Read the full transcript of a conversation between Foreign Affairs Interview’s Dan Kurtz-Phelan and foreign affairs advisor and author Fiona Hill on “What Does Trump See in Putin?”, Tuesday, March 11, 2025.
TRANSCRIPT:
Foreign Affairs Interview with Fiona Hill
DAN KURTZ-PHELAN: I’m Dan Kurtz-Phelan, and this is the Foreign Affairs Interview.
Not even two months into his second term, Donald Trump is already reshaping U.S.-Russia relations at a critical juncture for the war in Ukraine. As Putin presses his advantage on the battlefield, Trump’s admiration for the Russian leader and his push for warmer relations with Moscow is raising alarms across European capitals and in Kyiv, most of all.
Fiona Hill spent years studying Putin in Russia as a scholar and as a U.S. intelligence official before, in the first Trump administration, becoming senior director for European and Russian affairs on the National Security Council. She became a household name during Trump’s first impeachment when her testimony provided crucial insights into Trump’s dynamic with Putin and his earlier actions with President Zelensky.
I last had her on the podcast in September of 2022 when it was becoming clear that there would not be a quick end to the conflict in Ukraine. I spoke with her again on the morning of Tuesday, March 11th, about Trump’s relationship with Putin, about the prospects for peace in Ukraine and about European security in an age of American retreat.
Later that afternoon, U.S. and Ukrainian officials unveiled a tentative agreement for a 30-day ceasefire, meaning that the ball is now in Putin’s court.
Fiona, thank you for joining me. It’s really hard to think of anyone we’d rather have on at this particular moment in history, which has brought back so much of what you’ve written in Foreign Affairs over the last few years about Putin, about Ukraine and about Trump and about how the interaction among them is reshaping geopolitics right now.
FIONA HILL: Thanks so much, Dan.
Trump’s Second Term: First Impressions
DAN KURTZ-PHELAN: In part because there are so many ways in this conversation, I’ll start very broad. As you’ve watched the first seven or so weeks of Trump’s second term, what has surprised you?
FIONA HILL: Speed. He’s just had seven weeks. I thought, gosh, is it only been seven weeks?
Yes, it’s definitely the speed of things. I mean, there were a lot of things that I did anticipate. But honestly, I will confess I didn’t expect it to happen this fast and this furious as well.
The Trump-Zelensky Dynamic
DAN KURTZ-PHELAN: As you watch that rather extraordinary encounter in the Oval Office between President Trump and President Zelensky, did that surprise you? What kind of stood out to you about that? I mean, when you were the top NSC official handling Russia and Europe during Trump’s first term, you were present for early interactions between Trump and Zelensky, including those that led to the Trump impeachment in 2019.
So as you watch this, what did you think was going on on Trump’s side and how did you think Zelensky handled it?
FIONA HILL: Well, on Trump’s part, it was sort of vintage Trump and very reflective of his feelings of antipathy towards Zelensky personally and towards Ukraine. I mean, I think what was very telling was that he doesn’t want to be associated with Ukraine in any way, basically telling them they had no cards, that it was the United States that had puffed up Ukraine and Zelensky himself to be a tough guy, that they were losers, you know, basically had the losing hand. And he was basically telling them they should sort of give it up already and also making it very clear that any undertaking or any agreement that had already been made with Zelensky in Ukraine by the United States by previous presidents was null and void.
Because I think the thing to bear in mind when you’re watching all of this was Zelensky was already walking into an interaction that wasn’t going to go favorably for him. And I think in terms of Zelensky and his whole team, they didn’t do sufficient preparation for this. And in part, it’s not entirely their fault because I don’t think they fully understood what they were dealing with.
Trump was basically telling Zelensky that he had to make a personal agreement, in effect, a treaty of friendship with him. That was the rare earths, you know, the raw materials agreement. I don’t think Zelensky fully understood that this was not just a sort of a continuation of agreements with the United States and with previous presidents, but that this was something to cement the deal with Trump himself personally and that this was all very personal.
And you can see that where Zelensky really went awry, there were two different things that went wrong. First of all, he shouldn’t have been speaking in English. And what he should have done was slow the whole thing down and use his Ukrainian interpreter.
And I think in future, they need to have a really good interpreter. Perhaps they even need to assign a special envoy in the way that Trump has done this, to basically engage somebody who is capable of holding their own in these kinds of environments. Because I don’t think Zelensky, on the one hand, really understood where Trump was coming from.
And on the other hand, didn’t really understand the way that everything was being phrased. It was moving very fast. And even for a native English speaker, it would have been hard to keep on the game. His English is good, but it’s not native. And that’s 101 in diplomacy. You don’t have an interaction no matter how good you are in your non-native language.
So that’s kind of, again, a problem. There was also a lot of the people around Trump and the team around Kellogg. And obviously we heard that also from Lindsey Graham, Senator Graham. They were very angry with Zelensky because they said that they told him already what he was expected to do, which was go in, thank the president profusely, sign the deal and get out and do something that was going to be good for television, not in the terrible way in which it played out, but in the way of kind of performatively thanking the president. And he didn’t do that because, again, I don’t think he fully understood because, again, they were explaining to him in their terms, they understand how Trump operates. And Zelensky absolutely doesn’t.
And where it really went wrong was when Zelensky was trying to remind Trump of two things. First of, in the way that Vladimir Putin operates, which Trump didn’t really want to hear. And secondly, that there were commitments already made to Ukraine and to Zelensky by previous presidents.
And that’s when Trump essentially lost it. He basically said those people don’t count for anything. No one respected them. They were weak. They were useless. People respect me. This is with me.
So this is a hyper personalized set of interactions. And it’s not really about the team. It’s not really about the people around Trump. It’s just the way that Zelensky was supposed to behave with Trump himself. And it was ahead of the State of the Union.
There were all these compilation videos that had been made on behalf of Trump by his press office of people thanking President Trump from hostages that had been released to other people thanking him for all the things that he’s done that he could refer to. And I think Zelensky was supposed to be fitting into the same frame. And he did not get that message.
He genuinely thought he was still negotiating for some kinds of security guarantees. He didn’t realize he was making a personal treaty, perhaps not even really a friendship, but of some kind of undertaking with President Trump himself personally.
Understanding the Trump-Putin Dynamic
DAN KURTZ-PHELAN: So when you were at the National Security Council, you were not only in the room with Trump and Zelensky, you were also in meetings with Trump and Putin. And you were, of course, doing that after many years of studying Putin and Russia carefully, both as a scholar and as a member of the U.S. intelligence community. You wrote an extraordinary essay in our November, December 2021 issue called “The Kremlin’s Strange Victory,” especially extraordinary because it came months before Putin’s invasion of Ukraine and years before Trump’s re-election and yet seemed to portend so much of what we’ve seen in the years since in both regards.
And that essay opens with a really vivid and kind of staggering description of the July 2018 meeting between Trump and Putin in Helsinki when you watched in dismay as Trump in public echoed Putin’s talking points over those of his own intelligence officials. You understand the dynamic between these two figures almost as well as anyone. How do you explain it?
What’s it like in the room? Who kind of drives conversation? What’s the atmosphere like?
And what does that tell you about what may happen in that particular relationship in the months ahead? Trump has said that he wants to meet with Putin at some point and we’ll see whether that happens. But we’re certainly looking towards another such summit, which will be similarly dramatic, I assume.
FIONA HILL: Yeah, I mean, there’s a lot of the same things I’ve just said about the interaction with Zelensky that would hold true for this one, but perhaps on the other side of the ledger. Trump isn’t really all that prepared for his meetings with Putin. And interpretation, in his view, is kind of meaningless.
And having people who actually really understand the situation, who Putin is and what Russia is about, is key as well. Because although it’s a hyper-personalized set up in Russia as well, Putin’s the main guy. He is where all decision making begins and ends.
He also does have a system around him. He is a product of the deep state. He actually likes the state in Russia. He uses it. And he’s got a whole number of state functionaries like Ushakov, his presidential adviser, Lavrov, the foreign minister, Kirill Dmitriev, who many of us have seen active in these negotiations with the United States, the head of the Russian Sovereign Wealth Fund, who for many people is certainly not a household name and not somebody that people were kind of expecting to see. And all of these people have been in the Russian system for years.
Kirill Dmitriev’s wife is close to Putin’s daughter. Kirill Dmitriev, the head of the Sovereign Wealth Fund, is Harvard trained, went to business school, has worked at Goldman Sachs. His English is impeccable.
Same with Ushakov and Lavrov. Lavrov, of course, has been foreign minister since time immemorial, it seems, certainly longer than seven weeks. And also the Russian representative at the UN.
These guys know what they’re doing. And again, they speak impeccable English and they know all their talking points. They know what country they work for. They know how their system operates. They know all the externalities as well. They’ve got a kind of a complete picture of the field of play.
And I think what we’re sort of seeing with President Trump, which I saw the first time around, he’s fixated on the one guy himself, on Putin. He sees other people, the intermediaries around him, basically as just sort of conduits to Putin or some ways of just sort of facilitating interactions, certainly interpreters, certainly his own staff he doesn’t pay any attention to. It’s all about being able to sit down with Putin.
And when you’re not prepared and when you don’t know where the other person is coming from, it’s just about his interaction that, of course, you’re going to be taking on the talking points of Russia because the only peer he sees in this relationship, it’s certainly not Whitcuff, it’s not Rubio for certain, absolutely not. He’s a secretary. He’s the secretary of state.
But for Trump, he’s absolutely a secretary. He’s just a member of staff. Waltz, it’s the same thing.
Whitcuff might be a billionaire or millionaire and a kind of an ambassador and had a business role before. But again, he’s just brokering a deal. That’s how Trump saw Rex Tillerson before or H.R. McMaster or John Bolton or any of the various people who were working from previously. They were nothing in their own right. They were just facilitators and conduits. And it’s the same with a translator.
He’s not listening really to the words. He’s just trying to get the vibe. The very first time I was in one of the phone calls with Putin, I was listening very carefully to the Russian because the interpreters don’t always capture everything.
They don’t capture the nuances. And particularly when it’s the Russian interpreter who’s translating into a language that’s also not their native language, all kinds of things are missing. And Trump said, what a great, what a great conversation.
I thought, actually, not really. There was all kinds of menace in what Putin had said. He chooses words very carefully.
Many times when Putin and Trump are interacting, Putin’s actually making fun of him. It’s just completely lost in the translation. I can give lots of episodes of this or he’s goading him and urging him onto something because he’s trying to kind of see how he will react.
And the translation, you know, smooths over all of that. That context is obviously missing and he doesn’t do a readout afterwards. And, you know, we heard, for example, that Witkow spent several hours one on one with Putin.
Was anyone translating? Was Witkow making notes in real time or was he trying to remember what was said afterwards? All of this is amateur hour because it kind of means that you’re not really fully cognizant of what it is that the Russians have said beyond what you’ve taken on board from their talking points.
DAN KURTZ-PHELAN: And it’s worth noting that Witkoff is — Steve Witkoff, who is ostensibly the Middle East envoy, certainly not a Russia specialist, a longtime New York real estate mogul who is suddenly in this position. So it’s not exactly a worthy successor to Fiona Hill who’s doing this publicly. Russian leaders have reacted to Trump’s early moves in the second term with a degree of triumphalism, I would say.
Putin’s Mixed Reaction to Trump’s Return
FIONA HILL: Well, I think it’s a real mixed picture. I mean, as you said, there’s been quite a bit of euphoria in Russia. In fact, they think that they’ve walked into a fairy tale, where somebody finds a golden fish or a firebird – it’s like the genie in the lamp kind of equivalent and all their wishes come true.
And in many respects, that’s what’s happened. Putin wanted Ukraine to capitulate. It looks like that’s what Trump is trying to facilitate for him.
Putin wanted to see a rift between the United States and NATO and the United States and all its European allies. And Trump’s doing that in spades and also with Canada and Mexico and pretty much everybody else as well. The Russians would have loved the United States in every other interaction to just take on the talking points without any kind of pushback.
And that’s exactly what’s happened as well. The thing is, what we’ve done here is we’ve just gone completely over to the Russian side of the position, which is not necessarily good for Russia either. And I think that’s also creating some apprehension in Moscow.
What does this mean? Does this actually mean that the United States has completely shifted its position? Trump certainly has been of many of these views all the way along because he’s a strongman.
He sees Putin as a peer, as a fellow strongman. He wants to rule the United States in the way that he thinks Russia is ruled by Putin. But Putin also himself is beholden to public opinion.
There’s also a whole series of war bloggers and nationalists and others who are also trying to hold Putin’s feet to the fire. And there’s also a lot of anxiety about whether the United States and Trump can be trusted to stick to their word, because the first time around, Putin also was hopeful and all the Russians were very hopeful. They were popping champagne corks when Trump got elected because they certainly didn’t want to see Hillary Clinton elected in 2016.
But they didn’t get what they wanted out of it. Trump himself keeps saying, “I was tougher on Russia than anyone else.” Well, that was also not true.
In fact, it was the team of people around him who, once Russia started doing various things, basically persuaded Trump they needed to push back or he would look weak. But Trump has never believed that Russia has been interfering in the political space. And so he wants to now take Putin at his face value, irrespective of all the things that Russia has actually done.
The Dog That Caught the Car
And in a way, now the Russians are kind of feeling that maybe they’re the dog that caught the car. And so they’re not really sure where this is going to go. In fact, I’ve got colleagues who’ve been taking part in some of these track twos that have been happening in Geneva and elsewhere.
And one was taken aside by one of the Russians saying that they’re worried that this would lead to a crisis because Trump will also expect now that Putin will bring peace, that peace will break out all over and that Putin actually is perhaps not in a position to do that. So let’s just play the scenario. Ukraine completely capitulates.
Trump has been saying maybe there’ll be a country, maybe there won’t be a country. So Russia gets the control of the territory that it holds. Maybe it gets control of the territory it claims because it doesn’t hold all of the territory that it claims to have annexed.
Then what? You really think that the Ukrainians are going to put down all their arms? Is Trump going to force them to do so?
Is it not going to be kind of rearguard action? Ukraine is a failed state on the borders of Russia as well as on the borders of Europe isn’t necessarily going to be something that Russia wants. And once the facade of a US-Russia confrontation is stripped away, this becomes what it always has been, which is a Russian assault on Europe, the second largest land war in Europe after World War Two, the first one being Chechnya, where Russia invaded its own territory and created absolute chaos.
And effectively, what you will now see is that Europe is in a war with Russia. Over Ukraine, because this is existential to European security, and it may not be what Hungary thinks or Slovakia thinks, but certainly what a heck of a lot of other European countries think. And that means that China, North Korea and Iran are also engaging in a war against Europe.
They joined it because they thought that they could take potshots at the United States. But this becomes extraordinarily complicated because Russia might be able to and Putin may be able to have their discussions with Trump. But it doesn’t resolve the question of European security because Trump’s saying, I want nothing to do with European security.
The Nuclear Proliferation Risk
They’re on their own. So actually, this becomes really complicated. And so does the question of proliferation as well.
Lots of people are talking about this now. Basically, what Putin has done is make it much more likely that European countries and other neighbors like Japan, South Korea, for example, will be rushing to get a nuclear weapon because the United States, along with Russia and the United Kingdom, gave Ukraine assurances, guarantees as far as the Ukrainians were concerned, that when they gave up nuclear weapons that they’d inherited from the Soviet Union back in the 1990s, the one day in Belarus and Kazakhstan gave those weapons back to Moscow to be dismantled, that they would be guaranteed that nothing bad would ever happen to them, certainly that they wouldn’t be invaded by Russia.
And that’s exactly what’s happened. So the lesson to everyone else is you’re going to get clobbered by a nuclear power. And Trump wants to have nuclear negotiations with Putin.
Well, he might be able to do that, but he might have also presided over the proliferation of nuclear weapons to many more countries than have them already.
DAN KURTZ-PHELAN: You wrote a piece in Foreign Affairs with Angela Stent one year into the war in Ukraine, noting that, and I’m quoting you here, “despite a series of blunders, miscalculations and battlefield reversals that would have surely seen him thrown out of office in most normal countries, Putin is still at the pinnacle of power in Russia.” Two years later, more than two years later, Putin has continued to struggle in this war. The Russian economy is done better than I think most people would have imagined, given how much it’s been sanctioned and how much pressure has been put on it by the U.S. and its allies. But it’s still going OK, but not great for most Russians. Putin has had to resort to various fairly extreme measures to get adequate men to the front line, including, again, several thousand North Korean troops. Is it still your assessment that Putin’s power is fairly secure?
And if so, what accounts for that? Why has that not been dented more by his rather flailing effort in Ukraine?
Putin’s Multiple Battlefields
FIONA HILL: Well, because of multiple battlefields. It is actually true contrary to what President Trump and others think that Russia hasn’t done as well as one would expect on the battlefield because it still hasn’t taken over the whole of Ukraine, which was definitely the goal when Putin first moved in with a special military operation. Now, on that particular battlefield, Trump’s actually Putin’s best hope, because Trump, again, as he said in the Oval Office to Zelensky, “we were the ones who’ve made you a tough guy. If we take away our support, you’re finished, so you need to get to the table.”
Well, in actual fact, Ukraine’s still got some fight in it. We saw these drone attacks on Moscow and we’ve seen Europeans rallying around now. Admittedly, they can’t compensate for the United States anytime soon.
And everybody knows that. But it doesn’t mean that Ukraine’s fighting spirit is completely gone. And again, there’s been lots of calculations made by very smart military analysts that it would take something like 118 years for Russia to take over Ukraine at the pace that it’s going.
And if Ukraine really wanted to dig in and reinforce the lines of contact, it actually could with some assistance. And perhaps that’s something that they should have done before. But Ukraine never wanted to give up the idea that it might be able to incrementally take back some of its territory.
But I think Ukrainians are seeing the reality of the situation right now. But the other thing that Putin was really relying on was the broader psychological battlefield, the broader political battlefield as well. And psychologically, he’s given everybody the impression that he’s won.
He’s certainly given Trump the impression that he’s won and many other people besides that as well. And politically, he was hoping for a change in government in many different countries, just like Vice President Bantz seemed to be hoping for. He was hoping that the AFD would win in Germany.
Well, they haven’t. I mean, the CDU has. But again, in a difficult situation where they’ll have to be a coalition government.
But Friedrich Metz, the head of the CDU, the Christian Democratic Union in Germany, has started to be pretty forceful in the things that he said about Russia and also about the United States and its stance. In the United Kingdom in July, it was the Labour Party that won. And the Labour Party have actually been quite forward leaning in terms of their continued support for Ukraine based on the previous conservative governments and Boris Johnson and Rishi Sunak and all the other intervening prime ministers.
There’s been actually a continuation of support for Ukraine. Similarly in France at the top level of Macron, but very importantly in countries like Poland, the Baltic states, all the Nordic countries and Sweden and Finland are now part of NATO. And Sweden and Finland actually have real resources.
They’re bordering countries with Russia. So some of the things that Putin was holding out for haven’t exactly happened. But Putin still thinks that he can manipulate the situation.
Trump as a Mixed Bag for Putin
And this is where, getting back to what we were talking about before, about where Trump may be a mixed bag. He may not like it that Trump has become basically antagonistic towards Europe as well. Because in Putin’s view, just as in Trump’s view, Europe is a set of vassal states.
The European Union, Trump said, was basically created to rip off the United States. He wants to see the end of the European Union. Putin sees the European Union as formidable in its ability to aggregate economic potential and financial wherewithal, which is actually we’re seeing right now with the EU, talking about putting up billions in defense spending and also talking about doing that in a NATO context so that countries like Norway, the UK, Switzerland and also Turkey could be involved in defense spending.
And it seems like this has been done precisely in reaction to the US, not just in reaction to Putin, which suggests that Europe has agency and other countries have agency as well. And so Putin may have to do other things to maintain his position. And then the question is, what’s going on inside of the domestic battlefield?
Now, obviously, he’s eliminated all opposition, but there are these nationalist bloggers. There are people who want to see the war pursued to its final solution in their view, which is the subjugation of Ukraine and then from there subjugation of other countries to make sure they don’t go their own way. They will also be keeping Putin in their crosshairs, which, of course, we already saw with Prigozhin, we’ve already forgotten that, that there was an insurgency.
There was an attempt to change the tide in Russia. And if it becomes more clear about the huge cost that Putin has incurred and that maybe that isn’t acceptable to others, things may change as well. For him, it’s a price, which is different from a cost, right?
A cost may be something seen as negative. But for him, it’s a price worth paying if he has success. And success is not 100 percent guaranteed at this particular juncture.
DAN KURTZ-PHELAN: What kind of deal would Putin be interested in when it comes to ending the war in Ukraine? You know, you’ve written in the past and many commentators assume that a ceasefire would be really just a chance for him to rearm and to rest his troops for another offensive. But is there some deal that you can imagine that would really result in a sustainable end to this war, even if it’s more of an armistice than a true peace deal?
FIONA HILL: Well, that’s the problem, isn’t it? And that’s what Zelensky was trying to get at in the Oval Office, to no avail, pointing out that armistice equivalent ceasefires, just like we’re seeing in Gaza, with kind of difficulties of how hard it is once you get beyond just getting the fighting stopped. The big issues have to be resolved.
Things are much more difficult. The devil’s always in those very big details. So getting an armistice and the Ukrainians are proposing right now at air and at sea.
# What Does Trump See in Putin?
Ukraine’s Military Effectiveness
FIONA HILL: And you’ve also got to remember that the Ukrainians have wiped out a third of the Russian Black Sea fleet without having a fleet of their own. They’ve done that also with drones and basically autonomous vehicles for weapons. So the Ukrainians have been quite effective in that regard.
And we have the World War One type frontline, which is actually very difficult. And it’s not just a war of attrition. It’s dynamic.
It’s back and forth. But I think it’s actually quite difficult for Putin to effect a kind of a ceasefire and then take it from there, because he obviously wants things that are not in Trump’s wherewithal to hand over. And I don’t know whether Trump can actually force the Ukrainians to give up territory that they hold rather than that Russia holds.
Russia’s Extensive Demands
And then Putin has also made it very clear Russia’s terms are pretty extensive, which is also no army of any conceivable size that could defend itself on the part of Ukraine, not joining NATO. And actually, NATO may be the least of things at the moment, because there are other military bilateral treaties that Ukraine can avail itself of with a whole host of other countries and other arrangements that it doesn’t actually need NATO, to be frank, at this particular point to defend itself. And also the United States is pulling back from that.
So it diminishes that value of the military relationship with the United States. It used to be enshrined within NATO, plus the nuclear umbrella. But Russia obviously has said, you know, we don’t want to be talking about new European security arrangements.
They don’t want any European troops in Ukraine, which is European territory. And this is all about European security. They would like to have the US pull back.
But they can’t force Poland to pull out Polish troops from Polish soil or Finns to pull out Finnish troops from Finnish soil or Baltic states to pull out their own troops or Canadians, Germans and the UK forces who are pre-positioned forward deployed in the Baltic states and pulling out. So there’s all kinds of things going on here. And the Russians are saying they want the root causes of this conflict resolved, which for them is they want a sphere of influence recognized.
European Agency and Capabilities
And the United States might say, yeah, great, OK, we recognize your ability to have a sphere of influence in Europe. But what about Europe? You know, they have agency.
You can’t just infantilize the Europeans, you know, just basically say, right, we’re not with you anymore, you’re on your own and then expect them to just kind of sit about. There is an assumption in the United States a lot of the time, I have to say, that the Europeans aren’t capable of anything. Well, what are they talking about?
You know, they’re talking about what France and Germany may be, JD Vance’s random countries that haven’t fought a war. Well, JD Vance has probably not been to Finland and has not seen the front lines there, probably not been to Norway, Sweden, you know, perhaps he has, but I don’t think he’s fully processed. Has he been to Poland and, you know, seen how the Poles are trying to build themselves up?
The Turks have certainly fought wars and they’re part of NATO. The Turks have been in Syria, you know, recently and also involved in Iraq. And frankly, again, as Europeans keep pointing out, the only time that Article 5 was invoked was on behalf of the United States after 9-11 and European troops, including Georgians and many others who were not part of NATO, went to support the United States in Afghanistan and also in Iraq.
Limitations of Trump’s Approach
So there’s a lot going on here. And although the Russians have been very clear on what they want, I do not believe that Trump has the ability to give them everything that they want and to force other people to give up things, because everything is going to be a concession for Ukraine and everything’s also going to be a concession for Europe. And, you know, again, a ceasefire is one thing, but resolving all of the issues on this is something else.
And it may be that lots of Americans may believe that Russia has a right to a sphere of influence, but a heck of a lot of Europeans certainly don’t believe that, particularly when it comes to them being in the sphere of influence. And also what Trump has done in terms of threatening Canada and Greenland, which people should take very seriously, because I’m pretty convinced he means it. And then also, you know, the pressure on Panama is basically showing countries a very different view of the United States.
There’s a genuine rupture in the relationship between the United States and its allies at this point, not just European allies, but Japan, South Korea and others. And it’s a one sided rupture. It’s basically come from the United States saying it’s not going to be an ally anymore.
It’s going to be America first and really not interested in what happens in the security of other countries.
DAN KURTZ-PHELAN: How do you assess the European reaction so far as you watch what various leaders and governments in Europe have done over the last couple of months? Do you think they’re doing what they need to do? Are there things they should be doing that they’re not so far?
Europe’s Response to New Security Challenges
FIONA HILL: Well, I think the problem has been the speed of it. People have just been in a state of shock. So they should have been forewarned a long time ago.
Going back to, frankly, Kennedy and Johnson and back to the 60s and 70s, Europeans were being told they needed to do more for their own defense. They shouldn’t be relying exclusively on the United States. Bob Gates, Secretary Gates, who went obviously from the Bush to the Obama administration, made that point over and over again.
They knew this and this is on them that they didn’t take steps. They allowed their militaries to get hollowed out. They were focused on expeditionary forces, you know, indeed helping the United States in Afghanistan and Iraq and, you know, the French case in the Sahel and Mali and places like this.
They weren’t thinking that they might have to engage in a peer war, a major power state on state conflict. Well, now they are. And, you know, this really means that the European part of NATO needs to step up.
And they’ve realized that. And I would say belatedly, let’s hope it’s not too little too late. I think there’s some really serious discussions going on again about pooling resources from the EU, but also other NATO countries looking at capabilities and capacities.
The Finns certainly have a lot of military capacity. Countries are building up their armed forces again. You know, they’re talking about building up their military industrial base.
They realize that they’re in a very difficult environment, obviously, in the aggregate. They’ve got a lot of potential. Countries will see the threat differently from Russia.
Obviously, the threat of a land war is very real for Poland and for the Baltic states and for Finland. And anyone who has a direct border is very close proximity to Russia. And that will require more investment in land armies and, you know, perhaps in tanks.
Modern Warfare and Infrastructure Threats
Although, you know, as I said, we talk about drones and the whole face of warfare changing. But at the same time, we’ve seen in Ukraine that’s not always the case. But critical national infrastructure for every country is under risk, not just from bombardment by drones.
I mean, Ukraine has been devastated by these attacks, but also GPS jamming. That’s what the Russians have done. Remember, there was that dreadful case of a Azerbaijani flight that not just got its GPS jammed, but was also hit by anti-aircraft fire over Russia.
So there’s all these kinds of things that are happening in the vicinity of Russia for commercial airlines and then military aircraft. You’ve got Russian surveillance ships all over in the maritime zone looking at critical cables, undersea cables. And the United States is connected to the rest of Europe through these cables in the Atlantic.
The UK, for example, is a hub for all the communication networks, including for the United States. The United States would be just as affected by an attack on undersea cables.
And then you’ve got pipelines, critical gas pipelines and, you know, basically cyber attacks. I was shocked to see that the US was, I mean, I suppose they’re signaling to Russia, but getting rid of, you know, offensive cyber or cyber monitoring against Russia when Russia, as everybody knows, I mean, the Europeans are not idiots on this front. They know that Russia, along with China and Iran, is a major perpetrator, particularly for criminal groups as well, of cyber attacks, ransomware attacks, you know, for example.
Europe Caught Between Russia and the US
So these are real. And every single day, there are assaults on European publics through disinformation and propaganda coming from the United States now as well, not just from Russia. So there’s a feeling in Europe that they’re caught between a rock and a hard place.
The rock being Russia, which the threat hasn’t really changed. And then the technological challenge from China rather than perhaps a direct military challenge, obviously. But with China, Iran and North Korea helping Russia, you know, the whole security has become global and global dimensions here.
And then the hard place is the United States, because nobody knows how to act with it. Is it going to be an adversary? United States is making challenges against free speech in Europe under the guise of protecting free speech.
They’re kind of basically demanding that people apologize for saying things about President Trump or they’re basically saying that government should be overthrown, etc., but, you know, nobody should say anything back to the United States. I mean, this is kind of basically a chaotic mess. So the Europeans are also, while they’re trying to navigate the more conventional, so to speak, threat from Russia, are also trying to navigate what was a very unconventional threat now from the United States to disrupt their ability, you know, to basically improve their military position.
DAN KURTZ-PHELAN: In the grim scenario where a bad deal is forced on Ukraine and Putin is allowed to get most of what he wants and escape sanctions and otherwise kind of get away with it. Do you imagine that he will go further and start to test NATO by going into the Baltics or into Poland or will we see kind of further aggression in Moldova or elsewhere? You kind of often hear this from Ukrainians and supporters of Ukraine that Putin won’t stop here.
But what does that actually look like if he’s given everything he wants from Trump?
Russia’s Ongoing Hybrid Warfare
FIONA HILL: Well, it looks like what I just talked about, honestly, he’s already doing it. It’s undersea, deep sea cables. It’s potentially gas pipelines.
It’s GPS satellites. It’s propaganda. It’s, you know, psychological operations.
It’s cyber attacks. It’s already happening. There’s been, you know, assassinations.
We haven’t even talked about assassinations and poisonings. You know, there’s an inquest going on in the UK right now about the death of Dawn Sturgess, who was the woman in Salisbury in England, you know, the famous cathedral town that the members of the GRU, the Russian military intelligence unit, visited to poison Sergei Skripal, the former Russian spy and his daughter, Yulia. And I’m also going to put the entire population of that town at risk with Novichok, the weapons grade nerve agent in a small perfume bottle.
The agents discarded the perfume bottle, which had enough to kill everybody in Salisbury, into the donation container for a charity shop. Dawn Sturgess’ partner found that, sprayed them both with the perfume. He was seriously ill and she died.
You know, so this is the kind of thing they do. And of course, before that, there was Alexander Litvinenko, who was poisoned with polonium, essentially a dirty bomb with polonium spread, you know, radioactive material all the way around London. Assassinations in Germany, all kinds of sabotage attacks, DHL flights, warehouse fires.
We’ve got case after case of Bulgarians and Serbs and all kinds of others being recruited by Russian intelligence for assassinations, you know, going against Christo Grozev from pioneering journalistic intelligence group and others. Eliot Higgins, you know, all the people who helped Navalny uncover the plots against him, the poisoning of Navalny, the killings of Navalny and hostage taking. We’ve got Evan Gershkovich from The Wall Street Journal, I think is writing a book about his experience there.
But so many people, journalists and ordinary people have been taken hostage by Russia on visits. I mean, there’s still people in Russian prisons there. All of this is happening all the time.
And he can certainly step up the tempo. He doesn’t have to send a tank, you know, across the bridge at Narva in Estonia, for example. It’s all happening all the time, everywhere, all at once.
And Putin’s already emboldened. And there’s going to be more of this. And even if it’s not Russian GRU agents, as I said, there’s an ability to basically take on criminals from sympathetic Slavic countries, you know, for example, or others.
In fact, if the price is right. So we’re in the middle of it. And it’s not just thinking that something will happen after the fact.
I mean, the Ukrainians are absolutely right that Europe is under siege as well. But it has been for an absolutely long time.
DAN KURTZ-PHELAN: We’ll be back after a short break. You mentioned earlier the convergence or the similarity in worldview between Trump and Putin, this belief that, you know, kind of strongmen should be managing the world, that they should each have their sphere of influence in what each one does with. And it is not really the concern of others.
If you imagine this playing out over the next few years, if Trump really does have something resembling a coherent approach here, and I realize that’s a big if, what does that world look like? What does that mean for the Russia-China relationship? What does that mean for Russia-U.S. going forward? Can you imagine this being a really durable change in how we think about global order?
# What Does Trump See in Putin?
Trump’s Worldview and Leadership Style
FIONA HILL: Well, only if nobody else in the world has any agency. And that’s kind of the part of the problem. Next year is the 250th anniversary of the U.S. revolution in independence. And, you know, we seem to have gone from one king to a self-proclaimed king. And Trump is using, and the people around him, this idea of unitary executive to kind of recreate something that the U.S. cast off 250 years ago. But that’s obviously part of Trump’s worldview.
He obviously sees himself as a king. I mean, I would take that literally. I mean, the way that he had the mock time cover on the White House website.
Just look at the White House website and you can see kind of exactly what it is that Trump would like the United States to be. Now, in the case of Russia, that gets back to our mindset. It’s not just the strongman, the spheres of influence, the sort of old style imperialism.
I mean, and of course, we’re hearing a lot about McKinley and Teddy Roosevelt and all kinds of people that Trump never talked about before. But obviously he’s had a crash course in how they behaved and how they conducted themselves, like Andrew Jackson from the 1820s as well. But he’s kind of going back to sort of an 18th century style of governance, too.
In the 18th century, when Catherine the Great, who was an idol of Putin’s rather, was ruling Russia because Putin sees himself in a long line of czars and has taken the Russian presidency back to the czarist era. Not a constitutional monarchy, but monarchy with great powers. Well, he sees himself as a czar, you know, if not a king.
A Vision of Great Power Politics
But in that period, the great powers of Europe were carving the place up among themselves. America at that point was a colony or what was parts of America in that period and up until the War of Independence. But in that same time frame that the U.S. is getting its or America’s are getting their independence from Great Britain, Poland was being carved up by the Russia of Catherine the Great, Prussia and Austro-Hungary without the Poles having any say in it whatsoever. And I think that that’s the vision that certainly that Trump has. I’m not sure that Putin’s quite, you know, right there or Xi is in China. But that’s kind of basically what Trump is proposing.
He’s, I think, misrepresenting or misassessing, if that’s a word, the strength of Russia and Russia’s ability to do that. But he’s not necessarily wrong about China. And basically what he’s proposing here is a kind of tripartite carving up of the world.
It’s certainly what the rest of the world is assuming is what they want. And again, that could work if it wasn’t for the fact that there are now eight billion people on the planet, that there are a whole host of other countries, there are 550 million people in Europe who have all kinds of different modes of association. And there are rising powers like India, Brazil and many others who want to have their role.
And I was going to say on that the nuclear powers now, because you’ve got Iran and North Korea that aspire to be nuclear powers, obviously countries like South Africa, Israel, India and Pakistan as nuclear powers. You’ve got Japan and South Korea that are major economic powers. You’ve basically got a very complicated world out there.
So you might have that model and you might think you have the power to do this. And certainly Putin and Trump seem to have very generous estimates of their power. But that’s not the world that we’re in.
We’re in a very complicated world and they may try to do this, but I’m not sure that everyone else is going to cooperate.
Russia-China Relations
DAN KURTZ-PHELAN: There are others in Trump’s orbit who see the Russia relationship as really an opportunity to peel Russia away from China and kind of see it in that context. I’m not sure Trump would articulate it in exactly that way. Do you see any chance of eroding a Russia-China relationship that has really strengthened in ways that would have been hard to imagine a few years ago?
FIONA HILL: Yeah, I did years ago and it was hard for me to imagine then. I wrote an article about this with a colleague, a former Australian diplomat based in the UK, Bobo Lowe, who knows a lot about China and Russia as well. And, you know, years ago we actually thought it was unlikely that they would be in this, you know, what seems to be like a strategic partnership because of all of these frictions and differences in perspective.
But, you know, circumstances change, as we’ve seen, and Russia has become more dependent over the course of this war in Ukraine on China in ways that the Russians themselves would have resisted and also Iran and North Korea. We couldn’t have envisaged four years ago, five years ago for sure, that Russia would be throwing in its lot with Iran and North Korea and offering them technical assistance with their various weapons programs, basically giving them an entry into the larger global politics and decreasing their isolation. I mean, that’s all come out of the sort of desperation of those initial failures of Russia on the battlefield in Ukraine.
And in terms of China now, the Russian relationship with China in terms of trade, reliance on China for technology is so much more intensive than it was before. Trade has increased exponentially. A lot of it is one way, but Russia is relying very heavily now on China for the kind of technology that it got from other places before.
The Changing Global Order
Some of it is also being redirected. They’re still purchasing on the global marketplace, including from European companies, and they’re going through Turkey and Armenia and through China as well, all kinds of transshipments. But, I mean, you know, the world has changed as a result of this.
The war in Ukraine has been a pivotal war. In a way, it is World War III, and I’ve said that before as well, because it’s not everybody thinks of World War III. And when Trump thinks about this, thinking gambling with World War III, talking about nuclear Armageddon, he’s made that very clear in the last few days.
He’s very fixated on that. He genuinely does want to have arms control negotiations with Russia and with China and again with North Korea, probably, but also with Iran, which he’s made very clear. But again, the world has become more complicated.
You’re going to have much more interest by other powers becoming nuclear powers. But the whole thing about a World War III-like scenario, putting the nuclear aspect of this to one side, is it’s a system changing war or one that shows that the conflict is broken up because the system has changed. Pax Americana had already ended.
And this war was really one of the results of it because Russia didn’t feel deterred by the state of play. It thought it could move in. No one cared about Ukraine.
The US had pulled out of Afghanistan. The US was basically on the back foot and it could basically swoop in and take advantage of all of that. It didn’t really kind of work as planned.
And then China, North Korea and Iran come in because they also think that the United States is on its way out. And if the United States is defeated in Ukraine, rather than Ukraine per se, then that’s basically a way of them putting the United States on the back foot. I don’t think they reckoned on the United States basically saying, yep, yep, we see this is a proxy war.
We don’t want any part of it. We’re not part of this at all. We’re off.
So this is actually, in many respects, again, thrown everything into some point of disarray. I imagine that Russia, China, North Korea and Iran are going to have to recalculate because, again, what I’ve said already is this now becomes a European war where those countries are raiding and abetting Russia. And I’m not so sure that China will be able to take advantage of this in the way that it thought.
I mean, China’s been telling the Ukrainians and the Europeans, this isn’t about you. This is about the United States. And we’re not helping Russia to do something terrible in Europe or in Ukraine.
It’ll all be fine. And now you’re having this rupture with the U.S. We’ll be in there. We’ll help you rebuild.
Well, actually, they helped destroy. And if the U.S. has nothing to do with this, that’s going to be for them to negotiate this with the Europeans and explain themselves. So the whole world has become extraordinarily complex now.
This is the end of Pax Americana. The United States is heading off in God knows what kind of direction, all fast and furious, rupturing relationships, economic, trade, political, military, left, right and center. And I don’t think any of us know where it’s going to be in the future.
The last time when you had the end of Pax Augustus, we ended up after a period of absolute chaos in the Roman world with the Dark Ages. And that’s not where we’re headed now. But if Europe responds, and I mean European countries, because a lot of them do have the political will to respond to this and find out a modus operandi, then that’ll be very different.
And look, there’s Brazil, there’s India, there’s Pakistan, there’s Japan, there’s South Korea, there’s Australia, there’s New Zealand. There are so many countries out there who are in a very different place from what they were when we all began all of this 80 years ago. This is a very different world.
It’s not just a world of three powers.
Trump’s Attraction to Putin
DAN KURTZ-PHELAN: You know, listening to you and watching Trump’s interactions with Putin and with Zelensky and his statements on this whole set of issues over the last couple of months, it’s hard not to come back to this question, this kind of enduring mystery of why, what is at the root of Trump’s attraction or fealty to Putin? As you look at it, is it all just that kind of similarity of worldview, his kind of envy of Putin’s power? There are still people who, you know, for all the overstatement of some of the Russiagate conspiracy theories last time around, who still believe there’s some degree of compromise.
But as you’ve watched this, how do you explain this in your mind? What is the root of this as you see it?
FIONA HILL: I think he’s fundamentally really enamored of Russia and doesn’t see it as a threat at all. And there’s a lot going around, as you said, about all these kind of questions about what do the Russians or the Soviets have on him. All kinds of people are posting things all over the place about his first visits to Moscow and the Soviet Union, how he was hosted, as many others were, and how he was probably compromised then.
I think he was very much enamored of the Soviet Union at the time. He’s very much in the 1980s realm. That period of 1980s was when Gorbachev comes in.
And I went to study in Russia at the same time, 1987. I really kind of thought that Russia was on a different trajectory. You know, we have Gorbachev and Reagan meeting of the signing of the INF.
You have this kind of feeling that the whole place is changing, that they’re no longer clinging to the old communist ideology, that there’s new thinking in foreign policy. They all seem extraordinarily sympathetic. And this is a whole period of all the kind of peace movements and people doing outreach.
You know, Bill Clinton, Bernie Sanders, everybody goes to Moscow in this kind of period. And of course, they’re going to be wining and dining an American businessman. And I’m sure that, you know, he really felt flattered because Trump always responds to flattery.
And, you know, then, you know, we have Gorbachev. We have the collapse of the Soviet Union. We have Yeltsin.
Everybody thinks that the Russians have made a strategic choice. You have all these Russian business people emerging, many of them invest in Trump’s businesses, buy his apartments. He meets all these oligarchs and, you know, just like him, billionaires with beautiful wives, you know, et cetera, et cetera.
I don’t think he’s changed his view at all about Russia and the trajectory that it’s on. I don’t think he believes for one second that Putin has been out to get him. He just like with Gorbachev, who he wanted to sit down and basically negotiate nuclear weapons with, he sees Putin very similarly.
And, you know, an actual fact, though, Putin may be a KGB operative, Trump’s a total operative. He thinks in the same way. Conspiracy theories, lies, you know, these are all kind of part of his coin of business as well.
He’s a real estate mogul. I mean, I actually hadn’t pegged him for being an imperialist, but I think I hadn’t probably taken his interest in real estate to its logical conclusion. You know, it’s a great development of a literal greenfield site of Greenland.
And, you know, he operates in the same sort of way as Putin. It’s one of the reasons why they don’t want to clamp down on disinformation here in the United States. They don’t want to clamp down on money in politics because it’s extraordinarily useful for Trump.
Trump and Putin are working in parallel tracks. And again, Trump doesn’t basically have any respect for anyone apart from himself or people who think they’re his peers. And the people who think they’re his peers are a very small number of people.
Putin’s one of them. Xi is another. The Queen was one, but she’s gone now.
He’s got the richest man in the world operating as his tech support, according to his T-shirt of Elon Musk. You know, how more powerful could he possibly be? And so, you know, that’s the way that he’s thinking about this.
He thinks of Putin as an extraordinarily powerful individual. He’s got name recognition, face recognition. You know, even Americans who can’t tell, you know, one U.S. senator or one member of the Cabinet from the other recognize Putin. They know who he is. Elon Musk is one of the most recognizable people on the planet. And so is Trump.
# What Does Trump See in Putin?
Trump’s Susceptibility to Flattery
FIONA HILL: And that’s how he thinks about things. And so, of course, he’s compromised. Of course, he’s an asset because he can be manipulated.
He can be flattered. People are always coming up to me and getting really angry with me because they’ll say, well, what have the Russians got on him? We’ve all got stuff on him.
I mean, for God’s sake, there’s been 90 cases in courts against him. He’s already been found guilty on some charges. So come on.
It’s more about the flattery. And the bigger and more important you are and the more you flatter him, the more impact that has. And as I said, Putin is always extraordinarily clever, even though he makes fun of him in Russian and Putin is always saying nice things about Trump.
And so, Trump doesn’t believe in the interference, he’d rather believe it was Ukraine or he doesn’t believe that there was a real Russian effort on his behalf. That’s why he says that he and Putin have been through so much together. It’s almost like a kind of a teenage romance where everybody’s been trying to keep them apart.
And he just wants to get back together with Putin in spite of everybody. And he’s doing whatever he absolutely can to have that sit down with him.
DAN KURTZ-PHELAN: Could you share just one of those examples of Putin making fun of Trump in Russian?
Putin’s Sarcasm Lost in Translation
FIONA HILL: Well, one of the classics was in Osaka at the G20, which is also another famous incident where the Russians swapped out their interpreter for a very attractive, very skilled young woman. During that moment, they were standing off and chest beating about who had hypersonic missiles first. And Trump was saying he would get them.
And Putin was basically somewhat sarcastically saying, yes, you will. But I’ve got them first kind of thing. And then they started talking about Israel.
And we did have this really amazing historic meeting among the national security advisers of Israel, Russia and the United States that came around this time, because at that point, the Russians were trying to make the case that they were protecting Israel and being supportive of Israel by being in the Golan Heights and the activities that they were doing in Syria. And Putin was talking about this. And then Trump said, but I do more for Israel than anybody else.
You know, they’ve named this after me and that’s after me in Israel. And Putin looked at him and said, “Well, Donald, perhaps they should name the country after you.” And the way that he said it in Russian, it was so sarcastic.
And you could see his guys around him smirking. But when the interpreter, who was the only person that Trump was looking at, basically said it, it just came out as more sort of softer. And Trump responded and said, “Oh, no, I think that would be too much,” almost as if it was a kind of a genuine suggestion.
And there were other things like this where Putin would deliberately set him off, say terrible things about fellow Americans, be it Biden or Senator Warren, who he would call pocket hunters also to Putin. And I mean, honestly, I found that shocking. And I talked about that publicly and I said it in written materials, too.
When your president throws you under the bus with a foreign leader who really doesn’t care for you in the slightest, it tells you something. Because basically what Trump always wanted to be was the big, strong guy in front of Putin. And he does that by beating up on the people he can beat up on.
He takes on very deliberate, very strategically people who he doesn’t think are going to fight back, which of course Zelensky actually did in the Oval Office, or people that he can humiliate and look weak to look stronger to the other person. And it’s obvious to Putin he’s doing that. Let’s just be frank.
It’s pretty obvious because it’s obvious to everybody else as well.
America Becoming More Like Russia
DAN KURTZ-PHELAN: To close, I just want to quickly go back to that 2021 essay you wrote, “The Kremlin’s Strange Victory.” The core argument of that piece is really not about Putin or Russia or even U.S.-Russian relations. It’s about the United States in a way that seemed perhaps a bit provocative at the time, but as I think proved quite enduring and farsighted.
You wrote that rather than Russia becoming more like us, the United States becoming more like Russia. And quoting you here, “Putin realized that despite the lofty rhetoric that flowed from Washington about democratic values and liberal norms beneath the surface, the United States was beginning to resemble his own country, a place where self-dealing elites had hollowed out vital institutions and where alienated, frustrated people were increasingly open to populist and authoritarian appeals.” I suppose I’d close just by saying that we seem to be going in the wrong direction, not reversing those trends in any meaningful way.
FIONA HILL: Yeah, that’s absolutely right. I mean, there was a great deal of discussion at various points about convergence. This is called convergence theory between America and the Soviet Union.
And again, in the 1980s, we thought that they were coming towards us. That certainly seemed to be the case. But over time, we’ve moved in their direction for all kinds of obvious reasons.
And the thing is that Putin is pretty smart and he did recognize that because Putin knows the dynamics within his own country and he recognized them, obviously, in the U.S. and he knew exactly then how to push buttons, which they’ve been doing for a long time. Basically what the Russians do and why their propaganda is so effective is they surf a wave that’s already there. They don’t try to create things, and after a certain point, they just sit back and see this happening.
And while they think that we’re really weak, we’re not really going to get anywhere in terms of resolving issues. They do think that we’re weak. I mean, I remember my interactions with Ambassador Antonov, the previous Russian ambassador to the United States, when I would challenge him, as I was supposed to do in my position about Russian interference in the elections.
And he would say, “You know, Miss Hill, do you really think America is such a banana republic that you’re so weak that you would be susceptible to this?” And he was just basically telling me that’s what he thought. And unfortunately, that seems to be where we are.
And I still get screeds of emails from people screaming at me about these kinds of things and saying that we don’t see the situation that this is really about America being strong. But that’s not what Russia thinks and that’s not what Putin thinks. The only way to really get to peace is to show that you are strong and resilient and to show that you are able to withstand all these kinds of provocations and to restore deterrence.
And it doesn’t mean by being on a war footing with Russia, it absolutely doesn’t mean that. But it means that you’re shoring up your own social cohesion, your own unity. And unfortunately, President Trump is focused on disunity, on playing to his base, which is not as considerable as it looks like from the outside.
I mean, basically two thirds of the American population didn’t really vote for him, because not everybody voted. So this is a base that he can operate from. But it isn’t a base of unity and he hasn’t been a force for unity.
And while there is disunity and discord and Americans are being pitted against each other and he’s dismantling the state, this is like shock therapy. This is what Russia went through in the 1990s. It’s what the UK went through in the 1980s or East Germany went through also in the 1990s, dismantling the public sector.
There will be ample opportunity for Russia to continue to push buttons that make things worse. If we want to really resolve this, we have to do something different.
DAN KURTZ-PHELAN: We will end on that warning. Fiona, thank you so much for joining me and thank you so much for the wonderful and truly trenchant pieces you’ve done for Foreign Affairs over the last few years.
FIONA HILL: Thank you so much, Daniel. Thanks for having me.
DAN KURTZ-PHELAN: Thank you for listening. You can find the articles that we discussed on today’s show at ForeignAffairs.com. The Foreign Affairs Interview is produced by Julia Fleming Dresser, Molly McEnany, Ben Metzner and Caroline Wilcox.
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