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Editorial HELSINKI

EFE

Russian President Vladimir Putin and US President Donald Trump welcomed their first summit held yesterday in Helsinki as a "useful" meeting that "changed" relations between his two countries, declaring even the first that his "ideological" antagonism no longer exists.

"The cold war ended a long time ago.The era of ideological antagonism between two countries already belongs to the past.The situation in the world has changed radically," said Putin, who said he received a "strong" rejection of allegations that influenced the electoral victory of the American.

Trump even declared that he saw "no reason" for Russia to interfere in the 2016 US elections, contradicting the conclusion of intelligence agencies in his country.

However, Putin admitted that he wanted Trump to win the presidential election on the grounds that he "wanted to improve relations with Russia."

Bridging the Differences
Trump insisted that the judicial inquiry in his country about the so-called Russian conspiracy and its possible participation in the 2016 electoral process is a "disaster" and about it he took responsibility for Washington and Moscow being "separated".

The four-hour meeting in Helsinki was sufficient, he added, to iron out the differences between the two parties that the US president considered that a relationship "never worse than presently" had changed: "I really believe it", he said.

Asked about the concrete results of the meeting, he refrained from detailing them, as did Putin

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