civil War, and over Russia's interference in the 2016 and 2020 U.S. elections.

Following the Russian invasion of Ukraine in 2022, relations reached the lowest point since the Cuban Missile Crisis.[7] International sanctions imposed since 2014 were significantly expanded by the U.S. and its allies following the invasion, including several state-owned banks and oligarchs.[8]

Background edit

Russian Empire–United States relations
 
 
Russia
 
United States

United States and the Russian Empire edit

 
Fort Ross, Russian settlement in California, 1841, by Ilya Gavrilovich Voznesensky.

Official contacts between the Russian Empire and the new United States of America began in 1776. Russia, while formally neutral during the American Revolution (1765–1783), favored the U.S.[9]

There was little trade or migration before the late 19th century. Formal diplomatic ties were established in 1809.[10] During the American Civil War, Russia supported the Union, largely because it believed that the U.S. served as a counterbalance to its geopolitical rival, the United Kingdom. In 1863, the Russian Navy's Baltic and Pacific fleets wintered in the American ports of New York and San Francisco, respectively.[11]

Russia operated a small fur-trade operations in Alaska, coupled with missionaries to the natives. By 1861, the project had lost money, threatened to antagonize the Americans, and could not be defended from Britain. It proved practically impossible to entice Russians to permanently migrate to Alaska; only a few hundred were there in 1867. In the Alaska Purchase of 1867, the land was sold to the United States for $7.2 million.[12][13]

The Russian administrators and military left Alaska, but some missionaries stayed on to minister to the many natives who converted to the Russian Orthodox faith.[14]

After 1880, repeated anti-Jewish pogroms in Russia alienated American elite and public opinion. In 1903, the Kishinev pogrom killed 47 Jews, injured 400, and left 10,000 homeless and dependent on relief. American Jews began large-scale organized financial help and assisted in emigration.[15]

The Treaty of Portsmouth (1905), brokered by American President Theodore Roosevelt ended the Russo-Japanese War.[16]

During World War I, the United States declaration of war on Germany (1917) came after Nicholas II had abdicated as a result of the February Revolution. When the tsar was still in power, many Americans deplored fighting a war with him as an ally. With him gone, the Wilson administration used the new provisional government to describe how the democratic nations were fighting against autocratic old empires of Germany and Austria-Hungary. During the war, the American Expeditionary Forces were just starting to see battle when the October Revolution happened in which the Bolsheviks overthrew the provisional government and removed Russia from the war.

Before the armistice in November 1918, the Americans had helped the Allied intervention in the Russian Civil War with the Polar Bear Expedition and the American Expeditionary Force Siberia. The Americans' goal was not necessarily ideological but rather to prevent the German enemy from gaining access to war supplies controlled by the Bolsheviks, though the United States also tacitly supported the White movement against the Bolsheviks.[17]

From 1820 until 1917, about 3.3 million immigrants arrived in the U.S. from the Russian Empire. Most were Jews, Poles or Lithuanians; only 100,000 were ethnic Russians.[18][19]

United States and the Soviet Union edit

Soviet–American relations
 
 
Soviet Union
 
United States
 
U.K. Prime Minister Winston Churchill, U.S. President Franklin D. Roosevelt, and Soviet General Secretary Joseph Stalin in Tehran, Iran in November 1943.
 
U.S. Presidents Ronald Reagan and George H. W. Bush with Soviet General Secretary Mikhail Gorbachev in New York, 1988.
 
Comparison of life expectancy in the US and Russia since 1960

By 1921, after the Bolsheviks gained the upper hand in the Russian Civil War, executed the Romanov imperial family, repudiated the tsarist debt, and called for a world revolution by the working class, it was regarded as a pariah nation by most of the world.[20] Beyond the Russian Civil War, relations were also dogged by claims of American companies for compensation for the nationalized industries they had invested in.[21] The U.S., while starting to develop trade and economic ties, was the last major world power that continued to refuse to formally recognize the Soviet government.[22] The United States and Soviet Russia established diplomatic relations in November 1933.[23]

The United States and the Soviet Union, along with Britain, were the leaders of the Allies against the Axis powers during World War II. Following the onset of the Cold War in 1947, the North Atlantic Treaty was signed by the U.S., Canada, and several Western European nations, on April 4, 1949, a treaty that established the North Atlantic Treaty Organization (NATO) designed to provide collective security against the Soviet Union.[24]

The first bilateral treaty between the U.S. and Soviet Russia/USSR was a consular convention signed in Moscow in June 1964.[25][26] In 1975, the Helsinki Final Act was signed by a multitude of countries, including the USSR and the US, and, while not having a binding legal power of a treaty, it effectively signified the U.S.-led West's recognition of the Soviet Union's dominance in Eastern Europe and acceptance of the Soviet annexation of Estonia, Latvia and Lithuania that had been effected in 1940. The Act came to play a role in subsequently ending the Cold War.[27]

In the 1970s—1980s, the USSR and the U.S. signed a series of arms control treaties such as the Anti-Ballistic Missile Treaty (1972), two Strategic Arms Limitation treaties (SALT), the Intermediate-Range Nuclear Forces Treaty (1987); in July 1991 the Strategic Arms Reduction Treaty was concluded.

In the late 1980s, Eastern Europe nations took advantage of the relaxation of Soviet control under General Secretary Mikhail Gorbachev and began to break away from communist rule. The relationship greatly improved in the final years of the USSR.

On December 3, 1989, Soviet general secretary Gorbachev and the U.S. president George H. W. Bush declared the Cold War over at the Malta Summit.[28]

Both countries agreed to cut their strategic nuclear weapons by 30 percent, and the Soviet Union promised to reduce its intercontinental ballistic missile force by 50 percent.[29] In August 1991, hard-line Communists launched a coup against Gorbachev; while the coup quickly fell apart, it broke the remaining power of Gorbachev and the central Soviet government.[30] Later that month, Gorbachev resigned as general secretary of the Communist party, and Russian president Boris Yeltsin ordered the seizure of Soviet property. Gorbachev clung to power as the President of the Soviet Union until 25 December 1991, when the Soviet Union dissolved.[31] Fifteen states emerged from the Soviet Union, with the largest and most populous one, Russia, taking full responsibility for all the rights and obligations of the USSR under the Charter of the United Nations, including the financial obligations. As such, Russia assumed the Soviet Union's UN membership and permanent membership on the Security Council, nuclear stockpile and the control over the armed forces; Soviet embassies abroad became Russian embassies.[32] Bush and Yeltsin met in February 1992, declaring a new era of "friendship and partnership".[33] In January 1993, Bush and Yeltsin agreed to START II, which provided for further nuclear arms reductions on top of the original START treaty.[34]

History edit

The dissolution of the Soviet Union through Yeltsin's terms (1991–99) edit

With Communism defunct, on December 25, 1991, the Soviet Union dissolved, and the Commonwealth of Independent States, a loose association was formed by 12 of the 15 former Soviet constituent republics, leaving out the three Baltic states. The Russian Soviet Federative Socialist Republic became the Russian Federation. It was now an independent state that inherited the USSR's UN Security Council permanent membership and became the successor state to the USSR.

Strobe Talbott, who was Washington's chief expert on Russia, has argued that Clinton hit it off with Russian Boris Yeltsin, the president of Russia 1991-1999:

The personal diplomacy between Clinton and Yeltsin, augmented by the channel that Gore developed with Yeltsin's longest-serving prime minister, Victor Chernomyrdin, yielded half a dozen major understandings that either resolved or alleviated disputes over Russia's role in the post–cold war world. The two presidents were the negotiators in chief of agreements to halt the sale of Russian rocket parts to India; remove Soviet-era nuclear missiles from Ukraine in exchange for Russian assurances of Ukraine's sovereignty and security; withdraw Russian troops from the Baltic states; institutionalize cooperation between Russia and an expanding NATO; lay the ground for the Baltic states to join the alliance; and ensure the participation of the Russian military in Balkan peacekeeping and of Russian diplomacy in the settlement of NATO's air war against Serbia.[35]

As the collapse of the Soviet Union appeared imminent, the United States and their NATO allies grew concerned of the risk of nuclear weapons held in the Soviet republics falling into enemy hands. The Cooperative Threat Reduction (CTR) program was initiated by the Nunn–Lugar Act (really the Soviet Nuclear Threat Reduction Act of 1991), which was authored and cosponsored by Sens. Sam Nunn (D-GA) and Richard Lugar (R-IN). According to the CTR website, the purpose of the CTR Program was originally "to secure and dismantle weapons of mass destruction and their associated infrastructure in former Soviet Union states."

Relations between Yeltsin and the administrations of George H. W. Bush (1989–1993) and Bill Clinton (1993–2001) started off well, but deteriorated after 1997. Yeltsin and his foreign minister Andrey Kozyrev made a high priority Russia's full membership into the family of democratic nations. They wanted to be a partner of the United States. At home they tried to create democratic institutions and a free-market capitalist system.

In 1993, both nations signed the START II arms control treaty that was designed to ban the use of multiple independently targetable reentry vehicles (MIRVs) on intercontinental ballistic missiles (ICBMs). The treaty was eventually ratified by both countries, yet it was never implemented and was formally abandoned in 2002, following the U.S.'s withdrawal from the 1972 Anti-Ballistic Missile Treaty.

Clinton and Yeltsin were personally friendly. Washington encouraged the rapid transition to a liberal capitalist system in Russia.[36] Clinton provided rich talking points but provided less than $3 billion, and much was paid to American contractors. The Russians—aware of the Marshall Plan in the 1940s—had counted on far larger sums.[37] A 1995 NATO study on enlarging the alliance, and the 1999 admission of the Czech Republic, Hungary, and Poland into NATO, alarmed Russia.[38] With the Cold War over, Russians felt NATO's original role was no longer needed. It feared its dramatic move eastward meant an escalation of NATO's historic role in containment of Russian goals.[39][40] Fears over NATO enlargement contributed the rise of Vladimir Putin and his emphasis on Russian nationalism and security issues.[38]

 
President Bill Clinton and President Boris Yeltsin in the White House, October 1995.

Russia stridently opposed the U.S.-led NATO military operation against Serbia and Montenegro over Kosovo that began in March 1999.[41][42][43] In December 1999, while on a visit to China, president Yeltsin verbally assailed Clinton for criticizing Russia's tactics in Chechnya (at the start of the Second Chechen War) emphatically stating that Russia remained a nuclear power.[44]

Putin and George W. Bush (2001–2009) edit

In 2001, in response to the terrorist attacks on September 11, the new Russian president Vladimir Putin quickly announced strong support. Terrorism against Russia was already high on Putin's agenda and he found common ground by supporting the American/NATO invasion of Afghanistan to destroy the Taliban that had harbored the Al-Qaeda terrorists.[45] By 2002, however, the two countries were escalating their disagreements. Russia became more assertive in international affairs; George W. Bush took an increasingly unilateral course in foreign policy.[46]

In 2002, the United States withdrew from the Anti-Ballistic Missile Treaty in order to move forward with plans for a missile defense system. Putin called the decision a mistake. Russia strongly opposed the 2003 invasion of Iraq, though without exercising its veto in the United Nations Security Council. Russia has regarded the expansion of NATO into the old Eastern Bloc, and U.S. efforts to gain access to Central Asian oil and natural gas as a potentially hostile encroachment on Russia's sphere of influence. The Russian leadership blamed U.S. officials for encouraging anti-Russian revolts during the Rose Revolution in Georgia in 2003 and the Orange Revolution in Ukraine in 2004. Putin saw intrusions into Russia's historic sphere of interest.[47][48]

 
Russia strongly opposed the U.S.-led 2003 invasion of Iraq.
 
Vladimir Putin with George W. Bush and other Western leaders at 32nd G8 summit in Moscow, July 2006.

Russia condemned the unilateral declaration of independence of Kosovo from Serbia in February 2008,[49] stating they "expect the UN mission and NATO-led forces in Kosovo to take immediate action to carry out their mandate [...] including the annulling of the decisions of Pristina's self-governing organs and the taking of tough administrative measures against them."[50] Russian President Putin described the recognition of Kosovo's independence by the United States and other Western countries as "a terrible precedent, which will de facto blow apart the whole system of international relations, developed not over decades, but over centuries", and that "they have not thought through the results of what they are doing. At the end of the day it is a two-ended stick and the second end will come back and hit them in the face".[51] In March 2014, Russia used Kosovo's declaration of independence as a justification for recognizing the independence of Crimea, citing the so-called "Kosovo independence precedent".[52][53]

In early 2008, President George W. Bush vowed full support for admitting Ukraine and Georgia into NATO,[54] despite Russia's opposition to the further eastward expansion of NATO.[55] Russia's Deputy Foreign Minister Grigory Karasin warned that any incorporation of Ukraine into NATO would cause a "deep crisis" in Russia–Ukraine relations and also negatively affect Russia's relations with the West.[56]

Controversy over U.S. plan to station missiles in Poland (2007–2008) edit

In March 2007, the U.S. announced plans to build an anti-ballistic missile defense installation in Poland along with a radar station in the Czech Republic. Both nations were former Warsaw Pact members and both had repudiated Communism and Russian interference. U.S. officials said that the system was intended to protect the United States and Europe from possible nuclear missile attacks by Iran or North Korea. Russia, however, viewed the new system as a potential threat and, in response, tested a long-range intercontinental ballistic missile, the RS-24, which it claimed could defeat any defense system. Putin warned the U.S. that these new tensions could turn Europe into a powder keg. On June 3, 2007, Putin warned that if the United States built the missile defense system, Russia would consider targeting missiles at Poland and the Czech Republic.[57]

In October 2007, Vladimir Putin visited Iran to discuss Russia's aid to Iran's nuclear power program and "insisted that the use of force was unacceptable."[58] On October 17, Bush stated "if you're interested in avoiding World War III, it seems like you ought to be interested in preventing them from having the knowledge necessary to make a nuclear weapon," understood as a message to Putin.[59] A week later, Putin compared U.S. plans to put up a missile defense system near Russia's border as analogous to when the Soviet Union deployed missiles in Cuba, prompting the Cuban Missile Crisis.[60]

In July 2008, Russia announced that if a U.S. anti-missile shield was deployed near the Russian border, it would have to react militarily. The statement from the Russian foreign ministry said, "If an American strategic anti-missile shield starts to be deployed near our borders, we will be forced to react not in a diplomatic fashion but with military-technical means." Later, Russia's ambassador to the United Nations Vitaly Churkin said that "military-technical means" did not mean military action, but more likely a change in Russia's strategic posture, perhaps by redeploying its own missiles.[61]

On August 14, 2008, the U.S. and Poland agreed to have 10 two-stage missile interceptors – made by Orbital Sciences Corporation – placed in Poland, as part of a missile shield to defend Europe and the U.S. from a possible missile attack by Iran. In return, the U.S. agreed to move a battery of MIM-104 Patriot missiles to Poland. The missile battery was to be staffed – at least temporarily – by U.S. Military personnel. The U.S. also pledged to defend Poland, a NATO member, quicker than NATO would in the event of an attack. Additionally, the Czech Republic recently agreed to allow the placement of a radar-tracking station in their country, despite public opinion polls showing that the majority of Czechs were against the plans and only 18% supported it.[62] The radar-tracking station in the Czech Republic would also be part of the missile defense shield. After the agreement was announced, Russian officials said defences on Russia's borders would be increased and that they foresaw harm in bilateral relations with the United States.[63]

Russian-Georgian clash (August 2008) edit

In August 2008, United States-Russia bilateral relations became further strained, when Russia and Georgia fought a five-day war over the Russian-backed self-proclaimed republics of South Ossetia and Abkhazia. President Bush said to Russia, "Bullying and intimidation are not acceptable ways to conduct foreign policy in the 21st century."[64]

Obama administration (2009–2017) edit

"Reset" under Obama and Medvedev (2009–11) edit

 
U.S. president Barack Obama and Russian president Dmitry Medvedev after signing the New START treaty

Despite U.S.–Russia relations becoming strained during the Bush administration, Russian president Dmitry Medvedev (president from May 2008 until May 2012, with Vladimir Putin as head of government) and U.S. president Barack Obama struck a warm tone at the 2009 G20 summit in London and released a joint statement that promised a "fresh start" in Russia–United States relations. The statement also called on Iran to abandon its nuclear program and to permit foreign inspectors into the country.[65]

In March 2009, U.S. secretary of state Hillary Clinton and her Russian counterpart Sergey Lavrov symbolically pressed a "reset" button. The gag fell short as the Russian translation on the button was misspelt by the State Department and actually meant "overload" instead of "reset". After making a few jokes and laughs, they decided to press the button anyway to symbolise friendship.[66]

In early July 2009, Obama visited Moscow where he had meetings with president Medvedev and prime minister Putin. Speaking at the New Economic School Obama told a large gathering, "America wants a strong, peaceful and prosperous Russia. This belief is rooted in our respect for the Russian people, and a shared history between our nations that goes beyond competition."[67] Days after president Obama's visit to Moscow, U.S. vice president Joe Biden, noting that the U.S. was "vastly underestimat[ing] the hand that [it] h[e]ld", told a U.S. newspaper that Russia, with its population base shrinking and the economy "withering", would have to make accommodations to the West on a wide range of national-security issues.[68]

 
U.S. Secretary of State Hillary Clinton with Russian Foreign Minister Sergey Lavrov at the Waldorf Astoria New York in September 2010

In March 2010, the United States and Russia reached an agreement to reduce their stockpiles of nuclear weapons. The new nuclear arms reduction treaty (called New START) was signed by President Obama and President Medvedev on April 8, 2010. The agreement cut the number of long-range nuclear weapons held by each side to about 1,500, down from the current 1,700 to 2,200 set by the Moscow Treaty of 2002. The New START replaced the 1991 Strategic Arms Reduction Treaty, which expired in December 2009.[69]

 
U.S. Vice President Joe Biden and Russian Prime Minister Vladimir Putin in Moscow, Russia in March 2011

On a visit to Moscow in March 2011, U.S. vice president Joe Biden reiterated Washington's support for Russia's accession to the World Trade Organization;[70] he also had a meeting with Russia's leading human rights and opposition leaders where he reportedly told the gathering at the U.S. ambassador's Spaso House residence that it would be better for Russia if Putin did not run for re-election in 2012.[71]

Through 2020, this was the only time Biden and Putin had met. After an official group meeting Biden characterized in his memoir as "argumentative," he and Putin met privately, with Biden saying "Mr. Prime Minister, I'm looking into your eyes," (a reference to a 2001 meeting between Putin and President Bush, who later said "I looked the man in the eye...I was able to get a sense of his soul"). Biden continued, "I don't think you have a soul." Putin replied, "We understand each other." Biden was elected president in 2020.[72]

 
Joe Biden, Russia's President Dmitry Medvedev and Italy's Prime Minister Silvio Berlusconi meeting in Italy in June 2011

The 2011 military intervention in Libya prompted a widespread wave of criticism from several world leaders, including Russian President Medvedev[73] and Russian Prime Minister Putin, who said that "[UNSC Resolution 1973] is defective and flawed...It allows everything. It resembles medieval calls for crusades."[74]

At the start of the mass protests that began in Russia after the legislative election in early December 2011, prime minister Vladimir Putin accused the United States of interference and inciting unrest, specifically saying that secretary of state Hillary Clinton had sent "a signal" to "some actors in our country"; his comments were seen as indication of a breakdown in the Obama administration's effort to "reset" the relationship.[75]

By 2012, it was clear that a genuine reset never happened and relations remained sour. Factors in the West included traditional mistrust and fear, an increasing drift away from democracy by Russia, and a demand in Eastern Europe for closer political, economic and military integration with the West. From Russia factors included a move away from democracy by Putin, expectations of regaining superpower status and the tactic of manipulating trade policies and encouraging divisions within NATO.[76][77]

Increasing tensions during Putin's third term (2012–2015) edit

In mid-September 2013, the United States and Russia made a deal whereby Syria's chemical weapons would be placed under international control and eventually destroyed; President Obama welcomed the agreement[78] that was shortly after enshrined in the UNSC Resolution 2118. The Obama administration was criticised for having used the chemical weapons deal as an ineffectual substitute for military action that Obama had promised in the event of use of chemical weapons by the Syrian government.[79] In George Robertson's view, as well as many others', the failure of Obama to follow through on his 2013 "red line" and take promised military action badly hurt his credibility and that of the United States with Putin and other world leaders.[80][81]

Obama acknowledged Russia's role in securing the deal to limit Iran's nuclear program that was reached in July 2015, and personally thanked Putin for Russia's role in the relevant negotiations.[82]

 
American (red) and Russian (blue) military bases as of 2014

In May 2012, Russian general Nikolay Yegorovich Makarov said that there was a possibility of a preemptive strike on missile defense sites in Eastern Europe, to apply pressure to the United States regarding Russia's demands.[83] Later in August 2012, it was revealed that an Akula-class submarine had conducted a patrol within the Gulf of Mexico without being detected, raising alarms of the U.S. Navy's anti-submarine warfare capabilities.[84]

On December 14, 2012, U.S. President Barack Obama signed the Magnitsky Act, which "[imposed] U.S. travel and financial restrictions on human rights abusers in Russia". On December 28, 2012, Russian President Vladimir Putin signed a bill, widely seen as retaliatory, that banned any United States citizen from adopting children from Russia.[85]

On February 12, 2013, hours before the 2013 State of the Union Address by U.S. president Obama, two Russian Tu-95 Bear strategic bombers, reportedly equipped with nuclear-tipped cruise missiles, circled the U.S. territory of Guam.[86] Air Force F-15 jets based on Andersen Air Force Base were scrambled to intercept the aircraft.[86] The Russian aircraft reportedly "were intercepted and left the area in a northbound direction."[86]

At the end of 2013, Russia announced that a rearmament of the Kozelsk, Novosibirsk, Tagil Rocket divisions with advanced RS-24 Yars intercontinental ballistic missiles was going ahead.[87]

In July 2014, the U.S. government formally accused Russia of having violated the 1987 Intermediate-Range Nuclear Forces (INF) Treaty by testing a prohibited medium-range ground-launched cruise missile (presumably R-500,[88] a modification of Iskander)[89] and threatened to retaliate accordingly.[89][90] Concern in the U.S. was also caused by the test-firing in 2014 of the Russian RS-26 Rubezh Intercontinental Ballistic Missile capable of evading the existing anti-ballistic missile defenses.[91][92]

In early June 2015, the U.S. State Department reported that Russia had failed to correct the violation of the I.N.F. Treaty; the U.S. government was said to have made no discernible headway in making Russia so much as acknowledge the compliance problem.[93]

Edward Snowden affair (2013) edit

 
Snowden in Moscow in October 2013.

Edward Snowden, a contractor for the United States government, copied and released hundreds of thousands of pages of secret U.S. government documents. He fled to Hong Kong, and then to Russia where in July 2013 he was granted political asylum. He was wanted on a criminal warrant by U.S. prosecutors for theft of government property and espionage.[94]

The granting of asylum further aggravated relations between the two countries and led to the cancellation of a meeting between Obama and Putin that was scheduled for early September 2013 in Moscow.[95] Snowden remains in Russia as of October 2023.

Russian Annexation of Crimea (2014) edit

Following the collapse of the Viktor Yanukovych government in Ukraine in February 2014, Russia annexed Crimea on the basis of a controversial referendum held on March 16, 2014. The U.S. had submitted a UN Security Council resolution declaring the referendum illegal; it was vetoed by Russia on March 15 with China abstaining and the other 13 Security Council members voting for the resolution.[96] In 2016, in a court in Moscow, former top Ukrainian officials of the Yanukovich administration testified that the collapse of the government was, in their opinion, a coup d'état organized and sponsored by the U.S. government.[97][98] Russian newspaper Kommersant alleges George Friedman (chairman of Stratfor) had agreed this was the "most blatant coup in history', which George Friedman says was taken out of context.[99][100]

 
Anti-American slogans during the Victory Day celebrations in Donetsk, Russian-occupied Ukraine, May 9, 2014.

U.S. secretary of state John Kerry in early March 2014 answering the press questions about Russia's moves in Crimea said, "This is an act of aggression that is completely trumped up in terms of its pretext. It's really 19th century behavior in the 21st century, and there is no way, to start with, that if Russia persists in this, that the G8 countries are going to assemble in Sochi. That's a starter."[81] On March 24, 2014, the U.S. and its allies in the G8 political forum suspended Russia's membership thereof.[101] The decision was dismissed by Russia as inconsequential.[102][103]

At the end of March 2014, U.S. president Obama ruled out any Western military intervention in Ukraine[102] and admitted that Russia's annexation of Crimea would be hard to reverse; however, he dismissed Russia as a "regional power" that did not pose a major security threat to the U.S.[104] In January 2016, when asked for his opinion of Obama's statement, Putin said, "I think that speculations about other countries, an attempt to speak disrespectfully about other countries is an attempt to prove one's exceptionalism by contrast. In my view, that is a misguided position."[105][106]

In November 2016, the president of the European Commission Jean-Claude Juncker said this of the statement of Obama: "We have a lot to learn about the depths of Russia, we are very ignorant about it at the moment. I would like to have discussions on a level footing with Russia. Russia is not, as President Obama said, 'a regional power'. This was a big error in assessment."[107]

As unrest spread into eastern Ukraine in the spring of 2014, relations between the U.S. and Russia further worsened. The U.S. government imposed punitive sanctions for Russia's activity in Ukraine. After one bout of sanctions announced by President Obama in July 2014 targeting Russia's major energy, financial and defence companies, Russia said the sanctions would seriously harm the bilateral ties relegating them to the 1980s Cold War era.[108]

 
Putin meets with Secretary of State John Kerry, Victoria Nuland and John F. Tefft to discuss Ukraine and other issues in December 2015.

From March 2014 to 2016, six rounds of sanctions were imposed by the U.S., as well as by the EU, and some other countries allied to the U.S. The first three rounds targeted individuals close to Putin by freezing their assets and denying leave to enter. Russia responded by banning import of certain food products as well as by banning entry for certain government officials from the countries that imposed sanctions against Russia.

The end of 2014 saw the passage by the U.S. of the Ukraine Freedom Support Act of 2014,[109][110] aimed at depriving certain Russian state firms of Western financing and technology while also providing $350 million in arms and military equipment to Ukraine, and the imposition by the U.S. president's executive order of yet another round of sanctions.[111]

Due to the situation concerning Ukraine, relations between Russia and the U.S. that denounced Russia's actions were in 2014 said to be at their worst since the end of the Cold War.[112]

As vice president, Joe Biden urged the Ukrainian government to reduce the nation's reliance on imports of Russian natural gas, and to eliminate pro-Russia middlemen such as Dmitry Firtash from the country's natural gas industry.[113]

Russian military intervention in the Syrian Civil War (from September 30, 2015) edit

 
Barack Obama meets with Vladimir Putin to discuss Syria, September 29, 2015.

Shortly after the start of the Syrian Civil War in the spring of 2011, the U.S. imposed sanctions on Syria's government and urged president Bashar al-Assad to resign; meanwhile, Russia, a long-standing ally of Syria, continued and increased its support for the Syrian government against rebels backed up by the U.S. and its regional allies.

On September 30, 2015, Russia began the air campaign in Syria on the side of the Syrian government headed by president Bashar al-Assad of Syria. According to Russian foreign minister Sergey Lavrov's statement made in mid-October 2015, Russia had invited the U.S. to join the Baghdad-based information center set up by Iran, Iraq, Syria and Russia to coordinate their military efforts, but received what he called an "unconstructive" response; Putin's proposal that the U.S. receive a high-level Russian delegation and that a U.S. delegation arrive in Moscow to discuss co-operation in Syria was likewise declined by the U.S.[114][115]

In early October 2015, U.S. president Obama called the way Russia was conducting its military campaign in Syria a "recipe for disaster";[116] top U.S. military officials ruled out military cooperation with Russia in Syria.[117][118] Secretary of Defense Ashton Carter and other senior U.S. officials said Russia's campaign was primarily aimed at propping up Assad, whom U.S. president Barack Obama had repeatedly called upon to leave power.[119]

Three weeks into the Russian campaign in Syria, on October 20, 2015, Russian president Vladimir Putin met Bashar Assad in Moscow to discuss their joint military campaign and a future political settlement in Syria, according to the Kremlin report of the event.[120][121] The meeting provoked a sharp condemnation from the White House.[122]

While one of the original aims of the Russian leadership may have been to normalize relations with the U.S. and the West at large, the resultant situation in Syria was said in October 2015 to be a proxy war between Russia and the U.S.[123][124][125][126][127] The two rounds of the Syria peace talks held in Vienna in October and November 2015, with Iran participating for the first time, highlighted yet again the deep disagreement over the Syrian settlement between the U.S. and Russia, primarily on the issue of Bashar Assad's political future.[128] The talks in Vienna were followed by a bilateral meeting of Obama and Putin on the sidelines of the G-20 Summit in Turkey, during which a certain consensus between the two leaders on Syria was reported to have been reached.[129]

 
John Kerry and Sergey Lavrov are paying tribute at the French Embassy in Moscow after terror attack in Nice, July 15, 2016.

Bilateral negotiations over Syria were unilaterally suspended by the U.S. on October 3, 2016, which was presented as the U.S. government's reaction to a re-newed offensive on Aleppo by Syrian and Russian troops.[130] On the same day Putin signed a decree[131] that suspended the 2000 Plutonium Management and Disposition Agreement with the U.S. (the relevant law was signed on October 31, 2016[132]), citing the failure by the U.S. to comply with the provisions thereof as well as the U.S.' unfriendly actions that posed a "threat to strategic stability."[133][134]

In mid-October 2016, Russia's U.N. ambassador Vitaly Churkin, referring to the international situation during the 1973 Arab–Israeli War, said that tensions with the U.S. are "probably the worst since 1973".[135] After two rounds of fruitless talks on Syria in Lausanne and London, the foreign ministers of the U.S. and the UK said that additional sanctions against both Russia and Syria were imminent unless Russia and the "Assad regime" stopped their air campaign in Aleppo.[136][137]

 
Russian Ambassador Sergey Kislyak, NASA Administrator Charles Bolden and William Shepherd after Shepherd was awarded the Russian Medal "For Merit in Space Exploration", December 2, 2016.

Trump administration (2017–2021) edit

Election of Donald Trump and Russian interference edit

 
Anti-Trump poster in San Francisco, presumably associating Trump with Russia or the former Soviet Union, April 15, 2017.

In mid-November 2016, shortly after the election of Trump as the U.S. president, the Kremlin accused president Barack Obama's administration of trying to damage the U.S.' relationship with Russia to a degree that would render normalization thereof impossible for Trump's incoming administration.[138]

In his address to the Russian parliament delivered on December 1, 2016, Russian president Putin said this of U.S.—Russia relations: "We are prepared to cooperate with the new American administration. It's important to normalize and begin to develop bilateral relations on an equal and mutually beneficial basis. Mutual efforts by Russia and the United States in solving global and regional problems are in the interest of the entire world."[139]

In early December 2016, the White House said that President Obama had ordered the intelligence agencies to review evidence of Russian interference in the 2016 presidential campaign; Eric Schultz, the deputy White House press secretary, denied the review to be led by Director of National Intelligence James R. Clapper was meant to be "an effort to challenge the outcome of the election".[140] Simultaneously, the U.S. press published reports, with reference to senior administration officials, that U.S. intelligence agencies, specifically the CIA,[141] had concluded with "high confidence" that Russia acted covertly in the latter stages of the presidential campaign to harm Hillary Clinton's chances and promote Donald Trump.[142] President-elect Donald Trump rejected the CIA assessment that Russia was behind the hackers' efforts to sway the campaign in his favour as "ridiculous".[143][144]

In mid-December 2016, Hillary Clinton suggested that Putin had a personal grudge against her due to her criticism of the 2011 Russian legislative election and his opinion that she was responsible for fomenting the anti-Putin protests in Russia that began in December 2011.[145] She partially attributed her loss in the 2016 election to Russian meddling organized by Putin.[146][147] Among her presidential campaign's Russia policy advisors was Richard Lourie.[148][who?][citation needed]

Also in mid-December, President Obama publicly pledged to retaliate for Russian cyberattacks during the U.S. presidential election in order to "send a clear message to Russia" as both a punishment and a deterrent,;[149] however, the press reported that his actionable options were limited, with many of those having been rejected as either ineffective or too risky; The New York Times, citing a catalogue of U.S.-engineered coups in foreign countries, opined, "There is not much new in tampering with elections, except for the technical sophistication of the tools. For all the outrage voiced by Democrats and Republicans in the past week about the Russian action — with the notable exception of Mr. Trump, who has dismissed the intelligence findings as politically motivated — it is worth remembering that trying to manipulate elections is a well-honed American art form."[150]

The National Defense Authorization Act for Fiscal Year 2017 signed into law by president Obama on December 23, 2016, was criticised by the Russian foreign ministry as yet another attempt to "create problems for the incoming Trump administration and complicate its relations on the international stage, as well as to force it to adopt an anti-Russia policy."[151]

At the end of 2016, U.S. president-elect Donald Trump praised Putin for not expelling U.S. diplomats in response to Washington's expulsion of 35 Russian diplomats as well as other punitive measures taken by the Obama administration in retaliation for what U.S. officials had characterized as interference in the U.S. presidential election.[152][153]

On January 6, 2017, the Office of the Director of National Intelligence (ODNI), in an assessment of "Russian Activities and Intentions in Recent U.S. Elections", asserted that Russian leadership favored presidential candidate Trump over Clinton, and that Putin personally ordered an "influence campaign" to harm Clinton's chances and "undermine public faith in the US democratic process".[154]: 7  Trump campaign manager Paul Manafort admitted he was in contact with Russian operatives and sharing information through the campaign.[155]

2017 edit

 
Secretary of State Rex Tillerson with Russian Foreign Minister Sergey Lavrov in Moscow, Russia, April 12, 2017.

A week after Trump's inauguration on January 20, 2017, Trump had a 52-minute telephone conversation with Russian president Vladimir Putin that was hailed by both governments as a step towards improvement of relations between the U.S. and Russia; the presidents agreed to arrange a face-to-face meeting for a later date.[156][157]

In early March 2017, the U.S. military for the first time publicly accused Russia of having deployed a land-based cruise missile (SSC-8[158]) that they said violated the "spirit and intent" of the 1987 Intermediate-range Nuclear Forces (INF) treaty and posed a threat to NATO.[159]

On March 25, 2017, the U.S. imposed new sanctions against eight Russian companies in connection with the Iran, North Korea, Syria Nonproliferation Act (INKSNA).[citation needed]

The cruise-missile strikes on the Syrian Shayrat Airbase, conducted by the U.S. on April 7, 2017, as a response to the Khan Shaykhun chemical attack,[160][161][162] were condemned by Russia as an "act of aggression" that was based on a "trumped-up pretext", which substantially impaired Russia–United States relations.[163] Russian prime minister Dmitry Medvedev said the attack had placed the U.S. on the cusp of warfare with Russia.[164][165][166] Both Donald Trump in April and the Russian government in May characterised the relationship between the countries as frozen and lacking any progress;[167][168] in early June, Vladimir Putin said relations were at an all-time low since the end of the Cold War.[169] In mid-June 2017, the Russian foreign ministry confirmed that, for the first time ever, Russia had failed to receive a formal greeting from the U.S. government on occasion of Russia's national day celebrated on June 12.[170][171][172][173]

 
U.S. Secretary of State Rex Tillerson and Russian Foreign Minister Sergey Lavrov in Washington, D.C., May 10, 2017.

In April 2017, Trump's administration denied a request from ExxonMobil to allow it to resume oil drilling in Russia.[174] In July 2017, ExxonMobil filed a lawsuit against the U.S. government challenging the finding that the company violated sanctions imposed on Russia.[175]

On May 10, 2017, Trump had an unannounced meeting in the Oval Office with Russian Foreign Minister Sergey Lavrov and Russian Ambassador to the United States Sergey Kislyak.[176] During the meeting he disclosed highly classified information, providing details that could have been used to deduce the source of the information and the manner in which it was collected, according to current and former government officials.[177][178] Although the disclosure was not illegal, it was widely criticized because of the possible danger to the source.[179][180]

On July 6, 2017, during a speech in Warsaw, Poland, Trump urged Russia to cease its support for "hostile regimes" in Syria and Iran.[181] On July 7, 2017, in what appeared to be a sign of good relations between the leaders of both countries,[182] Trump met with Putin at the G20 Hamburg summit in Germany and described the meeting as "an honour."[183]

In mid-July 2017, the Russian foreign ministry noted that the staff of the U.S. Embassy in Moscow, following expulsion of diplomats by the Obama administration in December 2016, far exceeded the number of Russian embassy employees in Washington and indicated that the Russian government was considering retaliatory expulsion of more than thirty-five U.S. diplomats, thus evening out the number of the countries' diplomats posted.[184] On July 28, Russia announced punitive measures that were cast as Russia's response to the additional, codified, sanctions against Moscow passed by Congress days prior, but also referenced the specific measures imposed against the Russian diplomatic mission in the U.S. by the Obama administration.[185] Russia demanded that the U.S. reduce its diplomatic and technical personnel in the Moscow embassy and its consulates in St Petersburg, Ekaterinburg and Vladivostok to four hundred fifty-five persons — the same as the number of Russian diplomats posted in the U.S. — by September 1; Russia's government would also suspend the use of a retreat compound and a storage facility in Moscow used by the U.S. by August 1.[185][186][187] Two days later, Vladimir Putin said that the decision on the curtailment of the U.S. diplomatic mission personnel had been taken by him personally and that 755 staff must terminate their work in Russia.[188][189][190] After the sanction bill was on August 2 signed by Donald Trump, Russian prime minister Dmitry Medvedev wrote that the law had ended hope for improving U.S.–Russia relations and meant "an all-out trade war with Russia."[191][192] The law was also criticised by Donald Trump, whose signing statement indicated that he might choose not to enforce certain provisions of the legislation that he deemed unconstitutional.[193][194]

Russia protested on September 2, 2017, against a search it said U.S. officials were planning of a Russian trade mission building in Washington D.C., shortly after the U.S., ″in the spirit of parity invoked by the Russians″, demanded that Russia shut two of its diplomatic annexes (buildings) in Washington D.C. and New York City as well as its Consulate General in San Francisco.[195] The Russian foreign ministry said the inspection would be "illegal" and an "unprecedented aggressive action"; it also demanded that the U.S. ″immediately return the Russian diplomatic facilities″.[196][197]

In November 2017, Trump and Putin both attended the Asia-Pacific Economic Cooperation meeting in Danang. Although they had no formal meeting they spoke informally several times during the event.[198]

At the end of 2017, CNN concluded that a series of steps undertaken by the Trump administration within a mere week before Christmas such as naming Russia a "rival power" and ″revisionist power″ (along with China), imposing sanctions on Ramzan Kadyrov, a close Putin ally, the decision to provide Ukraine with anti-tank weapons, coupled with tougher line from the State Department about Moscow's activities in eastern Ukraine, and accusations from the Pentagon that Russia was intentionally violating de-confliction agreements in Syria, highlighted "a decided turn away from the warmer, more cooperative relationship with Russia that President Donald Trump called for during his campaign and early in his presidency".[199][200][201] In February 2018, echoing Donald Trump's own statement, White House press secretary Sarah Huckabee Sanders said: "[President Donald Trump] has been tougher on Russia in the first year than Obama was in eight years combined."[202][203]

Beginning of Putin's fourth term (2018–2020) edit

 
Large nuclear weapons stockpile with global range (dark blue), smaller stockpile with global range (medium blue).

A highly unusual[204] unannounced visit to Washington, D.C., at the end of January 2018 by the directors of Russia's three main intelligence and security agencies (FSB, SVR, and GRU), two of whom (Sergey Naryshkin and Igor Korobov) were on the U.S. sanctions list,[205] and their reported meetings with top U.S. security officials caused political controversy in the U.S. and elicited no official comment in Russia, while it occurred days before the Trump administration chose not to impose immediately new sanctions on Russia at the deadline mandated by the Countering America's Adversaries Through Sanctions Act.[206][207][208][209]

The U.S. air and artillery strike on a pro-government formation in eastern Syria on February 7, 2018, which caused massive death toll among Russian nationals and a political scandal in Russia, was billed by media as "the first deadly clash between citizens of Russia and the United States since the Cold War" and "an episode that threatens to deepen tensions with Moscow".[210][211]

Public statements read out by Vladimir Putin on March 1, 2018, days before the presidential election, about missile technology breakthroughs made by Russia, were referred to by the Trump administration officials as largely boastful untruths, as well as confirmation that "Russia ha[d] been developing destabilizing weapons systems for over a decade, in direct violation of its treaty obligations".[212] U.S. Defense Secretary James Mattis remarked that the systems Putin had talked about "[were] still years away" and he did not see them changing the military balance.[213] Nevertheless, White House insiders were later quoted as saying that Putin's claims "really got under the president [Trump]'s skin" and caused Trump to take a sharper tone behind the scenes vis-à-vis Vladimir Putin.[214]

On March 26, 2018, following the United States National Security Council's recommendation,[215] to demonstrate the U.S.'s support for the UK's position on the Salisbury poisoning incident, president Donald Trump ordered the expulsion of sixty Russian diplomats and closure of Russian consulate in Seattle.[216][217] Russian foreign minister Sergei Lavrov responded to the simultaneous expulsion of the total of 140 Russian diplomats by 25 countries by accusing the U.S. government of "blackmailing" other nations.[218][219]

 
Talks between U.S. delegation headed by Trump and Russian delegation headed by Vladimir Putin at the summit in Helsinki, Finland July 16, 2018.

In April 2018, U.S.-Russian relations were further exacerbated by missile strikes against the Syrian government targets following the suspected chemical attack in Douma on April 7.[220] The countries clashed diplomatically, with Russia's top military officials threatening to hit U.S. military targets in the event of a massive U.S.-led strike against Syria.[221][222][223][224] In late May, during an interview with RT, Syria's president Bashar al-Assad said that direct military conflict between the Russian forces and the U.S. forces in Syria had been averted in April "by the wisdom of the Russian leadership" and that the U.S.-led missile attack against Syria would have been far more extensive had it not been for Russia's intervention.[225][226]

On June 8, 2018, Trump called for Russia to be readmitted to the G-7, from which it was expelled after the Russian annexation of Crimea in 2014.[227]

Trump's public statements during his first formal meeting with Putin in Helsinki on July 16, 2018, drew criticism from the Democratic members of the U.S. Congress and a number of former senior intelligence officials as well as some ranking members of the Republican party for appearing to have sided with Putin rather than accepting the findings of Russian interference in the 2016 presidential election issued by the United States Intelligence Community.[228][229][230] Republican senator John McCain called the press conference "one of the most disgraceful performances by an American president in memory."[231] The press around the world ran publications that tended to assess the news conference following the presidents′ two-hour meeting as an event at which Trump had "projected weakness".[232]

 
Donald Trump (center), U.S. Secretary of State Mike Pompeo and Russian President Vladimir Putin (left) meet in Osaka, Japan in June 2019.

In December 2019, the Trump administration imposed sanctions on businesses involved in the construction of Nord Stream 2 natural gas pipeline from Russia to Germany,[233] as the U.S. sought to sell more of its own liquefied natural gas (LNG) to European states.[234] German Finance Minister Olaf Scholz called the sanctions "a severe intervention in German and European internal affairs", while the EU spokesman criticized "the imposition of sanctions against EU companies conducting legitimate business."[235] Russian Foreign Minister Sergey Lavrov also criticized sanctions, saying that U.S. Congress "is literally overwhelmed with the desire to do everything to destroy" the U.S.–Russia relations.[236]

A June 2020 New York Times report, citing unnamed sources, stated that American intelligence officials assessed with medium confidence that Russian military intelligence unit 29155 had supervised a bounty program paying Taliban-linked militants to kill foreign servicemembers, including Americans, in Afghanistan in 2019.[237][238] The bounty program reportedly resulted in the deaths of "several" U.S. soldiers,[239] but The Pentagon's top leaders said that Russian bounty program has not been corroborated.[240] The Taliban and Russia have both denied that the bounty program exists.[239] President Donald Trump and his aides denied that he was briefed on the intelligence. Director of National Intelligence John Ratcliffe said that Trump had not received a briefing on the bounty program. White House press secretary Kayleigh McEnany said the same.[239] Secretary of Defense Mark Esper said that General Kenneth McKenzie, the commander of U.S. Central Command, and General Scott Miller, the top U.S. military commander in Afghanistan, did not think "the reports were credible as they dug into them."[240] McKenzie said that he found no "causative link" between reported bounties to actual U.S. military deaths, but said a lack of proof is "often true in battlefield intelligence."[240]

On July 1, 2020, following media reports of Taliban participation in an alleged Russian bounty program, the U.S. House Armed Services Committee overwhelmingly voted in favor of an amendment to restrict President Trump's ability to withdraw U.S. troops from Afghanistan.[241]

On September 25, 2020, U.S. Air Force B-52 bombers staged a mock attack run on Kaliningrad, a Russian exclave locked between NATO countries. The simulated raid on the Kaliningrad region was a test case of destroying Russian air defense systems located in the region.[242]

Influence on the Trump Administration edit

 
The 2018 Helsinki summit. Putin gifts Trump a Telstar Mechta, the official match ball for the knockout stage of the 2018 FIFA World Cup.

Shortly before the inauguration of President Trump, the Steele dossier was leaked to the public. Written by a private intelligence firm claiming to unearth a relationship between his presidential campaign and the Russian government, the report alleged that the Russians possessed kompromat on Trump which could be used to blackmail him. It suggested the Kremlin had promised the campaign that compromising information would not be released if the Administration cooperated.[243][244] Though the report was met with skepticism, the relationship between Russian leadership and the incoming Trump Administration became highly salient. Days later, Ynet, an Israeli online news site, reported that U.S. intelligence had advised Israeli intelligence officers to be cautious about sharing information with the incoming Trump administration until the possibility of Russian influence over Trump had been fully investigated.[245] Allegations of collusion between Trump associations and the Russian government continued to emerge well into his presidency.

Various links between Trump associates and Russian officials and spies have been documented and heavily scrutinized, most notably former National Security Advisor Michael Flynn's contacts with the Russian ambassador. Throughout his presidential tenure, Trump expressed both support and criticism of Russia's actions in Crimea,[246] Syria,[247] Ukraine,[248] North Korea,[249] Venezuela,[250] election meddling,[251] Skripal poisoning,[252] and oil drilling in Russia.[253]

Despite extensive investigation into the dossier's claims, they remain unverified, and many consider the allegations to be a conspiracy theory.[254][255][256][257][258][259][260] Trump's actions at the Helsinki summit in 2018 led some to conclude that Steele's report was more accurate than not. Politico reported, "Trump sided with the Russians over the U.S. intelligence community's assessment that Moscow had waged an all-out attack on the 2016 election...The joint news conference cemented fears among some that Trump was in Putin's pocket and prompted bipartisan backlash."[261] At the joint news conference, when asked directly about the subject, Putin denied that he had any kompromat on Trump. Trump was reportedly given a gift from Putin the weekend of the pageant, though Putin argued "that he did not even know Trump was in Russia for the Miss Universe pageant in 2013 when, according to the Steele dossier, video of Trump was secretly recorded to blackmail him."[262]

In reaction to Trump's actions at the summit, Senator Chuck Schumer (D-N.Y.) spoke in the Senate:

Millions of Americans will continue to wonder if the only possible explanation for this dangerous and inexplicable behavior is the possibility — the very real possibility — that President Putin holds damaging information over President Trump.[263]

 
In May 2017, James Clapper, the former Director of National Intelligence, told NBC's Meet the Press that Russians are "almost genetically driven" to act deviously.[264]

Several operatives and lawyers in the U.S. intelligence community reacted strongly to Trump's performance at the summit, describing it as "subservien[ce] to Putin" and "a fervent defense of Russia's military and cyber aggression around the world, and its violation of international law in Ukraine". Some framed Trump's conduct as harmful to U.S. interests and an asset to Russian interests, suggesting that he was a "useful idiot" to Putin,[265] and that he looked like "Putin's puppet".[266] Former Director of National Intelligence James Clapper wondered "if Russians have something on Trump",[267] and former CIA director John O. Brennan accused Trump of treason, tweeting: "He is wholly in the pocket of Putin."[268] In January 2019, former acting CIA director Michael Morell called Trump "an unwitting agent of the Russian federation", echoing the sentiments of former CIA director Michael V. Hayden.[269] House Speaker Nancy Pelosi suggested then-President Trump's behavior was part of a pattern: "All roads lead to Putin."[270]

Biden administration (2021–present) edit

Following the arrest of Russian opposition leader Alexei Navalny on January 17, 2021, Jake Sullivan, Biden's national security advisor, stated: "Mr. Navalny should be immediately released, and the perpetrators of the outrageous attack on his life must be held accountable. The Kremlin's attacks on Mr. Navalny are not just a violation of human rights, but an affront to the Russian people who want their voices heard."[271]

On the day of Biden's inauguration, Russia urged the new administration to take a "more constructive" approach in talks over the extension of the 2010 New START treaty, accusing the Trump administration of "deliberately and intentionally" dismantling international arms control agreements and attacking its "counterproductive and openly aggressive" approach in talks.[272] On January 26, Biden and Putin agreed that they would extend by five years the New START treaty, which would otherwise have expired in February 2021.[273]

On 17 March 2021, the Russian foreign ministry announced that Russia had recalled its ambassador to the U.S., Anatoly Antonov, for "consultations" in a move that was characterized by the ministry's spokesperson as being without precedent for a Russia ambassador to the U.S.[274] The recall came after Biden said he thought that Putin was "a killer" and said he would "pay the price" for the interference in the 2020 U.S. election, which had been confirmed by a declassified DNI report released the previous day.[275] The State Department commented on the recall by saying that while the U.S. would work with Russia to advance U.S. interests, they would "be able to hold Russia accountable for any of their malign actions".[276]

On April 15, the U.S. announced the expulsion of 10 Russian diplomats and imposed sanctions on six Russian technology companies as well as 32 other individuals and entities. The new sanctions also targeted ruble-denominated sovereign debt. Nevertheless, the economic punishments were assessed by observers as "more bark than bite" and likely to be "largely symbolic", with the ruble even rebounding against the dollar on the news. Biden commented the United States "could have gone further" with the sanctions, but that he had opted for a milder form of sovereign-debt sanctions for now because he wanted to avoid a "cycle of escalation and conflict."[277] Russia retaliated the following day, expelling 10 U.S. diplomats and suggesting the U.S. ambassador return home for consultations.[278]

On May 19, the Biden administration lifted sanctions on the Nord Stream 2 gas pipeline that was being built between Russia and Germany. While President Biden believed the project was bad, the U.S. State Department explained it had concluded that it was in the "U.S. national interest" to waive the sanctions.[279]

In May 2021, Biden and Putin agreed to meet as the relationship between the countries was being assessed to be at the lowest point since the 1980s.[280] At the meeting in Geneva in mid-June, the countries′ leaders reached an agreement to return their ambassadors to their posts in each other's capitals, no progress was made in overcoming the major points of contention.[281]

On August 21, the Department of State imposed increased sanctions on Russia for alleged poisoning of Alexei Navalny. These sanctions include a ban on ammunition imports into the United States, as well as restrictions of small arm sales.[282]

On 1 December 2021, Russia's Foreign Ministry told U.S. diplomats who have been working in Moscow for more than three years, to leave the country by 31 January 2022.[283] The move came in response to news on 28 November 2021 that the US would be expelling 27 Russian diplomatic staff by the end of January 2022.[284]

On 21 February 2023, Russian President Vladimir Putin suspended the New START agreement.[285]

2021–2022 Russo-Ukrainian crisis edit

 
Russian Foreign Minister Sergey Lavrov meets with U.S. Secretary of State Antony Blinken on December 2, 2021
 
U.S. President Joe Biden holds a video call with Russian President Vladimir Putin, on December 7, 2021

In late 2021 and early 2022, Russian troops build up along the Russo-Ukrainian border, resulted in renewed tensions between Russia and NATO. Senior officials of the Biden administration reported that Russia had only withdrawn a few thousand troops since the previous military buildup in early 2021. The New York Times estimated over 80,000 Russian troops still remain at the Russo-Ukrainian border by September 2021.[286] The Kremlin has repeatedly denied that it has any plans to invade Ukraine.[287][288]

On 30 November 2021, Putin stated that an expansion of NATO's presence in Ukraine, especially the deployment of any long-range missiles capable of striking Russian cities or missile defence systems similar to those in Romania and Poland, would be a "red line" issue for the Kremlin.[289][290][291] Putin asked President Joe Biden for legal guarantees that NATO wouldn't expand eastward or put "weapons systems that threaten us in close vicinity to Russian territory."[292] The U.S. rejected Putin's demands.[293][294]

Biden and Putin discussed the crisis over the course of a 50-minute phone call on December 30, 2021.[295] Bilateral talks began in Geneva on 10 January 2022, to discuss the crisis in Ukraine as well as longstanding Russians concerns regarding NATO postering in Eastern Europe.[296] The talks were led by Russian Deputy Foreign Minister Sergei Ryabkov and U.S. Deputy Secretary of State Wendy Sherman.[297] On January 31, 2022, both the United States and Russia discussed the crisis at an emergency meeting of the UN Security Council.[298] The discussion was tense, with both sides accusing the other of stoking tensions.

The United States government increased military support to Ukraine through a $650 million arms deal.[299] U.S. Secretary of Defense Lloyd Austin and Chairman of the Joint Chiefs of Staff Mark Milley threatened U.S. support for an anti-Russian insurgency within Ukraine.[300] The Biden administration approved deliveries of American-made FIM-92 Stinger surface-to-air missiles to Ukraine.[301] The government threatened severe sanctions against Russia as well as personal sanctions against Putin and his allies.[302] The United States also threatened to halt the opening of the Nord Stream 2 pipeline that would send Russian natural gas to Germany, "if Russia invades Ukraine one way or another."[303]

In January 2022, the United States accused Russia of sending saboteurs into Ukraine to stage "a false-flag operation" that would create a pretext for Russia to invade Ukraine. Russian Foreign Minister Sergey Lavrov dismissed the U.S. claim as "total disinformation."[288] On 4 February 2022, Lavrov dismissed as "nonsense" and "craziness" allegations by the United States that Russia was preparing a fake video of the Ukrainian forces attacking the separatist-held Donbas as a pretext for starting a war in Ukraine.[304]

On 19 January 2022, President Biden said that he believed Russia would invade Ukraine.[305] Biden said a full-scale invasion of Ukraine would be "the most consequential thing that's happened in the world in terms of war and peace" since World War II.[306] Biden and Ukrainian President Volodymyr Zelenskyy disagreed on how imminent the threat was.[307][308] On 10 February 2022, Biden urged all American citizens in Ukraine to leave immediately.[309] On 11 February 2022, Biden's national security advisor Jake Sullivan publicly warned about the likelihood of a Russian invasion of Ukraine prior to the end the 2022 Winter Olympics.[310]

The Chicago Council on Global Affairs poll, conducted on 7–26 July 2021, found that 50% of Americans supported the use of U.S. troops to defend Ukraine if Russia invaded the rest of the country.[311]

In December 2021, a Levada Center poll found that about 50% of Russians believed that the U.S. and NATO were responsible for the Russo-Ukrainian crisis, while 16% blamed Ukraine and just 4% blamed Russia.[312][313]

In February 2022, according to the White House, U.S. President Joe Biden stated in a video conference with Russian President Vladimir Putin that if Russia invades Ukraine, Washington and its allies will respond "decisively and impose fast and severe penalties."[314]

 
A majority of Americans disapprove of President Joe Biden's handling of the Russo-Ukrainian crisis.[315]

On February 16, 2022, the US State Department stated that Russia is seeking to establish a "pretext" for invading Ukraine by making unsubstantiated claims of "genocide" and mass graves in Ukraine's eastern Donbas region.[316]

On February 20, 2022, the US secretary of state showed his concern about the continuation of Russian military drills in Belarus. According to Antony Blinken, Moscow's decision to keep roughly 30,000 troops in Belarus, near to Ukraine, amid increased tensions in the east justifies US's concerns.[317]

On February 22, 2022, US President Joe Biden criticized Russia's recognition of the Donetsk People's Republic and the Luhansk People's Republic as "the beginning of the Russian invasion of Ukraine" and announced sanctions against on banks VEB and Promsvyazbank and comprehensive sanctions on Russia's sovereign debt in response.[318]

Russian invasion of Ukraine and significantly increased tensions edit

 
Protest against the war outside the Russian Consulate in New York City on February 24, 2022

On February 24, 2022, Russia launched an invasion of Ukraine opening fire with explosive ordinance and hitting several residential buildings, by the 25th the invading army had taken all of the Chernobyl exclusion zone and began to attack the Ukrainian capital with high resistance from both the Ukrainian military and a makeshift militia. On February 26, President Joe Biden authorized the US State Department to deliver up to $350 million in weapons from US stockpiles to Ukraine.[319]

President Joe Biden rejected the idea of a NATO-enforced no-fly zone over Ukraine.[320]

On February 26, 2022, the deputy head of Russia's Security Council chaired by President Vladimir Putin, warned that Moscow may retaliate to international sanctions by withdrawing from the most recent nuclear arms treaty with the US, severing diplomatic ties with Western nations, and freezing their assets.[321]

On February 28, 2022, the U.S., during a meeting with the U.N., asked the Russian ambassador, Vasily Nebenzya, to remove 12 Russian diplomats from the U.S. under claims of abuse of power.

On March 4, 2022, the United States and its allies strongly denounced Russia at the United Nations on Friday for shelling and seizing Europe's largest nuclear power facility overnight in Ukraine, and some insisted that Moscow not allow such an action to happen again.[322]

On March 13, 2022, President Biden's National Security Adviser Jake Sullivan warned of a full-fledged NATO response if Russia were to hit any part of NATO territory.[323]

 
The United States is on Russia's "Unfriendly Countries List" (red). Countries and territories on the list have imposed or joined sanctions against Russia.[324]

The poll, conducted by NPR/Ipsos between 18 and 21 March 2022, found that only 36% of Americans approved the Biden administration's response to the invasion.[325]

On April 28, 2022, President Biden asked Congress for an additional $33 billion to assist Ukraine, including $20 billion to provide weapons to Ukraine.[326]

On July 6, 2022, the speaker of the Russian Parliament threatened the US about the possible "return" of Alaska to Russia.[327]

On September 21, 2022, President Putin warned the US and NATO during his partial mobilization speech regarding Russia's ability to use nuclear weapons, stating that if Russia's "territorial integrity" was threatened, Russia would "certainly make use of all weapon systems available" to them.[328]

On 27 September 2022, White House press secretary Karine Jean-Pierre encouraged Russian men fleeing their home country to avoid being drafted to apply for asylum in the United States.[329] In early 2023, the Biden administration resumed deportations of Russians who had fled Russia due to mobilization and political persecution. Texas-based attorney Jennifer Scarborough said that "In March of 2022, the US said they were stopping deportations to Russia because of the political situation – so I don’t understand why they restarted it and they did it so quietly."[330]

On January 25, 2023, the Biden administration decided to supply 31 M1 Abrams tanks to Ukraine.[331]

In February 2023, the United States stepped up efforts to pressure the countries, including Turkey and the United Arab Emirates, to stop the commercial activities that had been benefiting Russia and helping them to evade international sanctions. Turkey, a NATO member, and the United Arab Emirates, a close ally of the US, agreed to Western pressure and imposed sanctions on Russia.[332]

A Gallup poll conducted in June 2023 found that 62% of respondents in the United States wanted to support Ukraine in regaining territory that Russia had captured, even if it meant prolonging the war between Russia and Ukraine, while 32% wanted to end the war as quickly as possible, even if it meant allowing Russia to keep the territory it captured and annexed in southeastern Ukraine.[333] According to a 2023 CNN poll, 55% of American respondents said the US Congress should not approve additional funding to support Ukraine, while 45% would support additional funding.[334]

In 2022, Congress approved more than $112 billion to help Ukraine in its war with Russia. At the end of 2023, the White House requested $61.4 billion more for Ukraine for the year ahead.[335]

Russian and U.S. intelligence operations edit

 
Military attaches of foreign embassies visiting the exhibition of remains of U.S. U-2 reconnaissance aircraft destroyed on May 1, 1960, near Sverdlovsk (now Yekaterinburg).

The Soviet Union's systemic espionage efforts in the U.S. began in the 1920s.[336]

In April 2015, CNN reported that "Russian hackers" had "penetrated sensitive parts of the White House" computers in "recent months." It was said that the FBI, the Secret Service, and other U.S. intelligence agencies categorized the attacks "among the most sophisticated attacks ever launched against U.S. government systems."[337]

In 2017, a cybersecurity specialist working in the Federal Security Service was arrested by Russian authorities on suspicion of passing information to U.S. intelligence.[338]

In June 2019, Russia said that its electrical grid has been under cyber-attack by the United States. The New York Times reported that American hackers from the United States Cyber Command planted malware potentially capable of disrupting the Russian electrical grid.[339]

Mutual perceptions by the countries' populations edit

 
President Obama greets attendees at the New Economic School graduation in Gostinny Dvor, Moscow, July 7, 2009

A poll by the University of Maryland, College Park, released early July 2009 found that only 2 percent of Russians had "a lot of confidence" that U.S. president Barack Obama would do the right thing in world affairs.[340] Russian media has criticized the United States over the past years for pursuing an anti-missile system in Europe, for favoring NATO expansion and for supporting Georgia in its armed conflict with Russia in 2008.[341]

 
Russians have criticized the United States over the past years for favoring NATO's eastward expansion.[342]

Prior to 2014, the Russian press expressed varying opinions of Russia–United States relations.[343] Russian media treatment of America ranged from doctrinaire[344] and nationalistic[345] to very positive toward the United States and the West.[346][347][348][349] In 2013, 51 percent of Russians had a favorable view of the U.S., down from 57 percent in 2010.[350]

The opinion polls taken by the independent Levada Center in January 2015,[351] showed 81 percent of Russians tended to hold negative views of the U.S., a number that had nearly doubled over the previous 12 months and that was by far the highest negative rating since the center started tracking those views in 1988, as well as surpassing any time since the Stalin era, according to observers.[352] This contrasts with only 7 percent of Russians in April 1990 who said they had bad or somewhat bad attitudes towards the U.S.[353] Likewise, the figures published by Gallup in February 2015 showed a significant rise in anti-Russian sentiment in the U.S.: the proportion of Americans who considered Russia as a "critical military threat" had over the 12 months increased from 32 to 49 percent, and, for the first time in many years, Russia topped the list of America's perceived external enemies, ahead of North Korea, China and Iran, with 18 percent of U.S. residents putting Russia at the top of the list of the "United States' greatest enemy today".[354] Public opinion polls taken by the Pew Research Center showed that favorable U.S. public opinion of Russia was at 22 percent in 2015. The most negative view of Russia was at 19 percent in 2014, and the most positive view at 49 percent in 2010 and 2011.[355] The most negative view of the United States was at 15 percent in 2015, while the most positive view was at 61 percent in 2002.[356]

US public opinion regarding Russia has changed substantially over the past 25 years. A Gallup poll from 1992 to 2017 shows 62% of American respondents having a favorable view of Russia in 1992, and 29% having an unfavorable view. In 2017, 70% of American respondents had an unfavorable view of Russia, and 28% had a favorable view.[357] A February 2023 Gallup poll found that 9% of Americans have a favorable view of Russia, and 51% view the military power of Russia as a critical threat, though this is down significantly from 59% a year prior.[358] A poll conducted by YouGov in 2015 found that only 11% of Americans believed that the Soviet Union contributed most to the defeat of Nazi Germany in World War II.[359]

A 2017 survey conducted by the Pew Research Center showed 41% of Russians had a positive view of the US, only one of two countries surveyed where positive perception for the US increased; 52% expressed a negative view.[360] The same study also showed 53% of Russians had confidence in the U.S. president Donald Trump, compared to just 11% for former president Barack Obama.[361]

 
American metal band Fear Factory in Saint Petersburg.

There has also been a change in whether Americans view Russia as an ally or a threat. In 1992, 44% of American respondents saw Russia to be friendly but not an ally, and 5% see them as a threat. In 2014, the Gallup poll reports that 21% of Americans see Russia as friendly but not an ally, and 24% of American respondents seeing them as a threat.[357] This difference in how Americans view Russia has been attributed to the increasing lack of cooperation in the scientific field between the US and Russia, by some.[362] Another perspective is the shift from ally to threat is due to the US being critical of Russia's aggression, especially with their aggression towards geographic neighbors,[363] the United States being one of those neighbors, as it shares a common sea border with the Russian Federation and the US State of Alaska.

The 2016 surveys independently conducted by the Chicago Council and Russia's Levada Center showed that mutual perceptions between Russians and Americans were at levels not seen since the Cold War, indicating considerable mutual distrust.[364] 

U.S.–Russian relations have further deteriorated since 2016.[365] A December 2017 survey conducted by the Chicago Council and its Russian partner, the Levada Center, showed that:

Seventy-eight percent of Russians polled said the United States meddles "a great deal" or "a fair amount" in Russian politics, compared to 69 percent of Americans who say the same about Russian interference in U.S. politics. ... The poll found that 31 percent of Russians said Moscow tried to influence U.S. domestic affairs in a significant way, compared to 55 percent of Americans who felt that their own government tried to do the same thing in Russia. ... Only 31 percent of Americans say they hold a positive view of Russia, and 24 percent of Russians say the same of the United States. ... Eighty-one percent of Russians said they felt the United States was working to undermine Russia on the world stage; 77 percent of Americans said the same of Russia.[366]

A Levada poll released in August 2018 found that 68% of Russian respondents believe that Russia needs to dramatically improve relations with the United States and other Western countries.[367] According to The Moscow Times, "Russians increasingly view the United States in a positive light following a presidential" summit in Helsinki in July 2018. "For the first time since 2014, the number of Russians who said they had "positive" feelings towards the United States (42 percent) outweighed those who reported "negative" feelings (40 percent)."[368]

The 2019 poll independently conducted by the Chicago Council and Levada Center found that 85% of Russians and 78% of Americans say the United States and Russia are "more rivals than partners."[369] The president of the Center for Citizen Initiatives, Sharon Tennison, stated in 2019, "In my 35 years of traveling throughout Russia, I've never before witnessed such a vast gap between what average Americans 'believe' about Russia and Russia's reality on ground today."[369]

A Levada poll released in February 2020 found that 80% of Russian respondents believe that Russia and the West should become friends and partners.[370] However, only 42% of Russians polled said they had a positive view of the United States.[370] Only 18% of Americans polled by Pew Research Center said they had a positive view of Russia.[371] According to the Pew Research Center, "57% of Russians ages 18 to 29 see the U.S. favorably, compared with only 15% of Russians ages 50 and older."[372] In 2019, only 20% of Russians viewed U.S. President Donald Trump positively.[373] Only 14% of Russians expressed net approval of Donald Trump's foreign policies and actions.[374]

Propaganda edit

  • The U.S. government funds Radio Free Europe/Radio Liberty that broadcasts in 26 languages to many countries.[375] The radio's broadcasting is viewed by Russian researchers as an instrument of American propaganda targeting Russia as a state.[376] According to The Intercept, some American media have been accused of spreading anti-Russian propaganda."[377][378][379]
  • Russia funds Russia Today and Sputnik News which have been accused of pushing pro-Kremlin narratives internationally. In 2021, the Russian state media budget was 211 billion rubles (about $2.8 billion USD), an increase of 34 billion-ruble ($460 million USD) over previous years.[380] According to a University of Oxford report, Moscow uses RT "to sow conspiracy theories to cast doubt on traditional media outlets" and "skewing news output to promote narratives that showed the West as corrupt, divided and out of touch."[381] The influence operation also extends to US allies. RT and Sputnik were cited by the European Parliament's resolution of November 23, 2016 as the Russian government's tools of "propaganda against the EU and its North American partners" such as pushing narratives against democratic values and portraying eastern countries as failed states.[382] The RT America network has employed Americans, including TV hosts and political commentators such as Larry King and Ed Schultz, to help them appear more like a legitimate outlet. Jim Rutenberg described them "wittingly or not... playing the equestrians to Russia's trojan horse."[383][384]

Timeline of relations between the United States and Russia edit

The timeline covers key events, 1991 to present.[385][386]

Yeltsin era, 1991–99 edit

  • 1991: U.S. president George H. W. Bush and USSR president Mikhail Gorbachev sign START I treaty, July 31.
  • 1991: August: Soviet hardliners stage a coup against Gorbachev; they fail because of defiance by Russian president Boris Yeltsin. Communism collapses overnight in the USSR.
  • 1991: Gorbachev announces the dissolution of the USSR into 15 independent republics; Russia is the successor state to the USSR.
  • 1992: Russian president Yeltsin visits the U.S. on January 26. He and Bush set up the United States–Russia Joint Commission on P.O.W./M.I.A.'s. Its mission is to discover what happened to POWs and those missing in action during the Cold War, as well as planes shot down, missing submarines. The committee had access to classified archives from the FBI and the KGB.[387]
  • 1992: The Lisbon Protocol calls for the denuclearization of Ukraine, Belarus, Kazakhstan. May 23.[388]
  • 1992: Russia attends the Washington Summit on June 16.
  • 1992: The United States and Russia sign an Agreement Concerning Cooperation in the Exploration and Use of Outer Space for Peaceful Purposes on June 17.[389]
  • 1993: Bush and Yeltsin sign the START II treaty in Moscow on January 3.[390]
  • 1993: First summit meeting between U.S. president Bill Clinton and Yeltsin on April 4 in Vancouver, Canada, to discuss a new and expanded $1 billion aid package intended to support Russian democrats and to fund medical supplies, food and grain assistance as well as loans to Russian entrepreneurs.[391]
  • 1993: The U.S. announces a bilateral aid program of $1.8 billion for Russia and the former Soviet republics on July 9 to 10.
  • 1993: The U.S.–Russian Commission on technical cooperation in energy and space has its first meeting in Washington, D.C., on August 31 to September 2.
  • 1994: Presidents Clinton and Yeltsin sign the Kremlin accords on January 14 in Moscow.
  • 1994: First joint U.S.–Russia Space Shuttle mission on February 3.
  • 1994: The United States and Russia move to end the practice of aiming their strategic nuclear missiles at each other on May 30.
  • 1994: Russia joins the Partnership for Peace program on June 22.
  • 1995: Presidents Clinton and Yeltsin hold a summit on European Security in Moscow on May 9 to May 10.
  • 1995: Russia joins the NATO-led IFOR in the aftermath of the Bosnian War on December 20.
  • 1996: Ratification of START II treaty on January 26.
  • 1996: Clinton and Yeltsin attend the Summit of the Peacemakers in Sharm al-Sheikh, Egypt to condemn the terrorist attacks in Israel and to declare their support for the Middle East peace process on March 14.
  • 1996: Clinton attends a Summit on Nuclear Safety and Security with Yeltsin in Moscow on April 20.
  • 1997: Russia joins the NATO-led Euro-Atlantic Partnership Council to cooperate on political and security issues on January 1.
  • 1997: Clinton and Yeltsin hold another summit on European Security in Helsinki, Finland, on March 21. They reach some economic agreements, but there is continued disagreement on NATO expansion.
  • 1997: April. Moscow summit with Chinese president Jiang Zemin disapproves of American world domination; agree to reduce troops along Russia-China border.[392]
  • 1997: Russia attends the NATO summit in Paris, France, on May 27.
  • 1997: The NATO-Russia Founding Act provides the formal basis of bilateral cooperation between the U.S., Russia and NATO is signed on May 27. Allows participation in NATO decision making; Russia agrees to drop opposition to NATO expansion in Central Europe.[393]
  • 1997: Russia joins the G8 at the 23rd G8 summit in Denver, Colorado, on June 20 to June 22.[394]
  • 1998: Clinton and Yeltsin agree to exchange information on missile launchings and to remove 50 metric tons of plutonium from their countries' nuclear weapons stocks in a summit in Moscow on September 1 to 2.
  • 1999: Russia joins the NATO-led KFOR in the aftermath of the Kosovo War on June 12.
  • 1999: March: Operation Allied Force: NATO bombing of Yugoslavia to force it out of Kosovo. Moscow attacked it as a breach of international law and a challenge to Russia's status in the Balkans.[395]
  • 1999: Clinton and Yeltsin meet at an Organization for Security Cooperation in Europe Summit Meeting in Istanbul, Turkey, from November 18–19, to discuss arms control, Chechnya and events in Europe. Clinton remarks that the international community does not dispute Russia's right to defend its territorial integrity and to fight terrorism.[396]
 
Vladimir Putin and wife Lyudmila at service for victims of the September 11 attacks, November 16, 2001.

Putin era, 2000–present edit

  • 2000: Clinton visits Moscow to meet with new Russian president Vladimir Putin on June 3 to 5.
  • 2000: Clinton and Putin meet at the United Nations Millennium Summit in New York City to call a plea for world peace on September 6.
  • 2001: President George W. Bush has a very friendly meeting with Putin at the Slovenia summit on June 16. At the closing press conference, Bush said: "I looked the man in the eye. I found him very straightforward and trustworthy – I was able to get a sense of his soul." Bush's top security aide Condoleezza Rice realized that Bush's phrasing had been a serious mistake. "We were never able to escape the perception that the president had naïvely trusted Putin and then been betrayed."[397]
  • 2001: Russia supports the U.S. in the aftermath of the September 11 attacks on September 12.[398]
  • 2001: Russia opens a military hospital in Kabul, Afghanistan, to help the NATO military forces and Afghan civilians on December 2.
  • 2002: Bush and Putin meet in Moscow and sign the Strategic Offensive Reductions Treaty and declaration on a new strategic relationship between the U.S. and Russia on May 24.[399]
  • 2002: NATO and Russia create the NATO-Russia Council during Rome summit on May 28.[400]
  • 2003: The "Roadmap for Peace" proposal developed by the U.S. in cooperation with Russia, the European Union, and the United Nations (the Quartet), was presented to Israel and the Palestinian Authority on April 30.[401]
  • 2003: Russia strongly condemns the United States in the lead-up to the 2003 invasion of Iraq, and calls for a peaceful solution to the crisis.[402]
     
    Donald Rumsfeld with Russian Minister of Defense Sergei Ivanov on March 13, 2002
  • 2004: Bush gives condolences to Putin in the aftermath of the Beslan school hostage crisis on September 21.
  • 2006: Bush and Putin jointly announced the organization of the Global Initiative to Combat Nuclear Terrorism on July 16.[403]
  • 2006: The U.S. and Russia condemn North Korea's first nuclear launch test on October 6.
  • 2008: Russian president Dmitry Medvedev visits the U.S. for the first time at the 2008 G-20 summit in Washington, D.C., from November 14 to November 15.
  • 2009: February: US vice president Joe Biden suggests the new Obama administration would like to "reset" America's relationship with Russia, which had deteriorated to its lowest point since the Cold War after Russia's war with Georgia in 2008.[404]
  • 2009: Newly elected president Barack Obama and Medvedev meet for the first time at the G-20 Summit in London on April 1; they pledge to "deepen cooperation" on issues like nuclear terrorism.[405]
  • 2009: The U.S. and Russia disapprove the nuclear test by North Korea on May 25.[406]
  • 2009: Obama and Medvedev announce the Obama–Medvedev Commission to improve communication and cooperation between the U.S. and Russia in Moscow on July 6.
  • 2009: U.S. chairman of the Joint Chiefs of Staff Admiral Michael Mullen and Russian chief of the general staff Nikolay Makarov sign a new strategic framework for military-to-military engagement between the U.S. and Russia on July 7.
  • 2009: Obama administration cancels the eastern European missile defense program denounced by Russian.[407]
  • 2009: Russia agrees to allow U.S. and NATO troops and supplies to pass through Russia en route to Afghanistan on December 16.
  • 2010: Obama and Medvedev sign New START treaty in Prague, Czech Republic, to replace the START I and it will eventually see the reduction of both nations' nuclear arsenals to 1,500 warheads for both the U.S. and Russia on April 8.
     
    Barack Obama meets with Prime Minister Putin outside Moscow, July 7, 2009
  • 2010: The U.S. and Russia call for Iran to give up on its nuclear weapons program along with the United Kingdom, France and China on June 9.
  • 2010: Obama and Medvedev sign the "New START" (New Strategic Arms Reduction Treaty). Goal is to reduce the deployed nuclear warheads on both sides by roughly 30 percent, down to 1,550. The treaty also limits the number of nuclear-armed submarines and bombers. New START went into force in February 2011.[405]
  • 2010: The U.S. and Russia conduct a joint anti-hijacking exercise called Vigilant Eagle-2010 on August 14.
  • 2010: Foreign ministers from the U.S., Russia and NATO meet in New York to discuss areas of cooperation like Afghanistan, fighting piracy and combatting terrorism as well as ways of enhancing security within Europe on September 22.
  • 2010: Medvedev attends the 2010 NATO summit in Portugal, from November 19 to November 20. The U.S., Russia and NATO agree to cooperate on missile defense and other security issues as well as allowing more supplies for the U.S. and NATO to pass through Russia en route to Afghanistan as well as supplying Afghan armed forces with helicopters.
  • 2011: The New START treaty is ratified in Munich, Germany, by U.S. secretary of state Hillary Clinton and Russian foreign minister Sergey Lavrov on February 5.
  • 2011: Ministers from the U.S., Russia and NATO meet in Berlin, Germany to discuss the situation in Libya and Afghanistan, as well as ongoing work on outlining the future framework for missile defence cooperation between the U.S., Russia and NATO on April 15.
  • 2011: Russia congratulates the U.S. on the killing of Osama bin Laden on May 2.
  • 2011–present: Syrian Civil War; the government receives technical, financial, military and political support from Russia, while the U.S. favors some of the rebels. Russia provides diplomatic support in the United Nations as well. Russia has an interest in a military presence in the region, and in suppressing its own Muslim militants. It also rejects regime change imposed by the West.[408]
  • 2011: American, Russian and NATO ambassadors meet in Sochi, Russia, to restate their commitment to pursuing cooperation on missile defense as well as cooperation in other security areas of common interest on July 4.
     
    U.S. Secretary of State Hillary Clinton and Russian Foreign Minister Sergey Lavrov shake hands after signing the New START Treaty, Munich, Germany, on February 5, 2011
  • 2011: American, Russian and NATO diplomats meet in New York to announce they have made progress in combating terrorism and enhancing Afghan transit on September 22.
  • 2012: Russia agrees to host a U.S. and NATO transit hub at Ulyanovsk airport to help the U.S. and NATO withdrawal from Afghanistan in 2014 on March 21.
  • 2012: Obama and Medvedev meet at the 2012 Nuclear Security Summit in Seoul to discuss the increase economic trade on March 26.
  • 2012: The U.S., Russia and NATO hold missile defense exercises in Germany, from March 26 to March 30.
  • 2012: American, Russian and NATO military forces agree to strengthen cooperation to counter piracy in the Horn of Africa on March 27.
  • 2012: Russian prime minister Dmitry Medvedev attends the 38th G8 summit in Maryland, from May 18 to May 19.
  • 2012: Russia joins the U.S. and NATO at the Chicago Summit on May 20.
  • 2012: Obama and Putin meet at the 7th G-20 meeting in Los Cabos, Mexico, and call for an end to the Syrian civil war on June 18 to 19.
  • 2012: American and Russian navies participate in the RIMPAC 2012 naval exercises from June 29 to August 3.
  • 2012: Russia joins the WTO and begins trade with the U.S. on August 22.[409]
  • 2013: Russia supports the U.S. against North Korea for North Korea building up tensions in the Korean peninsula and for threatening the U.S. during the crisis with North Korea on April 8.
  • 2013: The U.S. and Russia agree to intensify their cooperation in countering terrorism, including information exchange between intelligence organizations and conduct joint counter-terrorist operations as well as signing a cyber security pact to reduce the risk of conflict in cyberspace and signing the New Anti-Proliferation Deal in order to protect, control and account for nuclear materials on June 17 during the 39th G8 summit.
     
    Obama at a bilateral meeting with Putin during the G8 summit in Ireland, June 17, 2013.
 
Putin and Obama shake hands at G8 summit, June 17, 2013
  • 2013 August 7. President Obama cancels an upcoming summit with Putin; journalists call it "a rare, deliberate snub that reflects the fresh damage done by the Edward Snowden case to an important relationship already in decline."[404]
  • 2013: Obama and Putin make progress on the discussion of Syria at the end of the 2013 G-20 summit in Saint Petersburg, Russia, on September 6.
  • 2013: U.S. secretary of state John Kerry and Russian foreign minister Sergey Lavrov meet in Geneva, Switzerland, and agree to secure and destroy Syria's chemical weapons on September 14.
  • 2013: The U.S. and Russia along with the United Kingdom, France, China and Germany sign a deal with Iran about their nuclear program in Geneva, Switzerland, on November 27.
  • 2014: The Geneva II Conference
  • 2014: The U.S. Olympics team arrives in Sochi, Russia, to participate in the 2014 Winter Olympics on January 30.
  • 2014 - Continuing. see Russian military intervention in Ukraine (2014–present)
  • 2014: The U.S. and Russia along with the European Union and Ukraine talk in Geneva about the crisis in Ukraine and reach an agreement to end the crisis on April 17.
  • 2014: The U.S. and Russia start sending aid to Iraq to help fight ISIS on June 5.
  • 2015: The U.S. and Russia along with members of the European Union and Ukraine welcome the new Minsk agreement to stop the war in Donbas in Donbas on February 12.
  • 2015: The U.S. and Russia agree to build a new space station to replace the International Space Station and to make a joint project to travel to Mars on March 28.
  • 2015: The U.S. and Russia along with the United Kingdom, France, China, Germany, the European Union and Iran sign the Joint Comprehensive Plan of Action to regulate Iran's nuclear program in Vienna, Austria on July 14.
  • 2015: The U.S. and Russia reach an agreement on a UN resolution that would designate accountability for use of chemical weapons in Syria on August 6.
  • 2015: The U.S. and Russia resume military relations to increase fighting against the Islamic State on September 18.
  • 2015: Obama and Putin meet in New York to discuss ways to combat the Islamic State on September 28–29.
  • 2015: The U.S. and Russia sign a deal to avoid air incidents over Syria on October 20.
  • 2015: Obama and Putin have an informal bilateral meeting on the sidelines of the G-20 Summit in Turkey to discuss the situation in Syria and the ramifications of the Paris attacks on November 15.
  • 2015: The U.S., Russia and the United Nations hold three way talks on Syria in Geneva, Switzerland on December 11.
  • 2015: The U.S. and Russia, along with the United Nations approve a resolution that supports international efforts to seek a solution to end the Syrian Civil War and provide a new government in Syria in Vienna, Austria on December 18.
  • 2016 June: A debate opens inside the Republican Party on future American policy toward Russia. The presumptive presidential nominee Donald Trump has suggested that US and Russia might work together in areas such as Syria. Meanwhile, on June 9, Republican leaders in Congress urged confronting Putin, alleging that he is exhibiting "burgeoning militarism" and calling for "standing up to Russian aggression and bolstering countries such as Ukraine."[410]
  • 2016 November: Donald Trump wins the US presidential election.
  • 2017 April: According to Trump, US ties with Russia may be at all-time low following US missile strike on Syria.[411]
  • 2017 July: During a speech in Warsaw, Poland, Trump warned Russia to stop its "destabilizing" actions in Ukraine and elsewhere, and its support for "hostile regimes" such as those in Syria and Iran. He also urged Russia to "join the community of responsible nations".[412]
     
    U.S. President Donald Trump, Russian President Vladimir Putin, Rex Tillerson, and Sergey Lavrov at the G20 Hamburg summit, July 7, 2017
  • 2017 July: Trump and Putin held a meeting for more than a two-hour period at the G20 Summit in Hamburg. Secretary of State Rex Tillerson said that Trump brought up discussion about Russia's alleged interference in the 2016 US presidential election.[413]
  • 2018 July 16, Russia–United States summit between Trump and Putin took place in Helsinki, Finland. Topics of discussion included the situation in Syria, the Ukrainian crisis and nuclear arms control.[414]
  • 2021 June 16, Russia–United States summit between Biden and Putin took place in Geneva, Switzerland.
  • 2021 Nov 19, the congressmen calling on the U.S. not to recognize Vladimir Putin as president of Russia beyond 2024. Kremlin denounced it as an attempt to meddle in its domestic affairs.[415]
  • 2022 January, the U.S. sent 5000-8500 troops to Eastern Europe, to assist Ukraine against a potential renewed invasion by Russia.[416]
  • 2022 Feb 24, Russia invades Ukraine.
 
The 55th expedition to the International Space Station in February 2018

The Planetary Society is known to have collaborated with Russia, especially Cosmos 1 and LIFE.

In 2014, NASA renewed a contract to ferry U.S. astronauts to the International Space Station on Soyuz rockets and spacecraft. Including additional support at the Russian launch site, this contract is costing the United States $457.9 million. Along with the renewal, NASA also announced that they would be cutting some contacts with Russia after the annexation of Crimea.[417]

In June 2021, NASA Administrator Bill Nelson told CNN Business' Rachel Crane about the future of U.S.-Russian cooperation in the International Space Station (ISS): "For decades, upwards now of 45 plus years [we've cooperated with] Russians in space, and I want that cooperation to continue. Your politics can be hitting heads on Earth, while you are cooperating" in space.[418]

In December 2022, Russia and the United States agreed to do a prisoner exchange. Russian arms dealer Viktor Bout and American basketball player Brittney Griner were swapped.[419]

In April 2023, US imposed sanctions on Russia & Iran for wrongful detention and hostage-taking of U.S. citizens abroad.[420]

Nuclear arms race edit

In 1995, a Black Brant sounding rocket launched from the Andøya Space Center caused a high alert in Russia, known as the Norwegian rocket incident.[421] The Russians thought it might be a nuclear missile launched from an American submarine. The incident occurred in the post-Cold War era, where many Russians were still very suspicious of the United States and NATO.[422][423] The Norwegian rocket incident was the first and thus far only known incident where any nuclear-weapons state had its nuclear briefcase activated and prepared for launching an attack.[424]

President Donald Trump announced on October 20, 2018, that the U.S. would no longer consider itself bound by the 1987 INF Treaty's provisions, raising nuclear tensions between the two powers.[425][426][427] Two days later, Russian military analyst Pavel Felgenhauer told Deutsche Welle that the new Cold War would make this treaty and other Cold War-era treaties "irrelevant because they correspond to a totally different world situation."[428] In early 2019, more than 90% of world's 13,865 nuclear weapons were owned by Russia and the United States.[429]

President Putin oversaw Russia's large-scale nuclear war exercises on October 17, 2019, where the Russian army integrated land, sea and air components of the nation's nuclear triad, nearly one year after Trump announced that the US was pulling-out of the nuclear treaty it had signed with Russia.[430]

According to a peer-reviewed study published in the journal Nature Food in August 2022,[431] a full-scale nuclear war between the U.S. and Russia, which together hold more than 90% of the world's nuclear weapons, would kill 360 million people directly and more than 5 billion indirectly from starvation during a nuclear winter.[432][433]

Economic ties edit

The U.S. Congress repealed the Jackson–Vanik amendment on November 16, 2012.[434]

"Last year [2015] was not particularly favorable for trade between Russia and the U.S. Our overall 2015 turnover was $21 billion, a decline of 27.9 percent," said a senior Russian official in April 2016.[435]

Reuters reported that U.S. companies "generated more than $90 billion in revenue from Russia in 2017."[436] According to the AALEP, "there are almost 3,000 American companies in Russia, and the U.S. is also the leader in terms of foreign companies in Special Economic Zones, with 11 projects."[437]

The U.S. goods and services trade deficit with Russia was $11.2 billion in 2022.[438]

The following chart shows dollar figures from the US Census Bureau's Trade in Goods with Russia page:

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  •   Imports from Russia to the US
  •   Exports from the US to Russia

Imports from Russia to the US edit

One major import is enriched uranium. As of 2023, 24% of enriched uranium in the US is imported from Russia.[439]

Another major import is gasoline, of which Russia the top provider in 2021.[440] During the period 2003-2023 (inclusive), the low-point was December 2003.[441]

Exports from the US to Russia edit

In 2023, the Congressional Research Service reported that the US was the third largest source of goods imports to Russia in 2021.[442]

In March 2022, following the Russian invasion of Ukraine, exports from the US to Russia fell dramatically.[443]

Military ties edit

 
Russian and U.S. sailors honoring military personnel who perished during World War II, Vladivostok, Russia, July 4, 2002
 
An element of the 18th Infantry Regiment, representing the United States at the 2010 Victory Day military parade in Moscow.

Following the demise of the Soviet Union, the United States and Russia signed a bilateral treaty called the Strategic Arms Reduction Treaty (START II), signed by George H. W. Bush and Boris Yeltsin.

The United States and Russia have conducted joint military maneuvers, training and counter-terrorist exercises in Germany. This was done in hopes to strengthen relations with the United States and Russia.[444] The Russian president has also proposed that the United States and Russia put a joint missile defense system in Azerbaijan, a proposal being considered by the United States.[445] In 2008, in response to tensions over Georgia, the United States had cancelled its most recent joint NATO-Russia military exercises.[citation needed]

As of August 2013, the U.S. and Russia continue to hold joint military exercises like Northern Eagle (held since 2004, together with Norway)[446] and Vigilant/Watchful Eagle (with Canada)[citation needed] among others, with the aim of improving joint cooperation against terrorism and piracy.

NATO–Russia relations edit

Russia-U.S. relations are significantly influenced by the United States' leading role in NATO and policies thereof. NATO and Russia agreed to cooperate on security issues at the 2002 Rome summit and had been gradually improving relations. However, due to the expansion of the alliance, the Russian intervention in Georgia, Russia's war campaign against Ukraine and other controversies, relations have since deteriorated significantly.[447]

In May 2015, following increased tensions with NATO, Russia closed a key military transport corridor (the Northern Distribution Network), which had allowed NATO to deliver military supplies to Afghanistan through the Russian territory.[448] The Northern Distribution Network was established in 2010 in response to the increased risk of sending supplies through Pakistan.[449]

A June 2016 Levada poll found that 69% of Russians think that deploying NATO troops in the Baltic states and Poland – former Eastern bloc countries bordering Russia – is a threat to Russia.[450]

Joint operations and mutual support edit

Russia has expressed support for the United States' War on Terror. Russia has also agreed to provide logistic support for the United States forces in Afghanistan to aid in anti-terrorist operations. Russia has allowed U.S. and NATO forces to pass through its territory to go to Afghanistan.[448] In 2017, the former Deputy Secretary of State Antony Blinken said: "We cooperated with regard to Afghanistan, where Russia played a positive role, particularly in letting our forces and our equipment transit into and out of Afghanistan."[451]

See also edit

Notes edit

References edit

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russia, united, states, relations, relations, before, 1917, russian, empire, united, states, relations, relations, from, 1917, 1991, soviet, union, united, states, relations, russia, united, states, maintain, most, important, critical, strategic, foreign, rela. For relations before 1917 see Russian Empire United States relations For relations from 1917 to 1991 see Soviet Union United States relations Russia and the United States maintain one of the most important critical and strategic foreign relations in the world Both nations have shared interests in nuclear safety and security nonproliferation counterterrorism and space exploration 1 Due to the 2022 Russian invasion of Ukraine relations became very tense after the United States imposed sanctions against Russia Russia placed the United States on a list of unfriendly countries 2 along with Taiwan South Korea Japan Singapore European Union members NATO members except Turkey Australia New Zealand Switzerland Micronesia and Ukraine Russian American relationsRussia United StatesDiplomatic missionEmbassy of Russia Washington D C Embassy of the United States MoscowEnvoyAmbassador Anatoly AntonovAmbassador Lynne M TracyU S President Joe Biden and Russian President Vladimir Putin at the 2021 Russia United States summit in Geneva SwitzerlandAfter the dissolution of the Soviet Union in 1991 the relationship was generally warm under the Russian President Boris Yeltsin 1991 99 In the early years of Yeltsin s presidency the U S and Russia established a cooperative relationship and worked closely together to address global issues such as arms control counterterrorism and the conflict in Bosnia During Yeltsin s second term U S Russia relations became more strained The NATO intervention in Yugoslavia in particular the 1999 NATO intervention in Kosovo was strongly opposed by Yeltsin 3 4 5 6 Although the Soviet Union had been strongly opposed by the Titovian flavour of independence Yeltsin saw it as an infringement on Russia s latter day sphere of influence citation needed Yeltsin also criticized NATO s expansion into Eastern Europe which he saw as a threat to Russia s security citation needed After Vladimir Putin became President of Russia in 2000 he initially sought to improve relations with the United States The two countries cooperated on issues such as counterterrorism and arms control Putin worked closely with U S President George W Bush on the war in Afghanistan following the 9 11 attacks Tensions began to rise as Putin became more authoritarian and the U S pursued policies that Russia viewed as threatening to its security The U S supported the pro Western government in Georgia which led to the Russo Georgian War The U S missile defense system created another source of tension Following Putin regaining control of the Russian government in 2012 relations between the two countries were significantly strained due to Russia s annexation of Crimea and the Russian military intervention in Ukraine Deterioration continued with the Russian military intervention in the Syrian Civil War and over Russia s interference in the 2016 and 2020 U S elections Following the Russian invasion of Ukraine in 2022 relations reached the lowest point since the Cuban Missile Crisis 7 International sanctions imposed since 2014 were significantly expanded by the U S and its allies following the invasion including several state owned banks and oligarchs 8 Contents 1 Background 1 1 United States and the Russian Empire 1 2 United States and the Soviet Union 2 History 2 1 The dissolution of the Soviet Union through Yeltsin s terms 1991 99 2 2 Putin and George W Bush 2001 2009 2 2 1 Controversy over U S plan to station missiles in Poland 2007 2008 2 2 2 Russian Georgian clash August 2008 2 3 Obama administration 2009 2017 2 3 1 Reset under Obama and Medvedev 2009 11 2 3 2 Increasing tensions during Putin s third term 2012 2015 2 3 3 Edward Snowden affair 2013 2 3 4 Russian Annexation of Crimea 2014 2 3 5 Russian military intervention in the Syrian Civil War from September 30 2015 2 4 Trump administration 2017 2021 2 4 1 Election of Donald Trump and Russian interference 2 4 2 2017 2 4 3 Beginning of Putin s fourth term 2018 2020 2 4 4 Influence on the Trump Administration 2 5 Biden administration 2021 present 2 5 1 2021 2022 Russo Ukrainian crisis 2 5 2 Russian invasion of Ukraine and significantly increased tensions 3 Russian and U S intelligence operations 4 Mutual perceptions by the countries populations 4 1 Propaganda 5 Timeline of relations between the United States and Russia 5 1 Yeltsin era 1991 99 5 2 Putin era 2000 present 6 Nuclear arms race 7 Economic ties 7 1 Imports from Russia to the US 7 2 Exports from the US to Russia 8 Military ties 8 1 NATO Russia relations 8 2 Joint operations and mutual support 9 See also 10 Notes 11 References 12 Further reading 12 1 To 1945 12 2 Cold War 12 3 Since 1991 13 External linksBackground editRussian Empire United States relations nbsp nbsp Russia nbsp United StatesUnited States and the Russian Empire edit Main article Russian Empire United States relations nbsp Fort Ross Russian settlement in California 1841 by Ilya Gavrilovich Voznesensky Official contacts between the Russian Empire and the new United States of America began in 1776 Russia while formally neutral during the American Revolution 1765 1783 favored the U S 9 There was little trade or migration before the late 19th century Formal diplomatic ties were established in 1809 10 During the American Civil War Russia supported the Union largely because it believed that the U S served as a counterbalance to its geopolitical rival the United Kingdom In 1863 the Russian Navy s Baltic and Pacific fleets wintered in the American ports of New York and San Francisco respectively 11 Russia operated a small fur trade operations in Alaska coupled with missionaries to the natives By 1861 the project had lost money threatened to antagonize the Americans and could not be defended from Britain It proved practically impossible to entice Russians to permanently migrate to Alaska only a few hundred were there in 1867 In the Alaska Purchase of 1867 the land was sold to the United States for 7 2 million 12 13 The Russian administrators and military left Alaska but some missionaries stayed on to minister to the many natives who converted to the Russian Orthodox faith 14 After 1880 repeated anti Jewish pogroms in Russia alienated American elite and public opinion In 1903 the Kishinev pogrom killed 47 Jews injured 400 and left 10 000 homeless and dependent on relief American Jews began large scale organized financial help and assisted in emigration 15 The Treaty of Portsmouth 1905 brokered by American President Theodore Roosevelt ended the Russo Japanese War 16 During World War I the United States declaration of war on Germany 1917 came after Nicholas II had abdicated as a result of the February Revolution When the tsar was still in power many Americans deplored fighting a war with him as an ally With him gone the Wilson administration used the new provisional government to describe how the democratic nations were fighting against autocratic old empires of Germany and Austria Hungary During the war the American Expeditionary Forces were just starting to see battle when the October Revolution happened in which the Bolsheviks overthrew the provisional government and removed Russia from the war Before the armistice in November 1918 the Americans had helped the Allied intervention in the Russian Civil War with the Polar Bear Expedition and the American Expeditionary Force Siberia The Americans goal was not necessarily ideological but rather to prevent the German enemy from gaining access to war supplies controlled by the Bolsheviks though the United States also tacitly supported the White movement against the Bolsheviks 17 From 1820 until 1917 about 3 3 million immigrants arrived in the U S from the Russian Empire Most were Jews Poles or Lithuanians only 100 000 were ethnic Russians 18 19 United States and the Soviet Union edit Soviet American relations nbsp nbsp Soviet Union nbsp United StatesMain article Soviet Union United States relations See also Cold War nbsp U K Prime Minister Winston Churchill U S President Franklin D Roosevelt and Soviet General Secretary Joseph Stalin in Tehran Iran in November 1943 nbsp U S Presidents Ronald Reagan and George H W Bush with Soviet General Secretary Mikhail Gorbachev in New York 1988 nbsp Comparison of life expectancy in the US and Russia since 1960By 1921 after the Bolsheviks gained the upper hand in the Russian Civil War executed the Romanov imperial family repudiated the tsarist debt and called for a world revolution by the working class it was regarded as a pariah nation by most of the world 20 Beyond the Russian Civil War relations were also dogged by claims of American companies for compensation for the nationalized industries they had invested in 21 The U S while starting to develop trade and economic ties was the last major world power that continued to refuse to formally recognize the Soviet government 22 The United States and Soviet Russia established diplomatic relations in November 1933 23 The United States and the Soviet Union along with Britain were the leaders of the Allies against the Axis powers during World War II Following the onset of the Cold War in 1947 the North Atlantic Treaty was signed by the U S Canada and several Western European nations on April 4 1949 a treaty that established the North Atlantic Treaty Organization NATO designed to provide collective security against the Soviet Union 24 The first bilateral treaty between the U S and Soviet Russia USSR was a consular convention signed in Moscow in June 1964 25 26 In 1975 the Helsinki Final Act was signed by a multitude of countries including the USSR and the US and while not having a binding legal power of a treaty it effectively signified the U S led West s recognition of the Soviet Union s dominance in Eastern Europe and acceptance of the Soviet annexation of Estonia Latvia and Lithuania that had been effected in 1940 The Act came to play a role in subsequently ending the Cold War 27 In the 1970s 1980s the USSR and the U S signed a series of arms control treaties such as the Anti Ballistic Missile Treaty 1972 two Strategic Arms Limitation treaties SALT the Intermediate Range Nuclear Forces Treaty 1987 in July 1991 the Strategic Arms Reduction Treaty was concluded In the late 1980s Eastern Europe nations took advantage of the relaxation of Soviet control under General Secretary Mikhail Gorbachev and began to break away from communist rule The relationship greatly improved in the final years of the USSR On December 3 1989 Soviet general secretary Gorbachev and the U S president George H W Bush declared the Cold War over at the Malta Summit 28 Both countries agreed to cut their strategic nuclear weapons by 30 percent and the Soviet Union promised to reduce its intercontinental ballistic missile force by 50 percent 29 In August 1991 hard line Communists launched a coup against Gorbachev while the coup quickly fell apart it broke the remaining power of Gorbachev and the central Soviet government 30 Later that month Gorbachev resigned as general secretary of the Communist party and Russian president Boris Yeltsin ordered the seizure of Soviet property Gorbachev clung to power as the President of the Soviet Union until 25 December 1991 when the Soviet Union dissolved 31 Fifteen states emerged from the Soviet Union with the largest and most populous one Russia taking full responsibility for all the rights and obligations of the USSR under the Charter of the United Nations including the financial obligations As such Russia assumed the Soviet Union s UN membership and permanent membership on the Security Council nuclear stockpile and the control over the armed forces Soviet embassies abroad became Russian embassies 32 Bush and Yeltsin met in February 1992 declaring a new era of friendship and partnership 33 In January 1993 Bush and Yeltsin agreed to START II which provided for further nuclear arms reductions on top of the original START treaty 34 History editThe dissolution of the Soviet Union through Yeltsin s terms 1991 99 edit With Communism defunct on December 25 1991 the Soviet Union dissolved and the Commonwealth of Independent States a loose association was formed by 12 of the 15 former Soviet constituent republics leaving out the three Baltic states The Russian Soviet Federative Socialist Republic became the Russian Federation It was now an independent state that inherited the USSR s UN Security Council permanent membership and became the successor state to the USSR Strobe Talbott who was Washington s chief expert on Russia has argued that Clinton hit it off with Russian Boris Yeltsin the president of Russia 1991 1999 The personal diplomacy between Clinton and Yeltsin augmented by the channel that Gore developed with Yeltsin s longest serving prime minister Victor Chernomyrdin yielded half a dozen major understandings that either resolved or alleviated disputes over Russia s role in the post cold war world The two presidents were the negotiators in chief of agreements to halt the sale of Russian rocket parts to India remove Soviet era nuclear missiles from Ukraine in exchange for Russian assurances of Ukraine s sovereignty and security withdraw Russian troops from the Baltic states institutionalize cooperation between Russia and an expanding NATO lay the ground for the Baltic states to join the alliance and ensure the participation of the Russian military in Balkan peacekeeping and of Russian diplomacy in the settlement of NATO s air war against Serbia 35 As the collapse of the Soviet Union appeared imminent the United States and their NATO allies grew concerned of the risk of nuclear weapons held in the Soviet republics falling into enemy hands The Cooperative Threat Reduction CTR program was initiated by the Nunn Lugar Act really the Soviet Nuclear Threat Reduction Act of 1991 which was authored and cosponsored by Sens Sam Nunn D GA and Richard Lugar R IN According to the CTR website the purpose of the CTR Program was originally to secure and dismantle weapons of mass destruction and their associated infrastructure in former Soviet Union states Relations between Yeltsin and the administrations of George H W Bush 1989 1993 and Bill Clinton 1993 2001 started off well but deteriorated after 1997 Yeltsin and his foreign minister Andrey Kozyrev made a high priority Russia s full membership into the family of democratic nations They wanted to be a partner of the United States At home they tried to create democratic institutions and a free market capitalist system In 1993 both nations signed the START II arms control treaty that was designed to ban the use of multiple independently targetable reentry vehicles MIRVs on intercontinental ballistic missiles ICBMs The treaty was eventually ratified by both countries yet it was never implemented and was formally abandoned in 2002 following the U S s withdrawal from the 1972 Anti Ballistic Missile Treaty Clinton and Yeltsin were personally friendly Washington encouraged the rapid transition to a liberal capitalist system in Russia 36 Clinton provided rich talking points but provided less than 3 billion and much was paid to American contractors The Russians aware of the Marshall Plan in the 1940s had counted on far larger sums 37 A 1995 NATO study on enlarging the alliance and the 1999 admission of the Czech Republic Hungary and Poland into NATO alarmed Russia 38 With the Cold War over Russians felt NATO s original role was no longer needed It feared its dramatic move eastward meant an escalation of NATO s historic role in containment of Russian goals 39 40 Fears over NATO enlargement contributed the rise of Vladimir Putin and his emphasis on Russian nationalism and security issues 38 nbsp President Bill Clinton and President Boris Yeltsin in the White House October 1995 Russia stridently opposed the U S led NATO military operation against Serbia and Montenegro over Kosovo that began in March 1999 41 42 43 In December 1999 while on a visit to China president Yeltsin verbally assailed Clinton for criticizing Russia s tactics in Chechnya at the start of the Second Chechen War emphatically stating that Russia remained a nuclear power 44 Putin and George W Bush 2001 2009 edit In 2001 in response to the terrorist attacks on September 11 the new Russian president Vladimir Putin quickly announced strong support Terrorism against Russia was already high on Putin s agenda and he found common ground by supporting the American NATO invasion of Afghanistan to destroy the Taliban that had harbored the Al Qaeda terrorists 45 By 2002 however the two countries were escalating their disagreements Russia became more assertive in international affairs George W Bush took an increasingly unilateral course in foreign policy 46 In 2002 the United States withdrew from the Anti Ballistic Missile Treaty in order to move forward with plans for a missile defense system Putin called the decision a mistake Russia strongly opposed the 2003 invasion of Iraq though without exercising its veto in the United Nations Security Council Russia has regarded the expansion of NATO into the old Eastern Bloc and U S efforts to gain access to Central Asian oil and natural gas as a potentially hostile encroachment on Russia s sphere of influence The Russian leadership blamed U S officials for encouraging anti Russian revolts during the Rose Revolution in Georgia in 2003 and the Orange Revolution in Ukraine in 2004 Putin saw intrusions into Russia s historic sphere of interest 47 48 nbsp Russia strongly opposed the U S led 2003 invasion of Iraq nbsp Vladimir Putin with George W Bush and other Western leaders at 32nd G8 summit in Moscow July 2006 Russia condemned the unilateral declaration of independence of Kosovo from Serbia in February 2008 49 stating they expect the UN mission and NATO led forces in Kosovo to take immediate action to carry out their mandate including the annulling of the decisions of Pristina s self governing organs and the taking of tough administrative measures against them 50 Russian President Putin described the recognition of Kosovo s independence by the United States and other Western countries as a terrible precedent which will de facto blow apart the whole system of international relations developed not over decades but over centuries and that they have not thought through the results of what they are doing At the end of the day it is a two ended stick and the second end will come back and hit them in the face 51 In March 2014 Russia used Kosovo s declaration of independence as a justification for recognizing the independence of Crimea citing the so called Kosovo independence precedent 52 53 In early 2008 President George W Bush vowed full support for admitting Ukraine and Georgia into NATO 54 despite Russia s opposition to the further eastward expansion of NATO 55 Russia s Deputy Foreign Minister Grigory Karasin warned that any incorporation of Ukraine into NATO would cause a deep crisis in Russia Ukraine relations and also negatively affect Russia s relations with the West 56 Controversy over U S plan to station missiles in Poland 2007 2008 edit In March 2007 the U S announced plans to build an anti ballistic missile defense installation in Poland along with a radar station in the Czech Republic Both nations were former Warsaw Pact members and both had repudiated Communism and Russian interference U S officials said that the system was intended to protect the United States and Europe from possible nuclear missile attacks by Iran or North Korea Russia however viewed the new system as a potential threat and in response tested a long range intercontinental ballistic missile the RS 24 which it claimed could defeat any defense system Putin warned the U S that these new tensions could turn Europe into a powder keg On June 3 2007 Putin warned that if the United States built the missile defense system Russia would consider targeting missiles at Poland and the Czech Republic 57 In October 2007 Vladimir Putin visited Iran to discuss Russia s aid to Iran s nuclear power program and insisted that the use of force was unacceptable 58 On October 17 Bush stated if you re interested in avoiding World War III it seems like you ought to be interested in preventing them from having the knowledge necessary to make a nuclear weapon understood as a message to Putin 59 A week later Putin compared U S plans to put up a missile defense system near Russia s border as analogous to when the Soviet Union deployed missiles in Cuba prompting the Cuban Missile Crisis 60 In July 2008 Russia announced that if a U S anti missile shield was deployed near the Russian border it would have to react militarily The statement from the Russian foreign ministry said If an American strategic anti missile shield starts to be deployed near our borders we will be forced to react not in a diplomatic fashion but with military technical means Later Russia s ambassador to the United Nations Vitaly Churkin said that military technical means did not mean military action but more likely a change in Russia s strategic posture perhaps by redeploying its own missiles 61 On August 14 2008 the U S and Poland agreed to have 10 two stage missile interceptors made by Orbital Sciences Corporation placed in Poland as part of a missile shield to defend Europe and the U S from a possible missile attack by Iran In return the U S agreed to move a battery of MIM 104 Patriot missiles to Poland The missile battery was to be staffed at least temporarily by U S Military personnel The U S also pledged to defend Poland a NATO member quicker than NATO would in the event of an attack Additionally the Czech Republic recently agreed to allow the placement of a radar tracking station in their country despite public opinion polls showing that the majority of Czechs were against the plans and only 18 supported it 62 The radar tracking station in the Czech Republic would also be part of the missile defense shield After the agreement was announced Russian officials said defences on Russia s borders would be increased and that they foresaw harm in bilateral relations with the United States 63 Russian Georgian clash August 2008 edit Main article Russia Georgia war In August 2008 United States Russia bilateral relations became further strained when Russia and Georgia fought a five day war over the Russian backed self proclaimed republics of South Ossetia and Abkhazia President Bush said to Russia Bullying and intimidation are not acceptable ways to conduct foreign policy in the 21st century 64 Obama administration 2009 2017 edit See also Foreign policy of the Barack Obama administration Russia and Foreign policy of Vladimir Putin Reset under Obama and Medvedev 2009 11 edit See also Russian reset and Obama Medvedev Commission nbsp U S president Barack Obama and Russian president Dmitry Medvedev after signing the New START treatyDespite U S Russia relations becoming strained during the Bush administration Russian president Dmitry Medvedev president from May 2008 until May 2012 with Vladimir Putin as head of government and U S president Barack Obama struck a warm tone at the 2009 G20 summit in London and released a joint statement that promised a fresh start in Russia United States relations The statement also called on Iran to abandon its nuclear program and to permit foreign inspectors into the country 65 In March 2009 U S secretary of state Hillary Clinton and her Russian counterpart Sergey Lavrov symbolically pressed a reset button The gag fell short as the Russian translation on the button was misspelt by the State Department and actually meant overload instead of reset After making a few jokes and laughs they decided to press the button anyway to symbolise friendship 66 In early July 2009 Obama visited Moscow where he had meetings with president Medvedev and prime minister Putin Speaking at the New Economic School Obama told a large gathering America wants a strong peaceful and prosperous Russia This belief is rooted in our respect for the Russian people and a shared history between our nations that goes beyond competition 67 Days after president Obama s visit to Moscow U S vice president Joe Biden noting that the U S was vastly underestimat ing the hand that it h e ld told a U S newspaper that Russia with its population base shrinking and the economy withering would have to make accommodations to the West on a wide range of national security issues 68 nbsp U S Secretary of State Hillary Clinton with Russian Foreign Minister Sergey Lavrov at the Waldorf Astoria New York in September 2010In March 2010 the United States and Russia reached an agreement to reduce their stockpiles of nuclear weapons The new nuclear arms reduction treaty called New START was signed by President Obama and President Medvedev on April 8 2010 The agreement cut the number of long range nuclear weapons held by each side to about 1 500 down from the current 1 700 to 2 200 set by the Moscow Treaty of 2002 The New START replaced the 1991 Strategic Arms Reduction Treaty which expired in December 2009 69 nbsp U S Vice President Joe Biden and Russian Prime Minister Vladimir Putin in Moscow Russia in March 2011On a visit to Moscow in March 2011 U S vice president Joe Biden reiterated Washington s support for Russia s accession to the World Trade Organization 70 he also had a meeting with Russia s leading human rights and opposition leaders where he reportedly told the gathering at the U S ambassador s Spaso House residence that it would be better for Russia if Putin did not run for re election in 2012 71 Through 2020 this was the only time Biden and Putin had met After an official group meeting Biden characterized in his memoir as argumentative he and Putin met privately with Biden saying Mr Prime Minister I m looking into your eyes a reference to a 2001 meeting between Putin and President Bush who later said I looked the man in the eye I was able to get a sense of his soul Biden continued I don t think you have a soul Putin replied We understand each other Biden was elected president in 2020 72 nbsp Joe Biden Russia s President Dmitry Medvedev and Italy s Prime Minister Silvio Berlusconi meeting in Italy in June 2011The 2011 military intervention in Libya prompted a widespread wave of criticism from several world leaders including Russian President Medvedev 73 and Russian Prime Minister Putin who said that UNSC Resolution 1973 is defective and flawed It allows everything It resembles medieval calls for crusades 74 At the start of the mass protests that began in Russia after the legislative election in early December 2011 prime minister Vladimir Putin accused the United States of interference and inciting unrest specifically saying that secretary of state Hillary Clinton had sent a signal to some actors in our country his comments were seen as indication of a breakdown in the Obama administration s effort to reset the relationship 75 By 2012 it was clear that a genuine reset never happened and relations remained sour Factors in the West included traditional mistrust and fear an increasing drift away from democracy by Russia and a demand in Eastern Europe for closer political economic and military integration with the West From Russia factors included a move away from democracy by Putin expectations of regaining superpower status and the tactic of manipulating trade policies and encouraging divisions within NATO 76 77 Increasing tensions during Putin s third term 2012 2015 edit See also Cold War II In mid September 2013 the United States and Russia made a deal whereby Syria s chemical weapons would be placed under international control and eventually destroyed President Obama welcomed the agreement 78 that was shortly after enshrined in the UNSC Resolution 2118 The Obama administration was criticised for having used the chemical weapons deal as an ineffectual substitute for military action that Obama had promised in the event of use of chemical weapons by the Syrian government 79 In George Robertson s view as well as many others the failure of Obama to follow through on his 2013 red line and take promised military action badly hurt his credibility and that of the United States with Putin and other world leaders 80 81 Obama acknowledged Russia s role in securing the deal to limit Iran s nuclear program that was reached in July 2015 and personally thanked Putin for Russia s role in the relevant negotiations 82 nbsp American red and Russian blue military bases as of 2014In May 2012 Russian general Nikolay Yegorovich Makarov said that there was a possibility of a preemptive strike on missile defense sites in Eastern Europe to apply pressure to the United States regarding Russia s demands 83 Later in August 2012 it was revealed that an Akula class submarine had conducted a patrol within the Gulf of Mexico without being detected raising alarms of the U S Navy s anti submarine warfare capabilities 84 On December 14 2012 U S President Barack Obama signed the Magnitsky Act which imposed U S travel and financial restrictions on human rights abusers in Russia On December 28 2012 Russian President Vladimir Putin signed a bill widely seen as retaliatory that banned any United States citizen from adopting children from Russia 85 On February 12 2013 hours before the 2013 State of the Union Address by U S president Obama two Russian Tu 95 Bear strategic bombers reportedly equipped with nuclear tipped cruise missiles circled the U S territory of Guam 86 Air Force F 15 jets based on Andersen Air Force Base were scrambled to intercept the aircraft 86 The Russian aircraft reportedly were intercepted and left the area in a northbound direction 86 At the end of 2013 Russia announced that a rearmament of the Kozelsk Novosibirsk Tagil Rocket divisions with advanced RS 24 Yars intercontinental ballistic missiles was going ahead 87 In July 2014 the U S government formally accused Russia of having violated the 1987 Intermediate Range Nuclear Forces INF Treaty by testing a prohibited medium range ground launched cruise missile presumably R 500 88 a modification of Iskander 89 and threatened to retaliate accordingly 89 90 Concern in the U S was also caused by the test firing in 2014 of the Russian RS 26 Rubezh Intercontinental Ballistic Missile capable of evading the existing anti ballistic missile defenses 91 92 In early June 2015 the U S State Department reported that Russia had failed to correct the violation of the I N F Treaty the U S government was said to have made no discernible headway in making Russia so much as acknowledge the compliance problem 93 Edward Snowden affair 2013 edit See also Global surveillance disclosures 2013 present nbsp Snowden in Moscow in October 2013 Edward Snowden a contractor for the United States government copied and released hundreds of thousands of pages of secret U S government documents He fled to Hong Kong and then to Russia where in July 2013 he was granted political asylum He was wanted on a criminal warrant by U S prosecutors for theft of government property and espionage 94 The granting of asylum further aggravated relations between the two countries and led to the cancellation of a meeting between Obama and Putin that was scheduled for early September 2013 in Moscow 95 Snowden remains in Russia as of October 2023 Russian Annexation of Crimea 2014 edit Main articles Annexation of Crimea by the Russian Federation and International sanctions during the Russo Ukrainian War Following the collapse of the Viktor Yanukovych government in Ukraine in February 2014 Russia annexed Crimea on the basis of a controversial referendum held on March 16 2014 The U S had submitted a UN Security Council resolution declaring the referendum illegal it was vetoed by Russia on March 15 with China abstaining and the other 13 Security Council members voting for the resolution 96 In 2016 in a court in Moscow former top Ukrainian officials of the Yanukovich administration testified that the collapse of the government was in their opinion a coup d etat organized and sponsored by the U S government 97 98 Russian newspaper Kommersant alleges George Friedman chairman of Stratfor had agreed this was the most blatant coup in history which George Friedman says was taken out of context 99 100 nbsp Anti American slogans during the Victory Day celebrations in Donetsk Russian occupied Ukraine May 9 2014 U S secretary of state John Kerry in early March 2014 answering the press questions about Russia s moves in Crimea said This is an act of aggression that is completely trumped up in terms of its pretext It s really 19th century behavior in the 21st century and there is no way to start with that if Russia persists in this that the G8 countries are going to assemble in Sochi That s a starter 81 On March 24 2014 the U S and its allies in the G8 political forum suspended Russia s membership thereof 101 The decision was dismissed by Russia as inconsequential 102 103 At the end of March 2014 U S president Obama ruled out any Western military intervention in Ukraine 102 and admitted that Russia s annexation of Crimea would be hard to reverse however he dismissed Russia as a regional power that did not pose a major security threat to the U S 104 In January 2016 when asked for his opinion of Obama s statement Putin said I think that speculations about other countries an attempt to speak disrespectfully about other countries is an attempt to prove one s exceptionalism by contrast In my view that is a misguided position 105 106 In November 2016 the president of the European Commission Jean Claude Juncker said this of the statement of Obama We have a lot to learn about the depths of Russia we are very ignorant about it at the moment I would like to have discussions on a level footing with Russia Russia is not as President Obama said a regional power This was a big error in assessment 107 As unrest spread into eastern Ukraine in the spring of 2014 relations between the U S and Russia further worsened The U S government imposed punitive sanctions for Russia s activity in Ukraine After one bout of sanctions announced by President Obama in July 2014 targeting Russia s major energy financial and defence companies Russia said the sanctions would seriously harm the bilateral ties relegating them to the 1980s Cold War era 108 nbsp Putin meets with Secretary of State John Kerry Victoria Nuland and John F Tefft to discuss Ukraine and other issues in December 2015 From March 2014 to 2016 six rounds of sanctions were imposed by the U S as well as by the EU and some other countries allied to the U S The first three rounds targeted individuals close to Putin by freezing their assets and denying leave to enter Russia responded by banning import of certain food products as well as by banning entry for certain government officials from the countries that imposed sanctions against Russia The end of 2014 saw the passage by the U S of the Ukraine Freedom Support Act of 2014 109 110 aimed at depriving certain Russian state firms of Western financing and technology while also providing 350 million in arms and military equipment to Ukraine and the imposition by the U S president s executive order of yet another round of sanctions 111 Due to the situation concerning Ukraine relations between Russia and the U S that denounced Russia s actions were in 2014 said to be at their worst since the end of the Cold War 112 As vice president Joe Biden urged the Ukrainian government to reduce the nation s reliance on imports of Russian natural gas and to eliminate pro Russia middlemen such as Dmitry Firtash from the country s natural gas industry 113 Russian military intervention in the Syrian Civil War from September 30 2015 edit Main article Russian military intervention in Syria See also Russian involvement in the Syrian Civil War nbsp Barack Obama meets with Vladimir Putin to discuss Syria September 29 2015 Shortly after the start of the Syrian Civil War in the spring of 2011 the U S imposed sanctions on Syria s government and urged president Bashar al Assad to resign meanwhile Russia a long standing ally of Syria continued and increased its support for the Syrian government against rebels backed up by the U S and its regional allies On September 30 2015 Russia began the air campaign in Syria on the side of the Syrian government headed by president Bashar al Assad of Syria According to Russian foreign minister Sergey Lavrov s statement made in mid October 2015 Russia had invited the U S to join the Baghdad based information center set up by Iran Iraq Syria and Russia to coordinate their military efforts but received what he called an unconstructive response Putin s proposal that the U S receive a high level Russian delegation and that a U S delegation arrive in Moscow to discuss co operation in Syria was likewise declined by the U S 114 115 In early October 2015 U S president Obama called the way Russia was conducting its military campaign in Syria a recipe for disaster 116 top U S military officials ruled out military cooperation with Russia in Syria 117 118 Secretary of Defense Ashton Carter and other senior U S officials said Russia s campaign was primarily aimed at propping up Assad whom U S president Barack Obama had repeatedly called upon to leave power 119 Three weeks into the Russian campaign in Syria on October 20 2015 Russian president Vladimir Putin met Bashar Assad in Moscow to discuss their joint military campaign and a future political settlement in Syria according to the Kremlin report of the event 120 121 The meeting provoked a sharp condemnation from the White House 122 While one of the original aims of the Russian leadership may have been to normalize relations with the U S and the West at large the resultant situation in Syria was said in October 2015 to be a proxy war between Russia and the U S 123 124 125 126 127 The two rounds of the Syria peace talks held in Vienna in October and November 2015 with Iran participating for the first time highlighted yet again the deep disagreement over the Syrian settlement between the U S and Russia primarily on the issue of Bashar Assad s political future 128 The talks in Vienna were followed by a bilateral meeting of Obama and Putin on the sidelines of the G 20 Summit in Turkey during which a certain consensus between the two leaders on Syria was reported to have been reached 129 nbsp John Kerry and Sergey Lavrov are paying tribute at the French Embassy in Moscow after terror attack in Nice July 15 2016 Bilateral negotiations over Syria were unilaterally suspended by the U S on October 3 2016 which was presented as the U S government s reaction to a re newed offensive on Aleppo by Syrian and Russian troops 130 On the same day Putin signed a decree 131 that suspended the 2000 Plutonium Management and Disposition Agreement with the U S the relevant law was signed on October 31 2016 132 citing the failure by the U S to comply with the provisions thereof as well as the U S unfriendly actions that posed a threat to strategic stability 133 134 In mid October 2016 Russia s U N ambassador Vitaly Churkin referring to the international situation during the 1973 Arab Israeli War said that tensions with the U S are probably the worst since 1973 135 After two rounds of fruitless talks on Syria in Lausanne and London the foreign ministers of the U S and the UK said that additional sanctions against both Russia and Syria were imminent unless Russia and the Assad regime stopped their air campaign in Aleppo 136 137 nbsp Russian Ambassador Sergey Kislyak NASA Administrator Charles Bolden and William Shepherd after Shepherd was awarded the Russian Medal For Merit in Space Exploration December 2 2016 Trump administration 2017 2021 edit See also Foreign policy of the Donald Trump administration Russia Election of Donald Trump and Russian interference edit See also Russian interference in the 2016 United States elections nbsp Anti Trump poster in San Francisco presumably associating Trump with Russia or the former Soviet Union April 15 2017 In mid November 2016 shortly after the election of Trump as the U S president the Kremlin accused president Barack Obama s administration of trying to damage the U S relationship with Russia to a degree that would render normalization thereof impossible for Trump s incoming administration 138 In his address to the Russian parliament delivered on December 1 2016 Russian president Putin said this of U S Russia relations We are prepared to cooperate with the new American administration It s important to normalize and begin to develop bilateral relations on an equal and mutually beneficial basis Mutual efforts by Russia and the United States in solving global and regional problems are in the interest of the entire world 139 In early December 2016 the White House said that President Obama had ordered the intelligence agencies to review evidence of Russian interference in the 2016 presidential campaign Eric Schultz the deputy White House press secretary denied the review to be led by Director of National Intelligence James R Clapper was meant to be an effort to challenge the outcome of the election 140 Simultaneously the U S press published reports with reference to senior administration officials that U S intelligence agencies specifically the CIA 141 had concluded with high confidence that Russia acted covertly in the latter stages of the presidential campaign to harm Hillary Clinton s chances and promote Donald Trump 142 President elect Donald Trump rejected the CIA assessment that Russia was behind the hackers efforts to sway the campaign in his favour as ridiculous 143 144 In mid December 2016 Hillary Clinton suggested that Putin had a personal grudge against her due to her criticism of the 2011 Russian legislative election and his opinion that she was responsible for fomenting the anti Putin protests in Russia that began in December 2011 145 She partially attributed her loss in the 2016 election to Russian meddling organized by Putin 146 147 Among her presidential campaign s Russia policy advisors was Richard Lourie 148 who citation needed Also in mid December President Obama publicly pledged to retaliate for Russian cyberattacks during the U S presidential election in order to send a clear message to Russia as both a punishment and a deterrent 149 however the press reported that his actionable options were limited with many of those having been rejected as either ineffective or too risky The New York Times citing a catalogue of U S engineered coups in foreign countries opined There is not much new in tampering with elections except for the technical sophistication of the tools For all the outrage voiced by Democrats and Republicans in the past week about the Russian action with the notable exception of Mr Trump who has dismissed the intelligence findings as politically motivated it is worth remembering that trying to manipulate elections is a well honed American art form 150 The National Defense Authorization Act for Fiscal Year 2017 signed into law by president Obama on December 23 2016 was criticised by the Russian foreign ministry as yet another attempt to create problems for the incoming Trump administration and complicate its relations on the international stage as well as to force it to adopt an anti Russia policy 151 At the end of 2016 U S president elect Donald Trump praised Putin for not expelling U S diplomats in response to Washington s expulsion of 35 Russian diplomats as well as other punitive measures taken by the Obama administration in retaliation for what U S officials had characterized as interference in the U S presidential election 152 153 On January 6 2017 the Office of the Director of National Intelligence ODNI in an assessment of Russian Activities and Intentions in Recent U S Elections asserted that Russian leadership favored presidential candidate Trump over Clinton and that Putin personally ordered an influence campaign to harm Clinton s chances and undermine public faith in the US democratic process 154 7 Trump campaign manager Paul Manafort admitted he was in contact with Russian operatives and sharing information through the campaign 155 2017 edit nbsp Secretary of State Rex Tillerson with Russian Foreign Minister Sergey Lavrov in Moscow Russia April 12 2017 A week after Trump s inauguration on January 20 2017 Trump had a 52 minute telephone conversation with Russian president Vladimir Putin that was hailed by both governments as a step towards improvement of relations between the U S and Russia the presidents agreed to arrange a face to face meeting for a later date 156 157 In early March 2017 the U S military for the first time publicly accused Russia of having deployed a land based cruise missile SSC 8 158 that they said violated the spirit and intent of the 1987 Intermediate range Nuclear Forces INF treaty and posed a threat to NATO 159 On March 25 2017 the U S imposed new sanctions against eight Russian companies in connection with the Iran North Korea Syria Nonproliferation Act INKSNA citation needed The cruise missile strikes on the Syrian Shayrat Airbase conducted by the U S on April 7 2017 as a response to the Khan Shaykhun chemical attack 160 161 162 were condemned by Russia as an act of aggression that was based on a trumped up pretext which substantially impaired Russia United States relations 163 Russian prime minister Dmitry Medvedev said the attack had placed the U S on the cusp of warfare with Russia 164 165 166 Both Donald Trump in April and the Russian government in May characterised the relationship between the countries as frozen and lacking any progress 167 168 in early June Vladimir Putin said relations were at an all time low since the end of the Cold War 169 In mid June 2017 the Russian foreign ministry confirmed that for the first time ever Russia had failed to receive a formal greeting from the U S government on occasion of Russia s national day celebrated on June 12 170 171 172 173 nbsp U S Secretary of State Rex Tillerson and Russian Foreign Minister Sergey Lavrov in Washington D C May 10 2017 In April 2017 Trump s administration denied a request from ExxonMobil to allow it to resume oil drilling in Russia 174 In July 2017 ExxonMobil filed a lawsuit against the U S government challenging the finding that the company violated sanctions imposed on Russia 175 On May 10 2017 Trump had an unannounced meeting in the Oval Office with Russian Foreign Minister Sergey Lavrov and Russian Ambassador to the United States Sergey Kislyak 176 During the meeting he disclosed highly classified information providing details that could have been used to deduce the source of the information and the manner in which it was collected according to current and former government officials 177 178 Although the disclosure was not illegal it was widely criticized because of the possible danger to the source 179 180 On July 6 2017 during a speech in Warsaw Poland Trump urged Russia to cease its support for hostile regimes in Syria and Iran 181 On July 7 2017 in what appeared to be a sign of good relations between the leaders of both countries 182 Trump met with Putin at the G20 Hamburg summit in Germany and described the meeting as an honour 183 In mid July 2017 the Russian foreign ministry noted that the staff of the U S Embassy in Moscow following expulsion of diplomats by the Obama administration in December 2016 far exceeded the number of Russian embassy employees in Washington and indicated that the Russian government was considering retaliatory expulsion of more than thirty five U S diplomats thus evening out the number of the countries diplomats posted 184 On July 28 Russia announced punitive measures that were cast as Russia s response to the additional codified sanctions against Moscow passed by Congress days prior but also referenced the specific measures imposed against the Russian diplomatic mission in the U S by the Obama administration 185 Russia demanded that the U S reduce its diplomatic and technical personnel in the Moscow embassy and its consulates in St Petersburg Ekaterinburg and Vladivostok to four hundred fifty five persons the same as the number of Russian diplomats posted in the U S by September 1 Russia s government would also suspend the use of a retreat compound and a storage facility in Moscow used by the U S by August 1 185 186 187 Two days later Vladimir Putin said that the decision on the curtailment of the U S diplomatic mission personnel had been taken by him personally and that 755 staff must terminate their work in Russia 188 189 190 After the sanction bill was on August 2 signed by Donald Trump Russian prime minister Dmitry Medvedev wrote that the law had ended hope for improving U S Russia relations and meant an all out trade war with Russia 191 192 The law was also criticised by Donald Trump whose signing statement indicated that he might choose not to enforce certain provisions of the legislation that he deemed unconstitutional 193 194 Russia protested on September 2 2017 against a search it said U S officials were planning of a Russian trade mission building in Washington D C shortly after the U S in the spirit of parity invoked by the Russians demanded that Russia shut two of its diplomatic annexes buildings in Washington D C and New York City as well as its Consulate General in San Francisco 195 The Russian foreign ministry said the inspection would be illegal and an unprecedented aggressive action it also demanded that the U S immediately return the Russian diplomatic facilities 196 197 In November 2017 Trump and Putin both attended the Asia Pacific Economic Cooperation meeting in Danang Although they had no formal meeting they spoke informally several times during the event 198 At the end of 2017 CNN concluded that a series of steps undertaken by the Trump administration within a mere week before Christmas such as naming Russia a rival power and revisionist power along with China imposing sanctions on Ramzan Kadyrov a close Putin ally the decision to provide Ukraine with anti tank weapons coupled with tougher line from the State Department about Moscow s activities in eastern Ukraine and accusations from the Pentagon that Russia was intentionally violating de confliction agreements in Syria highlighted a decided turn away from the warmer more cooperative relationship with Russia that President Donald Trump called for during his campaign and early in his presidency 199 200 201 In February 2018 echoing Donald Trump s own statement White House press secretary Sarah Huckabee Sanders said President Donald Trump has been tougher on Russia in the first year than Obama was in eight years combined 202 203 Beginning of Putin s fourth term 2018 2020 edit nbsp Large nuclear weapons stockpile with global range dark blue smaller stockpile with global range medium blue A highly unusual 204 unannounced visit to Washington D C at the end of January 2018 by the directors of Russia s three main intelligence and security agencies FSB SVR and GRU two of whom Sergey Naryshkin and Igor Korobov were on the U S sanctions list 205 and their reported meetings with top U S security officials caused political controversy in the U S and elicited no official comment in Russia while it occurred days before the Trump administration chose not to impose immediately new sanctions on Russia at the deadline mandated by the Countering America s Adversaries Through Sanctions Act 206 207 208 209 The U S air and artillery strike on a pro government formation in eastern Syria on February 7 2018 which caused massive death toll among Russian nationals and a political scandal in Russia was billed by media as the first deadly clash between citizens of Russia and the United States since the Cold War and an episode that threatens to deepen tensions with Moscow 210 211 Public statements read out by Vladimir Putin on March 1 2018 days before the presidential election about missile technology breakthroughs made by Russia were referred to by the Trump administration officials as largely boastful untruths as well as confirmation that Russia ha d been developing destabilizing weapons systems for over a decade in direct violation of its treaty obligations 212 U S Defense Secretary James Mattis remarked that the systems Putin had talked about were still years away and he did not see them changing the military balance 213 Nevertheless White House insiders were later quoted as saying that Putin s claims really got under the president Trump s skin and caused Trump to take a sharper tone behind the scenes vis a vis Vladimir Putin 214 On March 26 2018 following the United States National Security Council s recommendation 215 to demonstrate the U S s support for the UK s position on the Salisbury poisoning incident president Donald Trump ordered the expulsion of sixty Russian diplomats and closure of Russian consulate in Seattle 216 217 Russian foreign minister Sergei Lavrov responded to the simultaneous expulsion of the total of 140 Russian diplomats by 25 countries by accusing the U S government of blackmailing other nations 218 219 nbsp Talks between U S delegation headed by Trump and Russian delegation headed by Vladimir Putin at the summit in Helsinki Finland July 16 2018 In April 2018 U S Russian relations were further exacerbated by missile strikes against the Syrian government targets following the suspected chemical attack in Douma on April 7 220 The countries clashed diplomatically with Russia s top military officials threatening to hit U S military targets in the event of a massive U S led strike against Syria 221 222 223 224 In late May during an interview with RT Syria s president Bashar al Assad said that direct military conflict between the Russian forces and the U S forces in Syria had been averted in April by the wisdom of the Russian leadership and that the U S led missile attack against Syria would have been far more extensive had it not been for Russia s intervention 225 226 On June 8 2018 Trump called for Russia to be readmitted to the G 7 from which it was expelled after the Russian annexation of Crimea in 2014 227 Trump s public statements during his first formal meeting with Putin in Helsinki on July 16 2018 drew criticism from the Democratic members of the U S Congress and a number of former senior intelligence officials as well as some ranking members of the Republican party for appearing to have sided with Putin rather than accepting the findings of Russian interference in the 2016 presidential election issued by the United States Intelligence Community 228 229 230 Republican senator John McCain called the press conference one of the most disgraceful performances by an American president in memory 231 The press around the world ran publications that tended to assess the news conference following the presidents two hour meeting as an event at which Trump had projected weakness 232 nbsp Donald Trump center U S Secretary of State Mike Pompeo and Russian President Vladimir Putin left meet in Osaka Japan in June 2019 In December 2019 the Trump administration imposed sanctions on businesses involved in the construction of Nord Stream 2 natural gas pipeline from Russia to Germany 233 as the U S sought to sell more of its own liquefied natural gas LNG to European states 234 German Finance Minister Olaf Scholz called the sanctions a severe intervention in German and European internal affairs while the EU spokesman criticized the imposition of sanctions against EU companies conducting legitimate business 235 Russian Foreign Minister Sergey Lavrov also criticized sanctions saying that U S Congress is literally overwhelmed with the desire to do everything to destroy the U S Russia relations 236 A June 2020 New York Times report citing unnamed sources stated that American intelligence officials assessed with medium confidence that Russian military intelligence unit 29155 had supervised a bounty program paying Taliban linked militants to kill foreign servicemembers including Americans in Afghanistan in 2019 237 238 The bounty program reportedly resulted in the deaths of several U S soldiers 239 but The Pentagon s top leaders said that Russian bounty program has not been corroborated 240 The Taliban and Russia have both denied that the bounty program exists 239 President Donald Trump and his aides denied that he was briefed on the intelligence Director of National Intelligence John Ratcliffe said that Trump had not received a briefing on the bounty program White House press secretary Kayleigh McEnany said the same 239 Secretary of Defense Mark Esper said that General Kenneth McKenzie the commander of U S Central Command and General Scott Miller the top U S military commander in Afghanistan did not think the reports were credible as they dug into them 240 McKenzie said that he found no causative link between reported bounties to actual U S military deaths but said a lack of proof is often true in battlefield intelligence 240 On July 1 2020 following media reports of Taliban participation in an alleged Russian bounty program the U S House Armed Services Committee overwhelmingly voted in favor of an amendment to restrict President Trump s ability to withdraw U S troops from Afghanistan 241 On September 25 2020 U S Air Force B 52 bombers staged a mock attack run on Kaliningrad a Russian exclave locked between NATO countries The simulated raid on the Kaliningrad region was a test case of destroying Russian air defense systems located in the region 242 Influence on the Trump Administration edit See also Links between Trump associates and Russian officials and spies nbsp The 2018 Helsinki summit Putin gifts Trump a Telstar Mechta the official match ball for the knockout stage of the 2018 FIFA World Cup Shortly before the inauguration of President Trump the Steele dossier was leaked to the public Written by a private intelligence firm claiming to unearth a relationship between his presidential campaign and the Russian government the report alleged that the Russians possessed kompromat on Trump which could be used to blackmail him It suggested the Kremlin had promised the campaign that compromising information would not be released if the Administration cooperated 243 244 Though the report was met with skepticism the relationship between Russian leadership and the incoming Trump Administration became highly salient Days later Ynet an Israeli online news site reported that U S intelligence had advised Israeli intelligence officers to be cautious about sharing information with the incoming Trump administration until the possibility of Russian influence over Trump had been fully investigated 245 Allegations of collusion between Trump associations and the Russian government continued to emerge well into his presidency Various links between Trump associates and Russian officials and spies have been documented and heavily scrutinized most notably former National Security Advisor Michael Flynn s contacts with the Russian ambassador Throughout his presidential tenure Trump expressed both support and criticism of Russia s actions in Crimea 246 Syria 247 Ukraine 248 North Korea 249 Venezuela 250 election meddling 251 Skripal poisoning 252 and oil drilling in Russia 253 Despite extensive investigation into the dossier s claims they remain unverified and many consider the allegations to be a conspiracy theory 254 255 256 257 258 259 260 Trump s actions at the Helsinki summit in 2018 led some to conclude that Steele s report was more accurate than not Politico reported Trump sided with the Russians over the U S intelligence community s assessment that Moscow had waged an all out attack on the 2016 election The joint news conference cemented fears among some that Trump was in Putin s pocket and prompted bipartisan backlash 261 At the joint news conference when asked directly about the subject Putin denied that he had any kompromat on Trump Trump was reportedly given a gift from Putin the weekend of the pageant though Putin argued that he did not even know Trump was in Russia for the Miss Universe pageant in 2013 when according to the Steele dossier video of Trump was secretly recorded to blackmail him 262 In reaction to Trump s actions at the summit Senator Chuck Schumer D N Y spoke in the Senate Millions of Americans will continue to wonder if the only possible explanation for this dangerous and inexplicable behavior is the possibility the very real possibility that President Putin holds damaging information over President Trump 263 nbsp In May 2017 James Clapper the former Director of National Intelligence told NBC s Meet the Press that Russians are almost genetically driven to act deviously 264 Several operatives and lawyers in the U S intelligence community reacted strongly to Trump s performance at the summit describing it as subservien ce to Putin and a fervent defense of Russia s military and cyber aggression around the world and its violation of international law in Ukraine Some framed Trump s conduct as harmful to U S interests and an asset to Russian interests suggesting that he was a useful idiot to Putin 265 and that he looked like Putin s puppet 266 Former Director of National Intelligence James Clapper wondered if Russians have something on Trump 267 and former CIA director John O Brennan accused Trump of treason tweeting He is wholly in the pocket of Putin 268 In January 2019 former acting CIA director Michael Morell called Trump an unwitting agent of the Russian federation echoing the sentiments of former CIA director Michael V Hayden 269 House Speaker Nancy Pelosi suggested then President Trump s behavior was part of a pattern All roads lead to Putin 270 Biden administration 2021 present edit See also Political positions of Joe Biden Russia and Foreign policy of the Joe Biden administration Russia Following the arrest of Russian opposition leader Alexei Navalny on January 17 2021 Jake Sullivan Biden s national security advisor stated Mr Navalny should be immediately released and the perpetrators of the outrageous attack on his life must be held accountable The Kremlin s attacks on Mr Navalny are not just a violation of human rights but an affront to the Russian people who want their voices heard 271 On the day of Biden s inauguration Russia urged the new administration to take a more constructive approach in talks over the extension of the 2010 New START treaty accusing the Trump administration of deliberately and intentionally dismantling international arms control agreements and attacking its counterproductive and openly aggressive approach in talks 272 On January 26 Biden and Putin agreed that they would extend by five years the New START treaty which would otherwise have expired in February 2021 273 On 17 March 2021 the Russian foreign ministry announced that Russia had recalled its ambassador to the U S Anatoly Antonov for consultations in a move that was characterized by the ministry s spokesperson as being without precedent for a Russia ambassador to the U S 274 The recall came after Biden said he thought that Putin was a killer and said he would pay the price for the interference in the 2020 U S election which had been confirmed by a declassified DNI report released the previous day 275 The State Department commented on the recall by saying that while the U S would work with Russia to advance U S interests they would be able to hold Russia accountable for any of their malign actions 276 On April 15 the U S announced the expulsion of 10 Russian diplomats and imposed sanctions on six Russian technology companies as well as 32 other individuals and entities The new sanctions also targeted ruble denominated sovereign debt Nevertheless the economic punishments were assessed by observers as more bark than bite and likely to be largely symbolic with the ruble even rebounding against the dollar on the news Biden commented the United States could have gone further with the sanctions but that he had opted for a milder form of sovereign debt sanctions for now because he wanted to avoid a cycle of escalation and conflict 277 Russia retaliated the following day expelling 10 U S diplomats and suggesting the U S ambassador return home for consultations 278 On May 19 the Biden administration lifted sanctions on the Nord Stream 2 gas pipeline that was being built between Russia and Germany While President Biden believed the project was bad the U S State Department explained it had concluded that it was in the U S national interest to waive the sanctions 279 In May 2021 Biden and Putin agreed to meet as the relationship between the countries was being assessed to be at the lowest point since the 1980s 280 At the meeting in Geneva in mid June the countries leaders reached an agreement to return their ambassadors to their posts in each other s capitals no progress was made in overcoming the major points of contention 281 On August 21 the Department of State imposed increased sanctions on Russia for alleged poisoning of Alexei Navalny These sanctions include a ban on ammunition imports into the United States as well as restrictions of small arm sales 282 On 1 December 2021 Russia s Foreign Ministry told U S diplomats who have been working in Moscow for more than three years to leave the country by 31 January 2022 283 The move came in response to news on 28 November 2021 that the US would be expelling 27 Russian diplomatic staff by the end of January 2022 284 On 21 February 2023 Russian President Vladimir Putin suspended the New START agreement 285 2021 2022 Russo Ukrainian crisis edit Main article Prelude to the Russian invasion of Ukraine nbsp Russian Foreign Minister Sergey Lavrov meets with U S Secretary of State Antony Blinken on December 2 2021 nbsp U S President Joe Biden holds a video call with Russian President Vladimir Putin on December 7 2021In late 2021 and early 2022 Russian troops build up along the Russo Ukrainian border resulted in renewed tensions between Russia and NATO Senior officials of the Biden administration reported that Russia had only withdrawn a few thousand troops since the previous military buildup in early 2021 The New York Times estimated over 80 000 Russian troops still remain at the Russo Ukrainian border by September 2021 286 The Kremlin has repeatedly denied that it has any plans to invade Ukraine 287 288 On 30 November 2021 Putin stated that an expansion of NATO s presence in Ukraine especially the deployment of any long range missiles capable of striking Russian cities or missile defence systems similar to those in Romania and Poland would be a red line issue for the Kremlin 289 290 291 Putin asked President Joe Biden for legal guarantees that NATO wouldn t expand eastward or put weapons systems that threaten us in close vicinity to Russian territory 292 The U S rejected Putin s demands 293 294 Biden and Putin discussed the crisis over the course of a 50 minute phone call on December 30 2021 295 Bilateral talks began in Geneva on 10 January 2022 to discuss the crisis in Ukraine as well as longstanding Russians concerns regarding NATO postering in Eastern Europe 296 The talks were led by Russian Deputy Foreign Minister Sergei Ryabkov and U S Deputy Secretary of State Wendy Sherman 297 On January 31 2022 both the United States and Russia discussed the crisis at an emergency meeting of the UN Security Council 298 The discussion was tense with both sides accusing the other of stoking tensions The United States government increased military support to Ukraine through a 650 million arms deal 299 U S Secretary of Defense Lloyd Austin and Chairman of the Joint Chiefs of Staff Mark Milley threatened U S support for an anti Russian insurgency within Ukraine 300 The Biden administration approved deliveries of American made FIM 92 Stinger surface to air missiles to Ukraine 301 The government threatened severe sanctions against Russia as well as personal sanctions against Putin and his allies 302 The United States also threatened to halt the opening of the Nord Stream 2 pipeline that would send Russian natural gas to Germany if Russia invades Ukraine one way or another 303 In January 2022 the United States accused Russia of sending saboteurs into Ukraine to stage a false flag operation that would create a pretext for Russia to invade Ukraine Russian Foreign Minister Sergey Lavrov dismissed the U S claim as total disinformation 288 On 4 February 2022 Lavrov dismissed as nonsense and craziness allegations by the United States that Russia was preparing a fake video of the Ukrainian forces attacking the separatist held Donbas as a pretext for starting a war in Ukraine 304 On 19 January 2022 President Biden said that he believed Russia would invade Ukraine 305 Biden said a full scale invasion of Ukraine would be the most consequential thing that s happened in the world in terms of war and peace since World War II 306 Biden and Ukrainian President Volodymyr Zelenskyy disagreed on how imminent the threat was 307 308 On 10 February 2022 Biden urged all American citizens in Ukraine to leave immediately 309 On 11 February 2022 Biden s national security advisor Jake Sullivan publicly warned about the likelihood of a Russian invasion of Ukraine prior to the end the 2022 Winter Olympics 310 The Chicago Council on Global Affairs poll conducted on 7 26 July 2021 found that 50 of Americans supported the use of U S troops to defend Ukraine if Russia invaded the rest of the country 311 In December 2021 a Levada Center poll found that about 50 of Russians believed that the U S and NATO were responsible for the Russo Ukrainian crisis while 16 blamed Ukraine and just 4 blamed Russia 312 313 In February 2022 according to the White House U S President Joe Biden stated in a video conference with Russian President Vladimir Putin that if Russia invades Ukraine Washington and its allies will respond decisively and impose fast and severe penalties 314 nbsp A majority of Americans disapprove of President Joe Biden s handling of the Russo Ukrainian crisis 315 On February 16 2022 the US State Department stated that Russia is seeking to establish a pretext for invading Ukraine by making unsubstantiated claims of genocide and mass graves in Ukraine s eastern Donbas region 316 On February 20 2022 the US secretary of state showed his concern about the continuation of Russian military drills in Belarus According to Antony Blinken Moscow s decision to keep roughly 30 000 troops in Belarus near to Ukraine amid increased tensions in the east justifies US s concerns 317 On February 22 2022 US President Joe Biden criticized Russia s recognition of the Donetsk People s Republic and the Luhansk People s Republic as the beginning of the Russian invasion of Ukraine and announced sanctions against on banks VEB and Promsvyazbank and comprehensive sanctions on Russia s sovereign debt in response 318 Russian invasion of Ukraine and significantly increased tensions edit Main article Russian invasion of Ukraine nbsp Protest against the war outside the Russian Consulate in New York City on February 24 2022On February 24 2022 Russia launched an invasion of Ukraine opening fire with explosive ordinance and hitting several residential buildings by the 25th the invading army had taken all of the Chernobyl exclusion zone and began to attack the Ukrainian capital with high resistance from both the Ukrainian military and a makeshift militia On February 26 President Joe Biden authorized the US State Department to deliver up to 350 million in weapons from US stockpiles to Ukraine 319 President Joe Biden rejected the idea of a NATO enforced no fly zone over Ukraine 320 On February 26 2022 the deputy head of Russia s Security Council chaired by President Vladimir Putin warned that Moscow may retaliate to international sanctions by withdrawing from the most recent nuclear arms treaty with the US severing diplomatic ties with Western nations and freezing their assets 321 On February 28 2022 the U S during a meeting with the U N asked the Russian ambassador Vasily Nebenzya to remove 12 Russian diplomats from the U S under claims of abuse of power On March 4 2022 the United States and its allies strongly denounced Russia at the United Nations on Friday for shelling and seizing Europe s largest nuclear power facility overnight in Ukraine and some insisted that Moscow not allow such an action to happen again 322 On March 13 2022 President Biden s National Security Adviser Jake Sullivan warned of a full fledged NATO response if Russia were to hit any part of NATO territory 323 nbsp The United States is on Russia s Unfriendly Countries List red Countries and territories on the list have imposed or joined sanctions against Russia 324 The poll conducted by NPR Ipsos between 18 and 21 March 2022 found that only 36 of Americans approved the Biden administration s response to the invasion 325 On April 28 2022 President Biden asked Congress for an additional 33 billion to assist Ukraine including 20 billion to provide weapons to Ukraine 326 On July 6 2022 the speaker of the Russian Parliament threatened the US about the possible return of Alaska to Russia 327 On September 21 2022 President Putin warned the US and NATO during his partial mobilization speech regarding Russia s ability to use nuclear weapons stating that if Russia s territorial integrity was threatened Russia would certainly make use of all weapon systems available to them 328 On 27 September 2022 White House press secretary Karine Jean Pierre encouraged Russian men fleeing their home country to avoid being drafted to apply for asylum in the United States 329 In early 2023 the Biden administration resumed deportations of Russians who had fled Russia due to mobilization and political persecution Texas based attorney Jennifer Scarborough said that In March of 2022 the US said they were stopping deportations to Russia because of the political situation so I don t understand why they restarted it and they did it so quietly 330 On January 25 2023 the Biden administration decided to supply 31 M1 Abrams tanks to Ukraine 331 In February 2023 the United States stepped up efforts to pressure the countries including Turkey and the United Arab Emirates to stop the commercial activities that had been benefiting Russia and helping them to evade international sanctions Turkey a NATO member and the United Arab Emirates a close ally of the US agreed to Western pressure and imposed sanctions on Russia 332 A Gallup poll conducted in June 2023 found that 62 of respondents in the United States wanted to support Ukraine in regaining territory that Russia had captured even if it meant prolonging the war between Russia and Ukraine while 32 wanted to end the war as quickly as possible even if it meant allowing Russia to keep the territory it captured and annexed in southeastern Ukraine 333 According to a 2023 CNN poll 55 of American respondents said the US Congress should not approve additional funding to support Ukraine while 45 would support additional funding 334 In 2022 Congress approved more than 112 billion to help Ukraine in its war with Russia At the end of 2023 the White House requested 61 4 billion more for Ukraine for the year ahead 335 Russian and U S intelligence operations edit nbsp Military attaches of foreign embassies visiting the exhibition of remains of U S U 2 reconnaissance aircraft destroyed on May 1 1960 near Sverdlovsk now Yekaterinburg Main articles Soviet espionage in the United States Russian espionage in the United States CIA activities in the Soviet Union and American espionage in the Soviet Union and Russian Federation See also Illegals Program The Soviet Union s systemic espionage efforts in the U S began in the 1920s 336 In April 2015 CNN reported that Russian hackers had penetrated sensitive parts of the White House computers in recent months It was said that the FBI the Secret Service and other U S intelligence agencies categorized the attacks among the most sophisticated attacks ever launched against U S government systems 337 In 2017 a cybersecurity specialist working in the Federal Security Service was arrested by Russian authorities on suspicion of passing information to U S intelligence 338 In June 2019 Russia said that its electrical grid has been under cyber attack by the United States The New York Times reported that American hackers from the United States Cyber Command planted malware potentially capable of disrupting the Russian electrical grid 339 Mutual perceptions by the countries populations editSee also Anti American sentiment in Russia and Anti Russian sentiment in the United States nbsp President Obama greets attendees at the New Economic School graduation in Gostinny Dvor Moscow July 7 2009A poll by the University of Maryland College Park released early July 2009 found that only 2 percent of Russians had a lot of confidence that U S president Barack Obama would do the right thing in world affairs 340 Russian media has criticized the United States over the past years for pursuing an anti missile system in Europe for favoring NATO expansion and for supporting Georgia in its armed conflict with Russia in 2008 341 nbsp Russians have criticized the United States over the past years for favoring NATO s eastward expansion 342 Prior to 2014 the Russian press expressed varying opinions of Russia United States relations 343 Russian media treatment of America ranged from doctrinaire 344 and nationalistic 345 to very positive toward the United States and the West 346 347 348 349 In 2013 51 percent of Russians had a favorable view of the U S down from 57 percent in 2010 350 The opinion polls taken by the independent Levada Center in January 2015 351 showed 81 percent of Russians tended to hold negative views of the U S a number that had nearly doubled over the previous 12 months and that was by far the highest negative rating since the center started tracking those views in 1988 as well as surpassing any time since the Stalin era according to observers 352 This contrasts with only 7 percent of Russians in April 1990 who said they had bad or somewhat bad attitudes towards the U S 353 Likewise the figures published by Gallup in February 2015 showed a significant rise in anti Russian sentiment in the U S the proportion of Americans who considered Russia as a critical military threat had over the 12 months increased from 32 to 49 percent and for the first time in many years Russia topped the list of America s perceived external enemies ahead of North Korea China and Iran with 18 percent of U S residents putting Russia at the top of the list of the United States greatest enemy today 354 Public opinion polls taken by the Pew Research Center showed that favorable U S public opinion of Russia was at 22 percent in 2015 The most negative view of Russia was at 19 percent in 2014 and the most positive view at 49 percent in 2010 and 2011 355 The most negative view of the United States was at 15 percent in 2015 while the most positive view was at 61 percent in 2002 356 US public opinion regarding Russia has changed substantially over the past 25 years A Gallup poll from 1992 to 2017 shows 62 of American respondents having a favorable view of Russia in 1992 and 29 having an unfavorable view In 2017 70 of American respondents had an unfavorable view of Russia and 28 had a favorable view 357 A February 2023 Gallup poll found that 9 of Americans have a favorable view of Russia and 51 view the military power of Russia as a critical threat though this is down significantly from 59 a year prior 358 A poll conducted by YouGov in 2015 found that only 11 of Americans believed that the Soviet Union contributed most to the defeat of Nazi Germany in World War II 359 A 2017 survey conducted by the Pew Research Center showed 41 of Russians had a positive view of the US only one of two countries surveyed where positive perception for the US increased 52 expressed a negative view 360 The same study also showed 53 of Russians had confidence in the U S president Donald Trump compared to just 11 for former president Barack Obama 361 nbsp American metal band Fear Factory in Saint Petersburg There has also been a change in whether Americans view Russia as an ally or a threat In 1992 44 of American respondents saw Russia to be friendly but not an ally and 5 see them as a threat In 2014 the Gallup poll reports that 21 of Americans see Russia as friendly but not an ally and 24 of American respondents seeing them as a threat 357 This difference in how Americans view Russia has been attributed to the increasing lack of cooperation in the scientific field between the US and Russia by some 362 Another perspective is the shift from ally to threat is due to the US being critical of Russia s aggression especially with their aggression towards geographic neighbors 363 the United States being one of those neighbors as it shares a common sea border with the Russian Federation and the US State of Alaska The 2016 surveys independently conducted by the Chicago Council and Russia s Levada Center showed that mutual perceptions between Russians and Americans were at levels not seen since the Cold War indicating considerable mutual distrust 364 U S Russian relations have further deteriorated since 2016 365 A December 2017 survey conducted by the Chicago Council and its Russian partner the Levada Center showed that Seventy eight percent of Russians polled said the United States meddles a great deal or a fair amount in Russian politics compared to 69 percent of Americans who say the same about Russian interference in U S politics The poll found that 31 percent of Russians said Moscow tried to influence U S domestic affairs in a significant way compared to 55 percent of Americans who felt that their own government tried to do the same thing in Russia Only 31 percent of Americans say they hold a positive view of Russia and 24 percent of Russians say the same of the United States Eighty one percent of Russians said they felt the United States was working to undermine Russia on the world stage 77 percent of Americans said the same of Russia 366 A Levada poll released in August 2018 found that 68 of Russian respondents believe that Russia needs to dramatically improve relations with the United States and other Western countries 367 According to The Moscow Times Russians increasingly view the United States in a positive light following a presidential summit in Helsinki in July 2018 For the first time since 2014 the number of Russians who said they had positive feelings towards the United States 42 percent outweighed those who reported negative feelings 40 percent 368 The 2019 poll independently conducted by the Chicago Council and Levada Center found that 85 of Russians and 78 of Americans say the United States and Russia are more rivals than partners 369 The president of the Center for Citizen Initiatives Sharon Tennison stated in 2019 In my 35 years of traveling throughout Russia I ve never before witnessed such a vast gap between what average Americans believe about Russia and Russia s reality on ground today 369 A Levada poll released in February 2020 found that 80 of Russian respondents believe that Russia and the West should become friends and partners 370 However only 42 of Russians polled said they had a positive view of the United States 370 Only 18 of Americans polled by Pew Research Center said they had a positive view of Russia 371 According to the Pew Research Center 57 of Russians ages 18 to 29 see the U S favorably compared with only 15 of Russians ages 50 and older 372 In 2019 only 20 of Russians viewed U S President Donald Trump positively 373 Only 14 of Russians expressed net approval of Donald Trump s foreign policies and actions 374 Propaganda edit The U S government funds Radio Free Europe Radio Liberty that broadcasts in 26 languages to many countries 375 The radio s broadcasting is viewed by Russian researchers as an instrument of American propaganda targeting Russia as a state 376 According to The Intercept some American media have been accused of spreading anti Russian propaganda 377 378 379 Russia funds Russia Today and Sputnik News which have been accused of pushing pro Kremlin narratives internationally In 2021 the Russian state media budget was 211 billion rubles about 2 8 billion USD an increase of 34 billion ruble 460 million USD over previous years 380 According to a University of Oxford report Moscow uses RT to sow conspiracy theories to cast doubt on traditional media outlets and skewing news output to promote narratives that showed the West as corrupt divided and out of touch 381 The influence operation also extends to US allies RT and Sputnik were cited by the European Parliament s resolution of November 23 2016 as the Russian government s tools of propaganda against the EU and its North American partners such as pushing narratives against democratic values and portraying eastern countries as failed states 382 The RT America network has employed Americans including TV hosts and political commentators such as Larry King and Ed Schultz to help them appear more like a legitimate outlet Jim Rutenberg described them wittingly or not playing the equestrians to Russia s trojan horse 383 384 Further information on the non profit organizaton Russian Culture NowTimeline of relations between the United States and Russia editThe timeline covers key events 1991 to present 385 386 Yeltsin era 1991 99 edit 1991 U S president George H W Bush and USSR president Mikhail Gorbachev sign START I treaty July 31 1991 August Soviet hardliners stage a coup against Gorbachev they fail because of defiance by Russian president Boris Yeltsin Communism collapses overnight in the USSR 1991 Gorbachev announces the dissolution of the USSR into 15 independent republics Russia is the successor state to the USSR 1992 Russian president Yeltsin visits the U S on January 26 He and Bush set up the United States Russia Joint Commission on P O W M I A s Its mission is to discover what happened to POWs and those missing in action during the Cold War as well as planes shot down missing submarines The committee had access to classified archives from the FBI and the KGB 387 1992 The Lisbon Protocol calls for the denuclearization of Ukraine Belarus Kazakhstan May 23 388 1992 Russia attends the Washington Summit on June 16 1992 The United States and Russia sign an Agreement Concerning Cooperation in the Exploration and Use of Outer Space for Peaceful Purposes on June 17 389 1993 Bush and Yeltsin sign the START II treaty in Moscow on January 3 390 1993 First summit meeting between U S president Bill Clinton and Yeltsin on April 4 in Vancouver Canada to discuss a new and expanded 1 billion aid package intended to support Russian democrats and to fund medical supplies food and grain assistance as well as loans to Russian entrepreneurs 391 1993 The U S announces a bilateral aid program of 1 8 billion for Russia and the former Soviet republics on July 9 to 10 1993 The U S Russian Commission on technical cooperation in energy and space has its first meeting in Washington D C on August 31 to September 2 1994 Presidents Clinton and Yeltsin sign the Kremlin accords on January 14 in Moscow 1994 First joint U S Russia Space Shuttle mission on February 3 1994 The United States and Russia move to end the practice of aiming their strategic nuclear missiles at each other on May 30 1994 Russia joins the Partnership for Peace program on June 22 1995 Presidents Clinton and Yeltsin hold a summit on European Security in Moscow on May 9 to May 10 1995 Russia joins the NATO led IFOR in the aftermath of the Bosnian War on December 20 1996 Ratification of START II treaty on January 26 1996 Clinton and Yeltsin attend the Summit of the Peacemakers in Sharm al Sheikh Egypt to condemn the terrorist attacks in Israel and to declare their support for the Middle East peace process on March 14 1996 Clinton attends a Summit on Nuclear Safety and Security with Yeltsin in Moscow on April 20 1997 Russia joins the NATO led Euro Atlantic Partnership Council to cooperate on political and security issues on January 1 1997 Clinton and Yeltsin hold another summit on European Security in Helsinki Finland on March 21 They reach some economic agreements but there is continued disagreement on NATO expansion 1997 April Moscow summit with Chinese president Jiang Zemin disapproves of American world domination agree to reduce troops along Russia China border 392 1997 Russia attends the NATO summit in Paris France on May 27 1997 The NATO Russia Founding Act provides the formal basis of bilateral cooperation between the U S Russia and NATO is signed on May 27 Allows participation in NATO decision making Russia agrees to drop opposition to NATO expansion in Central Europe 393 1997 Russia joins the G8 at the 23rd G8 summit in Denver Colorado on June 20 to June 22 394 1998 Clinton and Yeltsin agree to exchange information on missile launchings and to remove 50 metric tons of plutonium from their countries nuclear weapons stocks in a summit in Moscow on September 1 to 2 1999 Russia joins the NATO led KFOR in the aftermath of the Kosovo War on June 12 1999 March Operation Allied Force NATO bombing of Yugoslavia to force it out of Kosovo Moscow attacked it as a breach of international law and a challenge to Russia s status in the Balkans 395 1999 Clinton and Yeltsin meet at an Organization for Security Cooperation in Europe Summit Meeting in Istanbul Turkey from November 18 19 to discuss arms control Chechnya and events in Europe Clinton remarks that the international community does not dispute Russia s right to defend its territorial integrity and to fight terrorism 396 nbsp Vladimir Putin and wife Lyudmila at service for victims of the September 11 attacks November 16 2001 Putin era 2000 present edit 2000 Clinton visits Moscow to meet with new Russian president Vladimir Putin on June 3 to 5 2000 Clinton and Putin meet at the United Nations Millennium Summit in New York City to call a plea for world peace on September 6 2001 President George W Bush has a very friendly meeting with Putin at the Slovenia summit on June 16 At the closing press conference Bush said I looked the man in the eye I found him very straightforward and trustworthy I was able to get a sense of his soul Bush s top security aide Condoleezza Rice realized that Bush s phrasing had been a serious mistake We were never able to escape the perception that the president had naively trusted Putin and then been betrayed 397 2001 Russia supports the U S in the aftermath of the September 11 attacks on September 12 398 2001 Russia opens a military hospital in Kabul Afghanistan to help the NATO military forces and Afghan civilians on December 2 2002 Bush and Putin meet in Moscow and sign the Strategic Offensive Reductions Treaty and declaration on a new strategic relationship between the U S and Russia on May 24 399 2002 NATO and Russia create the NATO Russia Council during Rome summit on May 28 400 2003 The Roadmap for Peace proposal developed by the U S in cooperation with Russia the European Union and the United Nations the Quartet was presented to Israel and the Palestinian Authority on April 30 401 2003 Russia strongly condemns the United States in the lead up to the 2003 invasion of Iraq and calls for a peaceful solution to the crisis 402 nbsp Donald Rumsfeld with Russian Minister of Defense Sergei Ivanov on March 13 2002 2004 Bush gives condolences to Putin in the aftermath of the Beslan school hostage crisis on September 21 2006 Bush and Putin jointly announced the organization of the Global Initiative to Combat Nuclear Terrorism on July 16 403 2006 The U S and Russia condemn North Korea s first nuclear launch test on October 6 2008 Russian president Dmitry Medvedev visits the U S for the first time at the 2008 G 20 summit in Washington D C from November 14 to November 15 2009 February US vice president Joe Biden suggests the new Obama administration would like to reset America s relationship with Russia which had deteriorated to its lowest point since the Cold War after Russia s war with Georgia in 2008 404 2009 Newly elected president Barack Obama and Medvedev meet for the first time at the G 20 Summit in London on April 1 they pledge to deepen cooperation on issues like nuclear terrorism 405 2009 The U S and Russia disapprove the nuclear test by North Korea on May 25 406 2009 Obama and Medvedev announce the Obama Medvedev Commission to improve communication and cooperation between the U S and Russia in Moscow on July 6 2009 U S chairman of the Joint Chiefs of Staff Admiral Michael Mullen and Russian chief of the general staff Nikolay Makarov sign a new strategic framework for military to military engagement between the U S and Russia on July 7 2009 Obama administration cancels the eastern European missile defense program denounced by Russian 407 2009 Russia agrees to allow U S and NATO troops and supplies to pass through Russia en route to Afghanistan on December 16 2010 Obama and Medvedev sign New START treaty in Prague Czech Republic to replace the START I and it will eventually see the reduction of both nations nuclear arsenals to 1 500 warheads for both the U S and Russia on April 8 nbsp Barack Obama meets with Prime Minister Putin outside Moscow July 7 2009 2010 The U S and Russia call for Iran to give up on its nuclear weapons program along with the United Kingdom France and China on June 9 2010 Obama and Medvedev sign the New START New Strategic Arms Reduction Treaty Goal is to reduce the deployed nuclear warheads on both sides by roughly 30 percent down to 1 550 The treaty also limits the number of nuclear armed submarines and bombers New START went into force in February 2011 405 2010 The U S and Russia conduct a joint anti hijacking exercise called Vigilant Eagle 2010 on August 14 2010 Foreign ministers from the U S Russia and NATO meet in New York to discuss areas of cooperation like Afghanistan fighting piracy and combatting terrorism as well as ways of enhancing security within Europe on September 22 2010 Medvedev attends the 2010 NATO summit in Portugal from November 19 to November 20 The U S Russia and NATO agree to cooperate on missile defense and other security issues as well as allowing more supplies for the U S and NATO to pass through Russia en route to Afghanistan as well as supplying Afghan armed forces with helicopters 2011 The New START treaty is ratified in Munich Germany by U S secretary of state Hillary Clinton and Russian foreign minister Sergey Lavrov on February 5 2011 Ministers from the U S Russia and NATO meet in Berlin Germany to discuss the situation in Libya and Afghanistan as well as ongoing work on outlining the future framework for missile defence cooperation between the U S Russia and NATO on April 15 2011 Russia congratulates the U S on the killing of Osama bin Laden on May 2 2011 present Syrian Civil War the government receives technical financial military and political support from Russia while the U S favors some of the rebels Russia provides diplomatic support in the United Nations as well Russia has an interest in a military presence in the region and in suppressing its own Muslim militants It also rejects regime change imposed by the West 408 2011 American Russian and NATO ambassadors meet in Sochi Russia to restate their commitment to pursuing cooperation on missile defense as well as cooperation in other security areas of common interest on July 4 nbsp U S Secretary of State Hillary Clinton and Russian Foreign Minister Sergey Lavrov shake hands after signing the New START Treaty Munich Germany on February 5 2011 2011 American Russian and NATO diplomats meet in New York to announce they have made progress in combating terrorism and enhancing Afghan transit on September 22 2012 Russia agrees to host a U S and NATO transit hub at Ulyanovsk airport to help the U S and NATO withdrawal from Afghanistan in 2014 on March 21 2012 Obama and Medvedev meet at the 2012 Nuclear Security Summit in Seoul to discuss the increase economic trade on March 26 2012 The U S Russia and NATO hold missile defense exercises in Germany from March 26 to March 30 2012 American Russian and NATO military forces agree to strengthen cooperation to counter piracy in the Horn of Africa on March 27 2012 Russian prime minister Dmitry Medvedev attends the 38th G8 summit in Maryland from May 18 to May 19 2012 Russia joins the U S and NATO at the Chicago Summit on May 20 2012 Obama and Putin meet at the 7th G 20 meeting in Los Cabos Mexico and call for an end to the Syrian civil war on June 18 to 19 2012 American and Russian navies participate in the RIMPAC 2012 naval exercises from June 29 to August 3 2012 Russia joins the WTO and begins trade with the U S on August 22 409 2013 Russia supports the U S against North Korea for North Korea building up tensions in the Korean peninsula and for threatening the U S during the crisis with North Korea on April 8 2013 The U S and Russia agree to intensify their cooperation in countering terrorism including information exchange between intelligence organizations and conduct joint counter terrorist operations as well as signing a cyber security pact to reduce the risk of conflict in cyberspace and signing the New Anti Proliferation Deal in order to protect control and account for nuclear materials on June 17 during the 39th G8 summit nbsp Obama at a bilateral meeting with Putin during the G8 summit in Ireland June 17 2013 nbsp Putin and Obama shake hands at G8 summit June 17 20132013 August 7 President Obama cancels an upcoming summit with Putin journalists call it a rare deliberate snub that reflects the fresh damage done by the Edward Snowden case to an important relationship already in decline 404 2013 Obama and Putin make progress on the discussion of Syria at the end of the 2013 G 20 summit in Saint Petersburg Russia on September 6 2013 U S secretary of state John Kerry and Russian foreign minister Sergey Lavrov meet in Geneva Switzerland and agree to secure and destroy Syria s chemical weapons on September 14 2013 The U S and Russia along with the United Kingdom France China and Germany sign a deal with Iran about their nuclear program in Geneva Switzerland on November 27 2014 The Geneva II Conference 2014 The U S Olympics team arrives in Sochi Russia to participate in the 2014 Winter Olympics on January 30 2014 Continuing see Russian military intervention in Ukraine 2014 present 2014 The U S and Russia along with the European Union and Ukraine talk in Geneva about the crisis in Ukraine and reach an agreement to end the crisis on April 17 2014 The U S and Russia start sending aid to Iraq to help fight ISIS on June 5 2015 The U S and Russia along with members of the European Union and Ukraine welcome the new Minsk agreement to stop the war in Donbas in Donbas on February 12 2015 The U S and Russia agree to build a new space station to replace the International Space Station and to make a joint project to travel to Mars on March 28 2015 The U S and Russia along with the United Kingdom France China Germany the European Union and Iran sign the Joint Comprehensive Plan of Action to regulate Iran s nuclear program in Vienna Austria on July 14 2015 The U S and Russia reach an agreement on a UN resolution that would designate accountability for use of chemical weapons in Syria on August 6 2015 The U S and Russia resume military relations to increase fighting against the Islamic State on September 18 2015 Obama and Putin meet in New York to discuss ways to combat the Islamic State on September 28 29 2015 The U S and Russia sign a deal to avoid air incidents over Syria on October 20 2015 Obama and Putin have an informal bilateral meeting on the sidelines of the G 20 Summit in Turkey to discuss the situation in Syria and the ramifications of the Paris attacks on November 15 2015 The U S Russia and the United Nations hold three way talks on Syria in Geneva Switzerland on December 11 2015 The U S and Russia along with the United Nations approve a resolution that supports international efforts to seek a solution to end the Syrian Civil War and provide a new government in Syria in Vienna Austria on December 18 2016 June A debate opens inside the Republican Party on future American policy toward Russia The presumptive presidential nominee Donald Trump has suggested that US and Russia might work together in areas such as Syria Meanwhile on June 9 Republican leaders in Congress urged confronting Putin alleging that he is exhibiting burgeoning militarism and calling for standing up to Russian aggression and bolstering countries such as Ukraine 410 2016 November Donald Trump wins the US presidential election 2017 April According to Trump US ties with Russia may be at all time low following US missile strike on Syria 411 2017 July During a speech in Warsaw Poland Trump warned Russia to stop its destabilizing actions in Ukraine and elsewhere and its support for hostile regimes such as those in Syria and Iran He also urged Russia to join the community of responsible nations 412 nbsp U S President Donald Trump Russian President Vladimir Putin Rex Tillerson and Sergey Lavrov at the G20 Hamburg summit July 7 2017 2017 July Trump and Putin held a meeting for more than a two hour period at the G20 Summit in Hamburg Secretary of State Rex Tillerson said that Trump brought up discussion about Russia s alleged interference in the 2016 US presidential election 413 2018 July 16 Russia United States summit between Trump and Putin took place in Helsinki Finland Topics of discussion included the situation in Syria the Ukrainian crisis and nuclear arms control 414 2021 June 16 Russia United States summit between Biden and Putin took place in Geneva Switzerland 2021 Nov 19 the congressmen calling on the U S not to recognize Vladimir Putin as president of Russia beyond 2024 Kremlin denounced it as an attempt to meddle in its domestic affairs 415 2022 January the U S sent 5000 8500 troops to Eastern Europe to assist Ukraine against a potential renewed invasion by Russia 416 2022 Feb 24 Russia invades Ukraine This section needs expansion You can help by adding to it June 2012 See also Apollo Soyuz nbsp The 55th expedition to the International Space Station in February 2018The Planetary Society is known to have collaborated with Russia especially Cosmos 1 and LIFE In 2014 NASA renewed a contract to ferry U S astronauts to the International Space Station on Soyuz rockets and spacecraft Including additional support at the Russian launch site this contract is costing the United States 457 9 million Along with the renewal NASA also announced that they would be cutting some contacts with Russia after the annexation of Crimea 417 In June 2021 NASA Administrator Bill Nelson told CNN Business Rachel Crane about the future of U S Russian cooperation in the International Space Station ISS For decades upwards now of 45 plus years we ve cooperated with Russians in space and I want that cooperation to continue Your politics can be hitting heads on Earth while you are cooperating in space 418 In December 2022 Russia and the United States agreed to do a prisoner exchange Russian arms dealer Viktor Bout and American basketball player Brittney Griner were swapped 419 In April 2023 US imposed sanctions on Russia amp Iran for wrongful detention and hostage taking of U S citizens abroad 420 Nuclear arms race editThis section needs expansion You can help by adding to it July 2019 See also Nuclear arms race Cuban Missile Crisis Second strike Nuclear holocaust and NATO missile defence system In 1995 a Black Brant sounding rocket launched from the Andoya Space Center caused a high alert in Russia known as the Norwegian rocket incident 421 The Russians thought it might be a nuclear missile launched from an American submarine The incident occurred in the post Cold War era where many Russians were still very suspicious of the United States and NATO 422 423 The Norwegian rocket incident was the first and thus far only known incident where any nuclear weapons state had its nuclear briefcase activated and prepared for launching an attack 424 President Donald Trump announced on October 20 2018 that the U S would no longer consider itself bound by the 1987 INF Treaty s provisions raising nuclear tensions between the two powers 425 426 427 Two days later Russian military analyst Pavel Felgenhauer told Deutsche Welle that the new Cold War would make this treaty and other Cold War era treaties irrelevant because they correspond to a totally different world situation 428 In early 2019 more than 90 of world s 13 865 nuclear weapons were owned by Russia and the United States 429 President Putin oversaw Russia s large scale nuclear war exercises on October 17 2019 where the Russian army integrated land sea and air components of the nation s nuclear triad nearly one year after Trump announced that the US was pulling out of the nuclear treaty it had signed with Russia 430 According to a peer reviewed study published in the journal Nature Food in August 2022 431 a full scale nuclear war between the U S and Russia which together hold more than 90 of the world s nuclear weapons would kill 360 million people directly and more than 5 billion indirectly from starvation during a nuclear winter 432 433 Economic ties editThis section needs expansion You can help by adding to it November 2012 See also International sanctions during the Russo Ukrainian War The U S Congress repealed the Jackson Vanik amendment on November 16 2012 434 Last year 2015 was not particularly favorable for trade between Russia and the U S Our overall 2015 turnover was 21 billion a decline of 27 9 percent said a senior Russian official in April 2016 435 Reuters reported that U S companies generated more than 90 billion in revenue from Russia in 2017 436 According to the AALEP there are almost 3 000 American companies in Russia and the U S is also the leader in terms of foreign companies in Special Economic Zones with 11 projects 437 The U S goods and services trade deficit with Russia was 11 2 billion in 2022 438 The following chart shows dollar figures from the US Census Bureau s Trade in Goods with Russia page 500 000 000 1 000 000 000 1 500 000 000 2 000 000 000 2 500 000 000 3 000 000 000 20 01 20 02 20 03 20 04 20 05 20 06 20 07 20 08 20 09 20 10 20 11 20 12 21 01 21 02 21 03 21 04 21 05 21 06 21 07 21 08 21 09 21 10 21 11 21 12 22 01 22 02 22 03 22 04 22 05 22 06 22 07 22 08 22 09 22 10 22 11 22 12 23 01 23 02 23 03 23 04 23 05 23 06 23 07 23 08 23 09 Imports from Russia to the US Exports from the US to Russia Imports from Russia to the US edit One major import is enriched uranium As of 2023 24 of enriched uranium in the US is imported from Russia 439 Another major import is gasoline of which Russia the top provider in 2021 440 During the period 2003 2023 inclusive the low point was December 2003 441 Exports from the US to Russia edit In 2023 the Congressional Research Service reported that the US was the third largest source of goods imports to Russia in 2021 442 In March 2022 following the Russian invasion of Ukraine exports from the US to Russia fell dramatically 443 Military ties edit nbsp Russian and U S sailors honoring military personnel who perished during World War II Vladivostok Russia July 4 2002 nbsp An element of the 18th Infantry Regiment representing the United States at the 2010 Victory Day military parade in Moscow Following the demise of the Soviet Union the United States and Russia signed a bilateral treaty called the Strategic Arms Reduction Treaty START II signed by George H W Bush and Boris Yeltsin The United States and Russia have conducted joint military maneuvers training and counter terrorist exercises in Germany This was done in hopes to strengthen relations with the United States and Russia 444 The Russian president has also proposed that the United States and Russia put a joint missile defense system in Azerbaijan a proposal being considered by the United States 445 In 2008 in response to tensions over Georgia the United States had cancelled its most recent joint NATO Russia military exercises citation needed As of August 2013 the U S and Russia continue to hold joint military exercises like Northern Eagle held since 2004 together with Norway 446 and Vigilant Watchful Eagle with Canada citation needed among others with the aim of improving joint cooperation against terrorism and piracy NATO Russia relations edit Main article NATO Russia relations Russia U S relations are significantly influenced by the United States leading role in NATO and policies thereof NATO and Russia agreed to cooperate on security issues at the 2002 Rome summit and had been gradually improving relations However due to the expansion of the alliance the Russian intervention in Georgia Russia s war campaign against Ukraine and other controversies relations have since deteriorated significantly 447 In May 2015 following increased tensions with NATO Russia closed a key military transport corridor the Northern Distribution Network which had allowed NATO to deliver military supplies to Afghanistan through the Russian territory 448 The Northern Distribution Network was established in 2010 in response to the increased risk of sending supplies through Pakistan 449 A June 2016 Levada poll found that 69 of Russians think that deploying NATO troops in the Baltic states and Poland former Eastern bloc countries bordering Russia is a threat to Russia 450 Joint operations and mutual support edit Russia has expressed support for the United States War on Terror Russia has also agreed to provide logistic support for the United States forces in Afghanistan to aid in anti terrorist operations Russia has allowed U S and NATO forces to pass through its territory to go to Afghanistan 448 In 2017 the former Deputy Secretary of State Antony Blinken said We cooperated with regard to Afghanistan where Russia played a positive role particularly in letting our forces and our equipment transit into and out of Afghanistan 451 See also edit nbsp Russia portal nbsp United States portal nbsp Politics portalRussian Americans Foreign relations of Russia Foreign relations of the United States Embassy of Russia Washington D C Embassy of the United States Moscow Ambassadors of Russia to the United States including Imperial and Soviet times Ambassadors of the United States to Russia Including Imperial and Soviet times Russian Empire United States relations Soviet Union United States relations NATO Russia relations Russia Ukraine relations Ukraine Commonwealth of Independent States relations Ukraine NATO relations Ukraine United States relations New Cold WarNotes editReferences edit U S Russian Relations Center for Strategic and International Studies Retrieved August 16 2021 Russia adds Japan to unfriendly countries regions list in sanctions countermeasure The Mainichi March 8 2022 retrieved September 23 2023 Yeltsin Russia will not use force against Nato The Guardian March 25 1999 Yeltsin Warns of European War Over Kosovo Reuters April 9 1999 Yeltsin warns of possible world war over Kosovo CNN April 9 1999 Retrieved April 23 2007 Russia Condemns NATO s Airstrikes Associated Press June 8 1999 Russia says United States is directly involved in Ukraine war Reuters August 2 2022 Retrieved October 1 2022 With Over 300 Sanctions U S Targets Russia s Circumvention and Evasion Military Industrial Supply Chains and Future Energy Revenues U S Department of the Treasury June 9 2023 Retrieved June 22 2023 Hans Rogger The influence of the American Revolution in Russia in Jack P Greene and J R Pole eds A Companion to the American Revolution 2000 554 555 Rossiya ustanovila diplomaticheskie otnosheniya s SShA Norman E Saul Richard D McKinzie Russian American Dialogue on Cultural Relations 1776 1914 p 95 ISBN 0 8262 1097 X 9780826210975 James R Gibson Why the Russians Sold Alaska Wilson Quarterly 3 3 1979 179 188 online Thomas A Bailey Why the United States Purchased Alaska Pacific Historical Review 3 1 1934 39 49 online Ronald Jensen The Alaska Purchase and Russian American Relations 1975 Philip Ernest Schoenberg The American Reaction to the Kishinev Pogrom of 1903 American Jewish Historical Quarterly 63 3 1974 262 283 See Treaty of Portsmouth John W Long American Intervention in Russia The North Russian Expedition 1918 19 Diplomatic History 6 1 1982 45 68 online John Powell 2009 Encyclopedia of North American Immigration Infobase pp 257 59 ISBN 978 1 4381 1012 7 Russkie trudovye emigranty v SShA konec XIX veka 1917 god MacMillan Margaret 1943 2003 Paris 1919 six months that changed the world Holbrooke Richard First U S ed New York Random House pp 63 82 ISBN 0 375 50826 0 OCLC 49260285 a href Template Cite book html title Template Cite book cite book a CS1 maint multiple names authors list link CS1 maint numeric names authors list link Donald E Davis and Eugene P Trani 2009 Distorted Mirrors Americans and Their Relations with Russia and China in the Twentieth Century University of Missouri Press p 48 ISBN 978 0 8262 7189 1 Priznanie Ameriki Radio Liberty April 30 2018 Nov 16 1933 U S Establishes Diplomatic Relations With the Soviet Union The New York Times November 16 2011 North Atlantic Treaty Organization NATO 1949 U S Department of State Luman H Long 1968 Centennial Edition The World Almanac and Book of Facts Newspaper Enterprise Association Inc N Y N Y p 532 Konsulskaya konvenciya mezhdu Pravitelstvom Soyuza Sovetskih Socialisticheskih Respublik i Pravitelstvom Soedinennyh Shtatov Ameriki Milestones 1969 76 Office of the Historian history state gov Retrieved February 9 2018 Malta summit ends Cold War BBC News December 3 1989 Retrieved June 11 2008 Greene p 204 Naftali George H W Bush 2007 pp 137 138 Greene pp 205 206 Letter to the Secretary General of the United Nations from the President of the Russian Federation Jussi Hanhimaki Georges Henri Soutou Basil Germond 2010 The Routledge Handbook of Transatlantic Security Routledge p 501 ISBN 978 1 136 93607 4 Ruud van Dijk et al 2013 Encyclopedia of the Cold War Routledge pp 860 51 ISBN 978 1 135 92311 2 Strobe Talbott The Russia Hand 2002 p 9 Strobe Talbott The Russia hand A memoir of presidential diplomacy 2007 pp 189 213 Svetlana Savranskaya Yeltsin and Clinton Diplomatic History 2018 42 4 pp 564 567 a b Lampton David M 2024 Living U S China Relations From Cold War to Cold War Lanham MD Rowman amp Littlefield p 253 ISBN 978 1 5381 8725 8 Ronald D Asmus Opening NATO s Door How the Alliance Remade Itself for a New Era 2002 Talbott The Russia Hand pp 218 250 Russia condemns Nato at UN BBC News March 25 1999 Fighting for a foreign land BBC News May 20 1999 Talbott The Russia Hand pp 298 349 Michael Laris December 10 1999 In China Yeltsin Lashes Out at Clinton Criticisms of Chechen War Are Met With Blunt Reminder of Russian Nuclear Power The Washington Post p A35 Ian Bremmer and Alexander Zaslavsky Bush and Putin s tentative embrace World Policy Journal 18 4 2001 11 17 online Angela E Stent The Limits of Partnership US Russian Relations in the Twenty First Century 2014 pp 62 81 Stent The Limits of Partnership 2014 pp 82 134 Mazzetti Mark Eric Lichtblau December 11 2016 C I A Judgment on Russia Built on Swell of Evidence The New York Times Retrieved December 14 2016 Russia warns of resorting to force over Kosovo France 24 February 22 2008 In quotes Kosovo reaction BBC News Online 17 February 2008 Putin calls Kosovo independence terrible precedent The Sydney Morning Herald February 23 2008 Address by President of the Russian Federation March 18 2014 Why the Kosovo precedent does not justify Russia s annexation of Crimea Washington Post Ukraine NATO s original sin Politico November 23 2021 Bush Putin row grows as pact pushes east The Guardian April 2 2008 Bush stirs controversy over NATO membership CNN April 1 2008 Gottemoeller Rose June 5 2007 Strained Russian Relations Greet Bush in Europe NPR Interview Interviewed by Robert Siegel Retrieved July 26 2016 Halpin Tony October 17 2007 Vladimir Putin pledges to complete Iranian nuclear reactor The Times Archived from the original on July 6 2008 Retrieved April 2 2010 White House Transcript of 17 October 2007 Press Conference whitehouse gov October 17 2007 via National Archives Putin compares US shield to Cuba BBC News October 26 2007 Retrieved April 2 2010 Russia warns over US Czech shield BBC News July 8 2008 Retrieved April 2 2010 No permanent foreign inspectors in US Czech radar talks minister spacedaily com May 11 2008 Retrieved August 8 2008 Andrusz Katya August 15 2008 Poland Gets U S 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News December 21 2019 Germany EU decry US Nord Stream sanctions Deutsche Welle December 21 2019 Ukraine and Russia look to strike new gas deal amid US sanctions threa CNBC December 16 2019 Outrage mounts over report Russia offered bounties to Afghanistan militants for killing US soldiers The Guardian June 27 2020 Retrieved June 27 2020 Why we need a little skepticism and more evidence on Russian bounties The Hill July 7 2020 a b c Nakashima Ellen DeYoung Karen Ryan Missy Hudson John June 28 2020 Russian bounties to Taliban linked militants resulted in deaths of U S troops according to intelligence assessments The Washington Post a b c Top Pentagon officials say Russian bounty program not corroborated ABC News July 10 2020 span, wikipedia, wiki, book, books, library,

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