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President Donald Trump said he believed President Vladimir Putin when he denied accusations that Russia meddled in 2016's US election, despite US intelligence agencies' conclusion of Russian interference.
Trump made the comment after he and Putin met briefly at a summit in Vietnam on Saturday, and agreed on a joint statement supporting a political solution for Syria, now in its seventh year of civil war.
It was the first encounter of the two leaders since July and came during a low in US-Russia relations and at a time when Trump is haunted by an investigation into accusations that Putin influenced the election that brought him to the White House.
Putin reiterated the denials of interference, Trump said.
Trump has called allegations of campaign collusion with Moscow a hoax. A special counsel, Robert Mueller, is conducting a probe that has led to charges against Trump's former campaign manager Paul Manafort and his associate Rick Gates.
On Saturday, James Clapper, the former director of national intelligence, said Trump has been informed of the conclusions showing Russia's meddling.
"President Trump was presented with clear and indisputable evidence that Russia interfered in the election." Clapper told Reuters. Clapper was the national intelligence director when his office in January released the conclusion reached by the CIA, Federal Bureau of Investigation and National Security Agency that Russia had meddled in the 2016 US presidential election told Reuters.
The Republican chairman of the Senate Armed Services Committee, John McCain, took Trump to task over his comments about Putin, using the "America First" phrase that Trump invoked at the APEC summit in laying out his trade priorities.
"There's nothing 'America First' about taking the word of a KGB colonel over that of the American intelligence community," McCain said in a statement. Putin is a former KGB officer and ex-head of Russia's FSB security service.
Adam Schiff, the top Democrat on the US House of Representatives intelligence committee, which is investigating the issue, accused Trump of siding with Putin over US intelligence agencies.
In Danang, Putin told reporters that an alleged link between Manafort and Russia was fabricated by Trump's opponents.
Putin dismissed suggestions that Russia influenced the elections through political advertising. Tech companies, including Facebook, have said some Russian-bought political content spread on their platforms around the time.
"There is no confirmation of our mass media meddling in election campaigns – and there can't be any," Putin said.
Trump, who had emphasised on the 2016 campaign trail that it would be nice if the United States and Russia could work together, made this case again on Saturday. He said it would benefit Washington to have good ties with Moscow so they could work together on issues including Syria's civil war, the conflict in Ukraine and the North Korean nuclear crisis.
In Vietnam, Trump and Putin agreed a joint statement that said there was no military solution to the Syrian conflict, pledged to continue "de-confliction" to ensure the US and Russian militaries do not clash there, and pledged new support for the UN-backed "Geneva process," which has failed to find a political solution to end the conflict.
Russia has militarily supported Syrian President Bashar al-Assad while the United States has at times, backed Syrian rebels against him, though the recent US focus has been on defeating the Islamic State militant group that had seized parts of Syria.
Trump hailed the joint statement.
"We did it very quickly," he told reporters. "We seem to have a very good feeling for each other, a good relationship considering we don't know each other well."
Trump and Putin were seen chatting amicably as they walked to the position where the traditional APEC summit photo was being taken at a viewpoint looking over the South China Sea.
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