President Bush expressed concern Wednesday about the Kremlin's crackdowns on internal dissent but declared ``I haven't given up on Russia'' and said he would not boycott a summit in St. Petersburg. Bush made clear he has differences with President Vladimir Putin on his increasingly authoritarian stand on issues such as political, religious and press freedoms and the emergence of democracies on Russia's borders. But he said he feared that scolding Putin might cause the Russian to turn a deaf ear to criticism.
``I need to be in a position where I can sit down with him and be very frank about our concerns,'' Bush said,
saying he would ignore calls to boycott the Group of Eight summit of industrial nations, being held for the first time in Russia in Putin's home city in July. There is pressure on the administration to toughen its approach toward Russia. Sen.
John McCain, R-Ariz., a likely candidate for the Republican presidential nomination, has urged Bush not to attend the summit. A bipartisan task force led by former Sen. John Edwards, D-N.C., and former housing secretary Jack Kemp, a Republican, concluded that democracy was in retreat in Russia. ``U.S.-Russian relations are clearly headed in the wrong direction,'' the task force wrote. ``Contention is crowding out consensus. The very idea of 'strategic partnership' no longer seems realistic.'' Bush outlined his concerns during a question-and-answer session after a speech to Freedom House, a more than 60-year-old independent organization that supports the expansion of freedom in the world. ``I haven't given up on Russia,'' Bush said. ``I still think Russia understands that it's in her interests to be West, to work with the West and to act in concert with the West.''
Bush has been a fan of Putin's since 2001 when they first met and Bush declared that he had gotten a sense of Putin's soul. The bond was strengthened after the Sept. 11, 2001, terrorist attacks when Putin allowed U.S. forces into Central Asia.
``I remember meeting with human rights groups in Russia,'' Bush said. ``And I asked them what strategy should I take as the president of the United States. Should I be in a position where I can engage the president in frank discussion? Or should I, you know, publicly scold him? In which case he may turn a deaf ear. ``And the universal consensus for them kind of played to my own instincts, which is that it is important for the United States to be in a position to be able to express our concerns,'' Bush said.
The president said he has spent a lot of time with Putin ``making it clear that he should not fear democracy on his border, nor should he fear democracy within his borders. I like to make the case to him that democracies don't war with each other.''http://www.guardian.co.uk/worldlatest/story/0,,-5720283,00.html