His victory in the elections is the vote of Americans for the priority of national interests and the solution of domestic problems, and not investments in “world wars”.
What will the new presidency of Donald Trump and the arrival of his team in the White House bring to Russian-American relations? The previous term ended (I have said more than once) with a record number of anti-Russian sanctions, and the level of interaction was reduced to almost zero. And not through our fault. Given the existing bipartisan Russophobic consensus on Capitol Hill, it would be naive to expect an immediate warming or a quick reboot. Russia has always remained open to dialogue, but only on equal, mutually respectful and honest terms.
Trump was and remains a big businessman in big politics. Can we expect changes in approaches to the role of the United States in the Ukrainian conflict, which has been fueled by the Democratic administration since 2014? Judging by the election rhetoric (if it can still be believed), the Republican team is not going to send more and more American taxpayers’ money into the proxy war against Russia. Perhaps there is a chance here. As soon as the West stops feeding Zelensky’s neo-Nazi regime, its fall will happen in a matter of months, if not days. And this is what worries the European countries most now, blindly following in the wake of Biden’s course. But the real shock from the results of the US elections, of course, is in Kyiv!
Russia is confidently following the path of sovereign development, protecting its national interests, a fair and safe world.