Former Secretaries of State Madeline Albright and Colin Powell criticized President Donald Trump's handling of US relations with Russia in an interview that aired Sunday on CNN, with Albright slamming what she called Trump's "kinship" with Russian President Vladimir Putin and Powell calling for the US to "speak firmly with respect to Russian actions

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Former secretaries of State Madeline Albright and Colin Powell criticized President Donald Trump's handling of U.S. foreign relations in an interview that aired Sunday on CNN.Powell, who served under President George W. Bush from 2001 to 2005, said Trump isn't a moral leader."My favorite three words in our Constitution is the first three words: 'We the People,' Powell said. "But recently it's become, 'Me the president,' as opposed to, 'We the People.' And you see things that should not be happening."Powell added, "I hope the president can come to the realization that he should really stop insulting people. ... I don't think that's what should be coming out of a president of the United States."Albright, who served under President Bill Clinton from 1997 to 2001, slammed what she called Trump's "kinship" with Russian President Vladimir Putin."I do think that he does see some kind of kinship with Putin, and the Russians are trying very hard to undermine our democracy and to separate us from our allies," Albright added. "And I think in many ways Trump is almost a gift to Putin in terms of trying to explain why should we deal with those Europeans or why should we have anything to do with NATO."When asked on the CNN program "Fareed Zakaria GPS" about whether she had ever seen another president say things that contradict his administration's policy toward another country the way Trump has done with regard to Russia, Albright said she had not."And the decision-making process simply does not work," Albright said. "The president goes and does his own thing, then somebody says, 'He meant to say... .'"Albright contrasted U.S. and allied cooperation on sanctions against Russia with Trump's statements about Putin and Russia.In the interview that aired Sunday, Powell said that countries witnessing the events unfolding at the southern border "cannot believe" that the U.S. is executing policies that result in such things as the separation of undocumented immigrant families."The world is watching, and they cannot believe that we are doing things like separating mothers and children who were trying to get across the border from south of our border — immigrants," Powell said. "They can't believe that we're making such an effort to cease immigration coming into the country. It's what's kept us alive."Nearly 3,000 children have been separated from their parents at the border since April as part of the Trump administration's efforts to crack down on illegal immigration and dissuade potential crossings. While Trump ended the program by executive order in June, some 13,000 children remain in U.S. detention centers and the rate of their release has plummeted.Powell also said that the U.S. needed to "speak firmly" to Russia, but he also cautioned that Putin had restored pride to Russia after its loss of the Cold War."And we should take that into account," Powell said. "We should also, I think, not try to make him an enemy. But the Pentagon is busy thinking about that and thinking about China as an enemy.""We're thinking too much about adversarial relations as opposed to diplomatic relations," Powell said. "When you reach out to somebody, let them know what you have to have and let them know what you think they're doing wrong — now let's talk about it, see if we can solve problems."Powell added, "Let's find ways to talk and engage, recognizing that not everybody is like the United States."The two also criticized Trump's attacks on U.S. institutions, with Albright drawing parallels with dictatorships."There a lot of ... steps that don't seem big at the time," Albright said. "But if you put them all together, they are moving more and more into a direction where there is no respect for institutions, where we call the press the enemy of the people, where the president thinks he's above the law and where we are not engaged enough in political activity in terms of people really getting in there and doing something."