The Kremlin's welcoming Washington's latest policy pivot. Trump's administration just rolled out a revised National Security Strategy, and here's the kicker—they've dropped the "direct threat" tag that Biden's team pinned on Moscow. Instead? Talks of potential cooperation on arms control are back on the table.
This marks a notable shift in tone from the previous administration's hardline stance. Russia's officials are clearly pleased with the recalibration, viewing it as a step toward de-escalation. Whether this translates into actual diplomatic progress remains to be seen, but the rhetorical change alone signals a different approach to US-Russia dynamics under the current White House.
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HappyMinerUncle
· 12-07 09:48
Oh boy, changing direction again. Trump really loves to play this game.
Another flip-flop, at least US-Russia relations are not so tense now.
Just word games, real action is still a long way off.
With this move, Moscow must be secretly pleased.
Nice on paper, but actual implementation is what matters.
The shift was pretty fast, Biden's tough stance is just an empty piece of paper.
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MEVHunter_9000
· 12-07 09:48
Uh... are they playing word games again? Does just removing a label count as easing tensions? I think we need to watch for real actions with actual money.
Is Trump trying to restart something with this move, or is he just trying to fool public opinion?
Changing the wording but not reducing any actual sanctions—doesn't that seem pretty empty?
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OnchainFortuneTeller
· 12-07 09:43
Uh, so now it's starting to "ease up"? Just change the wording and pretend nothing happened.
They turn on you faster than flipping a page; if you trust them again, you deserve it.
Here comes the old "cooperation" act again...
Better to be pragmatic—look at the results, not the talk.
History keeps repeating itself, only the actors change.
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MEVictim
· 12-07 09:27
Do they really think changing a few words on paper can resolve the conflict? I doubt it—this play has been performed too many times throughout history.
The Kremlin's welcoming Washington's latest policy pivot. Trump's administration just rolled out a revised National Security Strategy, and here's the kicker—they've dropped the "direct threat" tag that Biden's team pinned on Moscow. Instead? Talks of potential cooperation on arms control are back on the table.
This marks a notable shift in tone from the previous administration's hardline stance. Russia's officials are clearly pleased with the recalibration, viewing it as a step toward de-escalation. Whether this translates into actual diplomatic progress remains to be seen, but the rhetorical change alone signals a different approach to US-Russia dynamics under the current White House.