Donald Trump meets with Russian President Vladimir Putin at the G-20 Summit in Germany last year. Credit:AP Although the Trump administration has taken a tougher stance toward Russia recently - including new sanctions last week on some entities for election meddling and cyber attacks - the President has declined to forcefully join London in denouncing Moscow for the poisoning of Sergie Skripal and his daughter Yulia in Salisbury this month. They remain critically ill. Trump told reporters that he had offered his well wishes on Putin's new six-year term during a conversation on a range of topics, including arms control and the security situations in Syria and North Korea. White House Press Secretary Sarah Huckabee Sanders told reporters that Skripal's case was not discussed. Information on Syria and North Korea were also provided to the President in writing before the call, officials said. "We'll probably be meeting in the not-too-distant future," Trump said of Putin, though Sanders emphasised that nothing was planned. A gift shop displays souvenir matryoshka dolls decorated with the faces of Vladimir Putin, Donald Trump and Queen Elizabeth. Credit:Bloomberg

The White House press office declined to comment on the briefing materials given to Trump. Two people familiar with the notecards acknowledged that they included instructions not to congratulate Putin. But a senior White House official emphasised that national security adviser HR McMaster did not mention the issue during a telephone briefing with the President, who was in the White House residence ahead of and during his conversation with Putin. It was not clear whether Trump read the notes, administration officials said. Trump, who initiated the call, opened it with the congratulations for Putin, one person familiar with the conversation said. The President's tone drew a rebuke from Republican Senator John McCain, chairman of the Armed Services Committee, who wrote on Twitter: "An American president does not lead the Free World by congratulating dictators on winning sham elections. And by doing so with Vladimir Putin, President Trump insulted every Russian citizen who was denied the right to vote in a free and fair election." But fellow Republican Senator Bob Corker, chairman of the Senate Foreign Relations Committee, appeared less concerned, noting Trump has also offered congratulations to other leaders of more totalitarian states. "I wouldn't read much into it," Corker said. Putin's latest consolidation of power came in what foreign policy analysts said was a rigged election in which he got 76 per cent of the vote against several minor candidates. Some world leaders have hesitated to congratulate Putin, since his reelection occurred in an environment of state control of much of the news media and with his most prominent opponent barred from the ballot.

Ahead of Tuesday's phone call, national security aides provided Trump with several handwritten notecards filled with talking points to guide his conversation, as is customary for calls with foreign leaders, according to the officials with knowledge of the call, who spoke on the condition of anonymity to discuss private conversations. The notecards are similar to the one Trump was photographed clutching during a White House meeting with students and parents after the mass shooting at Marjory Stoneman Douglas High School in Parkland, Florida, officials said. Trump's failure to raise Moscow's alleged poisoning of the former Russian spy in Britain risked angering officials in London, who are trying to rally Britain's closest allies to condemn the attack. Russia has denied involvement in the March 4 poisoning, but the attack has badly damaged British-Russian relations and British Prime Minister Theresa May last week announced the expulsion of 23 Russian diplomats in retaliation. Russia has matched that action with the expulsion of 23 British diplomats. Putin denied that Russia had any role and called the claim "nonsense". Asked about McCain's criticism, Sanders noted that the leaders of France and Germany also called Putin this week and pointed to former president Barack Obama, who congratulated Putin on an election victory in 2012.

"We've been very clear in the actions that we've taken that we're going to be tough on Russia, particularly when it comes to areas that we feel where they've stepped out of place," Sanders said. "We've placed tough sanctions on Russia and a number of other things where we have shown exactly what our position is." She emphasised, however, that Trump was determined to establish a working relationship with Putin to tackle global challenges, including confronting North Korea's nuclear weapons program. Asked whether the Trump administration believed Russia conducted a "free and fair" election, Sanders said the administration was focused on US elections. "We don't get to dictate how other countries operate," she said. "What we do know is that Putin has been elected in their country, and that's not something that we can dictate to them how they operate." Senate Majority Leader Mitch McConnell, also distanced himself from Trump's congratulatory remarks.

"The President can call whomever he chooses," McConnell said at his weekly news conference on Tuesday. "When I look at a Russian election, what I see is a lack of credibility in tallying the results. I'm always reminded of the election they used to have in almost every communist country where whoever the dictator was at the moment always got huge percentage of the vote." Trump has largely refrained from criticising Putin amid the ongoing investigation into the 2016 election meddling by Special Counsel Robert Mueller, who in February indicted 13 Russian nationals on conspiracy charges. His tone has at times been at odds with his administration, which has taken stronger actions to counter Russian aggression, including his own authorisation of new sanctions against Russia and additional support Ukrainian troops in their fight against Russian-backed forces in Crimea. "It's blatantly obvious that he has just an inexplicable level of support for President Putin," said Julie Smith, a European security expert who served as deputy national security adviser for former vice president Joe Biden. "You keep thinking it will change as he sees his own administration take action - that this never-ending well of support for Putin will some how subside. It's disheartening at a time when our trans-Atlantic partners really need a boost. Europe is looking to us for leadership on Russia in particular and they're not getting it." Thomas Wright, director of the Centre on the United States and Europe at the Brookings Institution, said Trump's actions were "a sign he wants a pro-Russia foreign policy," which conflicts with the harder line from his administration. "Everyone is trying to figure out what does this mean," Wright said. "Russia hawks say, pay attention to us, but not to the President or to the tweets. But the reality is, his reaction is policy. The fact that there hasn't been a stronger sanctions response to the poisoning so far is policy."

Trump's applause of Putin's victory was in line with other congratulatory calls he has made, including to Turkish President Recep Tayyip Erdogan for winning a much-disputed referendum that increased his already autocratic powers and to China's President Xi Jinping for his "extraordinary elevation" after Xi last month engineered the Communist Party's elimination of presidential term limits. "I think it's great. Maybe we'll have to give that a shot some day," Trump said in a closed-door speech to Republican donors at his Mar-a-Lago Club in Florida several weeks ago, a recording of which was obtained by CNN. Washington Post