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US national security adviser John Bolton on Thursday. Photo: AP

Donald Trump’s national security adviser John Bolton presses Russia about US election meddling

‘I made it clear that we wouldn’t tolerate meddling in 2018, and we were prepared to take necessary steps to prevent it from happening,’ John Bolton says

US President Donald Trump’s national security adviser said on Thursday that he pressed top Russian officials about meddling in the US election process, promising that Russians will face no new US sanctions if they stop such interference.

John Bolton spoke in an interview at the US mission in Geneva between morning and afternoon meetings with his Russian counterpart, Nikolai Patrushev, a follow-up meeting to the summit between Trump and Russian President Vladimir Putin in Helsinki last month.

It marked the first top-level meeting in what could be a series of talks between the two presidents’ national security teams, a result of what Bolton called the only “concrete” result from the summit in the Finnish capital.

Such meetings were aimed toward “opening up channels” and “break through some of the difficulties we’ve had,” he said.

US national security adviser John Bolton, at right, shakes hands with his Russian counterpart Nikolai Patrushev during a meeting on Thursday. Photo: US Mission in Geneva via AFP

Bolton wasted little time in mentioning he had brought up the election meddling.

“I raised that this morning,” he said, suggesting that the Russians reacted with stone faces: “They didn’t respond at all.”

“I’m going to make sure that they understand how strongly we feel about this,” he said, adding that he would “tell them how firm the position of the US is that there is no election meddling”.

Bolton told reporters later: “I made it clear that we wouldn’t tolerate meddling in 2018, and we were prepared to take necessary steps to prevent it from happening.”

Asked if there would be consequences for Russians who might do so, Bolton demurred, saying the “focus” was “to make sure that’s no repetition of 2016”. He said bilateral issues were on tap for his afternoon session.

But he appeared to offer a bit of an olive branch.

“There won’t be any new sanctions if there’s no further interference,” he said, before specifying that “how we resolve the interference in the past remains to be seen”.

Members of Russian and Syrian forces stand guard near posters of Syrian President Bashar al-Assad and his Russian counterpart Vladimir Putin at the Abu Duhur crossing on the eastern edge of Idlib province, Syria on August 20. Photo: AFP

Bolton cautioned that “people who are accused of having violated the sanctions could be indicted”, alluding to a possible follow-up of the US indictments of 12 Russian officials as part of an investigation by US special counsel Robert Mueller.

More broadly, Bolton said he and Patrushev had discussed nuclear non-proliferation, Iran, North Korea, arms control, and Middle East issues including Syria and Afghanistan.

He said he had expressed the US “priority of getting all Iranian forces out of Syria”, and reiterated that Putin had told Bolton in a recent meeting that the Russians too “would like to see the Iranians go home as well, we [the Russians] are just not sure we alone can accomplish it”.

Bolton said he and Patrushev had discussed “a number of ideas” about how to do that, without specifying.

“We’re not going to solve Syria here,” he said.

Iran and Russia are two leading backers of Syrian President Bashar al-Assad. Bolton is a fervent critic of Iran’s leadership, saying it supports terrorism, and has defended the US withdrawal from the Iran nuclear deal involving Russia, China, Germany, France and Britain.

Bolton told reporters the US was considering a number of possibilities for the future of the New Strategic Arms Reduction Treaty with Russia, including whether it should be extended or renegotiated. He said the US was “very, very early in the process” of considering the future of the new START or the Intermediate-range Nuclear Forces Treaty with Russia.

Watch: US Secretary of State Mike Pompeo faces tough questions on Russia and North Korea

Bolton insisted that recent US political turmoil over guilty pleas and verdicts against by former Trump campaign chairman Paul Manafort and Trump’s former personal lawyer, Michael Cohen – “doesn’t have any effect” on his job.

He said there was “no weakening of my position, no weakening of the United States, and no weakening of the Trump administration” as a result of the developments that have arguably caused the greatest political crisis of Trump’s 19-month presidency.

Asked about whether the issue had been addressed Thursday, he said the Russian officials “haven’t brought it up” in Thursday morning – and suggested they should not at the later session either.

Bolton, a frequent critic of the United Nations who served as US ambassador to the UN under George W. Bush’s administration, also offered tough new language about the UN-backed Human Rights Council based in Geneva.

The Trump administration pulled out of the 47-member body in June, accusing it of anti-Israel bias and of allowing countries with poor human rights records to be among its members.

In a new development, he also said the United States will cut funding for the UN human rights office, where former Chilean President Michelle Bachelet is set to become the new High Commissioner for Human Rights next month.

“We are going to de-fund the Human Rights Council,” Bolton said, while warning that other UN agencies could also be up for cuts in US funding.

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