President Trump says he will 'most likely' meet with Vladimir Putin next month while he is on a previously-planned trip abroad.

Topics of discussion will include the Ukraine and Syria, he said, and potentially Russian election meddling.

'It would look like we will probably be meeting sometime in the not-too-distant future,' Trump on Wednesday said. 'We'll probably be meeting sometime around my trip to Europe.'

Trump is due to visit Belgium, England and Scotland in mid-July. His meeting with Putin is expected to take place immediately after Finland or Austria.

The Kremlin said earlier in the day that Presidents Putin and Trump would sit down for talks at a date and place will be announced on Thursday by Moscow and Washington.

An aide to the Kremlin, Yuri Ushakov, was the first to say that the rumored meeting would in fact take place, calling it 'this summer's most important international event.'

U.S. National Security Adviser John Bolton declined to offer additional information, saying at a media avail in Moscow that he will wait for tomorrow's joint declaration.

President Trump says he will 'most likely' meet with Vladimir Putin next month while he is on a previously-planned trip abroad

The Kremlin is says that President Trump and President Putin will sit down for talks and a date and place will be announced by Moscow and Washington on Thursday. The announcement came as U.S. National Security Adviser John Bolton was in Moscow meeting with Vladimir Putin

Russian President Vladimir Putin (3-R) and US National security advisor John Bolton (3-L) during their meeting in the Kremlin in Moscow, Russia, along with U.S. ambassador to Russia Jon Huntsman

Austria had been at the top of the list, although Helsinki was the more likely choice, according to Politico.

Trump said Wednesday afternoon that it had not been determined yet, but he was likely to know where in the next hour.

A reporter directly asked if Vienna was the destination, to which Trump said that 'could be' the case. To Helsinki he said, 'It'll be announced very soon.'

All that Ushakov, a foreign affairs adviser to Putin, would reveal Wednesday is that the destination would be one that's foreign.

He told reporters it will be 'very convenient for both us and the U.S. side' without disclosing the time or location.

The Kremlin's disclosure that a summit would take place came as Bolton was in Moscow meeting with Russian President Vladimir Putin. The White House had confirmed earlier on Wednesday that they were discussing a possible summit.

A spokesperson for the National Security Council declined to comment on the Kremlin aide's claims that a deal had already been brokered, as did senior Trump aide Larry Kudlow.

'We'll wait for ambassador Bolton to come home and report and see where all that leads,' Kudlow told DailyMail.com. 'I can't make any predictions.'

Pompeo said a conversation with Russia is one 'worth having' so that the two countries can put the relationship back on track

Bolton at his media avail also refused to get into exact details of the summit.

Asked what it would accomplish, he set the bar low, saying, 'I think the fact of the summit itself is deliverable.'

The senior White House official said that the president's critics have tried to make hay of the meeting with Putin to score political points. Bolton said that 'despite the noise' the president believes it would be better to directly communicate with Putin.

Trump likewise said in the Oval Office: 'I've said it from day one: Getting along with Russia and with China and with everybody is a very good thing.

'It's good for the world, it's good for us, it's good for everybody. So we'll probably be meeting sometime around my trip to Europe.'

Bolton slapped down charges at his news conference that a meeting with Putin means there's a 'nexus' between Russian election meddling at the U.S. president.

The allegation is 'complete nonsense' he said while admitting that it's not 'helpful' to the two countries' relations.

'But what must guide his conduct is the pursuit of American national interest,' Bolton said, explaining that the summit is something President Trump believes 'that he needs to do and will do regardless of political criticism at home.'

He described his own talks with Putin as 'wide-ranging' in opening remarks.

In response to questions, he acknowledged that the conversation including the U.S. sanctions on Russia that Putin wants Trump to let up for the incursion into Crimea and attempts to disrupt the American presidential election.

Election meddling came up during Bolton's press conference in relation to a statement he made prior to joining the Trump administration deriding Putin.

'As I've said, many times in Washington, and I'm now happy to say for the first time in Moscow, I don't really address what I've written in the past or what I've said on television. It's all out there. Right now I'm an adviser to President Trump,' replied the former U.S. ambassador who flirted in 2015 with a presidential run.

Bolton said: 'It's his agenda that we're pursuing. And that's the agenda that I intend to advance.

'But we did indeed talk about Russian interference in the elections, and I expect it will be a subject of conversation between the two presidents, as well.'

Ushakov said prior to the avail that talks with Bolton were 'constructive and businesslike.' He also acknowledged that a conversation took place about election meddling.

'It was stated clearly by our side that the Russian state hasn't interfered with the U.S. domestic politics, moreover hasn't interfered in the 2016 election,' the Putin aide according to the Associated Press said.

Over the weekend, Secretary of State Mike Pompeo said a meeting between Donald Trump and Vladimir Putin would be helpful to the countries' relations, in spite of a U.S. assessment that Russia is trying to meddle in the mid-term elections.

The top U.S. diplomat told CNN, 'The Russians, unlike the Europeans, don't share our value set.'

However, he said a conversation with Russia is one 'worth having' so that the two nations can try to put their relationship back on track.

'Whether it's the battlefield in Syria, the situation in Ukraine, the Russians' active measures,' Pompeo said. 'I am sure there are many topics that President Trump and President Putin will discuss and each of them is important to trying to put the relationship back in place with a common set of understandings.'

Secretary of State Mike Pompeo says a meeting between Donald Trump and Vladimir Putin next month in Europe would be helpful to the countries' relations, in spite of a U.S. assessment that Russia is trying to meddle in the mid-term elections

Russia's interference in the 2016 election has been a sore spot for the president who has campaign associates who been probed in response to allegations that they were in on it.

Trump has said at times that he believes Russia did do it only to come back and claim that he believes the Kremlin head's claims that the country didn't.

The U.S. intelligence community has repeatedly warned that the November elections are ripe for additional attempts at disruption. Still, Trump has said he believes it would be better for the U.S. and sanctioned-nation to have a dialogue.

'President Obama lost Crimea ... Obama lost Crimea because President Putin didn’t respect President Obama, didn’t respect our country, and didn’t respect Ukraine,' Trump told DailyMail.com and other reporters on the North Lawn of the White House earlier this month.

Trump implied that he believes that he will not have the same problems.

Director of National Intelligence Dan Coats said this month, however, that it's his assessment that Russia is 'attempting to influence the midterm elections in the United States in November as well as divide the transatlantic alliance.'

'These Russian actions are purposeful and premeditated and they represent an all-out assault, by Vladimir Putin, on the rule of law, Western ideals and democratic norms,' he told the Atlantic Council.

National Security Advisor John Bolton (top) laid the groundwork this week in Moscow for a July summit between Russian President Vladimir Putin and U.S. President Donald Trump (bottom)

As CIA director in January, Pompeo also concluded, 'The Russians have been at this a long time, and I fully expect they’ll continue to be at it.'

'We will push back in a way that is sufficiently robust, that the impact they have on our election won’t be great,' he told the BBC.

In an interview published Tuesday, Pompeo, now the secretary of state, told CNN that 'Trump agrees Russia interfering in our election is something they simply cannot do' and he does not believe the president would take 'any umbrage with that.'

But he said, 'To say there is a single issue that has caused there to not to be a warm relationship between the two countries is a misnomer.'

The administration was known to have been considering a meeting between Trump and Putin while the U.S. president is traveling next month in Europe.

But the Kremlin was not ready on Sunday to confirm reports that it would be July 15 that have circulating in Austria.

A White House official would only say at the time that it was possible the meeting would occur after President Trump's two-day trip to Scotland.

Pompeo had indicated in recent interviews, however, that the face-to-face talk would take place, without providing going into additional details.

Trump's top national security adviser, Bolton, also laid the groundwork this week for a possible U.S.-Russia summit. He was making a trip to Moscow this week where he was met with questions afterward about the U.S.-and Russian relations.

The state-run RIA Novosti news agency cited Russian Deputy Foreign Minister Mikhail Bogdanov on Monday saying the war-torn nation will be on his agenda.

Trump and Putin last met face-to-face during the November 2017 Asia-Pacific Economic Cooperation summit in Da Nang, Vietname



Bolton spokesman Garrett Marquis first mentioned the likelihood of a Russia journey last week in a tweet, saying he would 'travel to Moscow' after stops in London and Rome 'to discuss a potential meeting between Presidents Trump and Putin.'

At the time, Putin spokesman Dmitry Peskov deflected questions about whether the two leaders would meet when Trump travels to Europe the week after next for a NATO summit.

'We have nothing to say yet, and if and when we are ready we will make the relevant statement,' Peskov said then.

Washington-Moscow ties have been strained by the special counsel Russia probe into election meddling and alleged Trump campaign collusion. Trump added stress when he pulled out of the Obama-era Iran nuclear deal.

The U.S. has also been streadfast in its condemnation of the Kremlin for a poisoning attack of a former Russian spy in the United Kingdom.

Bolton, a former U.S. ambassador to the United Nations, is President Trump's third national security adviser

The last Trump-Putin meeting was a brief encounter in November 2017 during an APEC leaders summit in Vietnam.

But Pompeo said in an interview broadcast Saturday that he expects Bolton's visit to bear fruit in the form of a bilateral summit.

'I think it’s likely President Trump will be meeting with his counterpart in the not-too-distant future following that meeting, Pompeo said in an interview with conservative talk radio host Hugh Hewitt.

Pompeo said the U.S. was 'trying to find places where we have overlapping interests' with Russia, 'but protecting American interest where we do not.'

Just prior to the interview, Russian Foreign Minister Sergey Lavrov emphasized that Moscow was 'ready for contacts' with Washington, and also said any agreement 'on a high-level meeting' would be announced in advance of it.

National Security Advisor John Bolton is pictured listening to Trump as he spoke to reporters on June 9, 2018, during the G7 Summit in La Malbaie, Quebec, Canada

Trump has claimed that 'nobody has been tougher on Russia,' and he may have a chance to demonstrate next month that he's willing to push back against the nation's autocrat

Trump and Putin hold a closely watched bilateral meeting on the sidelines of the G20 summit in Hamburg, Germany, on July 7, 2017

Trump and Putin discussed a face-to-face meeting in March, when Trump called the Russian leader to congratulate him on his re-election. Both the White House and Kremlin revealed that Trump had invited Putin to visit the White House.

That raised eyebrows among Democrats who have long suggested a cozy relationship between the two men led to Trump's election victory in 2016.

Trump said June 15 during an unannounced gaggle with reporters outside the White House that 'it's possible' he could sit down for a Putin summit in July, and 'it's much better if we get along with them than if we don't.'

He was responding to questions about his assertion that Putin's government should be re-admitted to the G-7 group of nations, which was known as the G-8 before Russia sent troops into Crimea in 2014 and seized the Black Sea peninsula from neighboring Ukraine.

Trump blamed his predecessor, Barack Obama, for that turn of events.

'Putin didn't respect President Obama,' he said. 'President Obama lost Crimea, just so you understand. This was long before I got there.'

Austria has offered to host a Trump-Putin summit, which a White House official said Monday could happen after the president's July trip is over.

In addition to the two-day NATO summit in Brussels, he is scheduled to spend a day in London and two more in Scotland, where his real estate management company owns two storied golf courses.

That would make July 16 the likely date for the Russian summit.