RA’s Daily Russia News Blast – Jan 20, 2017
TODAY: Inauguration day is here and U.S. intelligence agencies are investigating business dealings between Moscow and Trump officials; likelihood of immediate improvement to U.S.-Russia relations dwindling; Facebook suspends RT coverage over copyright infringement; Moscow alleges bias against its form of reporting; Kremlin will not make payout to former Yukos shareholders, flouting landmark ECHR decision; Amnesty decries new plans to decriminalise domestic assault.
On the eve of Donald Trump’s inauguration, the New York Times reports that American intelligence agencies have intercepted communications in an investigation into possible political and financial links between Russia and associates of Donald Trump. Former campaign manager Paul Manafort, who previously worked for oligarchs like Rinat Akhmetov, Dmitry Firtash and Oleg Deripaska is a target, as are other Moscow-friendly Trump associates Carter Page and Roger Stone. The agencies have apparently chosen to speak out now, as once Trump is inaugurated, he will have the power to stop some of the investigative work they are undertaking. For the Kremlin, the Trump presidency is apparently seeming less and less sweet, as the controversy about hacking is pushing some top Republicans to take a harsher stance on Moscow, and the matter of sanctions. Bloomberg considers the investment perspective and notes it unlikely that sanctions would be lifted immediately. Things always starts out well when a new President arrives, says the Moscow Times, but ‘much as the bread always lands butter-side-down, Russia welcomes every new president warmly, and U.S.-Russian relations tend to start promisingly – only to end poorly and then to begin anew’. Indeed the head of Russia’s State Duma Committee on Foreign Affairs, Leonid Slutsky, has refuted the possibility of a ‘quick fix’ and urged caution in moves to improve relations. None of this has deterred a group of gunsmiths in Zlatoust from making a commemorative two-pound coin reading ‘In Trump We trust’.