Piece of recommendation for you – by no means purchase an enormous quantity of champagne until you’re completely sure it’s price celebrating.
In November 2016, Russian ultranationalist politician Vladimir Zhirinovsky was so excited by Donald Trump’s victory, and so certain that it might rework US-Russian relations, he splashed out on 132 bottles of bubbly down on the Duma, Russia’s parliament, and partied away (in his social gathering workplaces) in entrance of the TV cameras.
He wasn’t the one one celebrating.
The day after Trump’s shock White Home win, Margarita Simonyan, editor-in-chief of state channel RT, tweeted her intention to drive round Moscow with an American flag in her automobile window.
And I’ll always remember the second a Russian official instructed me she had smoked a cigar and drunk a bottle of champagne (sure, MORE champagne) to toast Trump successful.
In Moscow, expectations had been excessive that Trump would scrap sanctions in opposition to Russia; maybe, even, recognise the Crimean Peninsula, annexed from Ukraine, as a part of Russia.
“The worth of Trump was that he by no means preached on human rights in Russia,” explains Konstantin Remchukov, the proprietor and editor-in-chief of newspaper Nezavisimaya Gazeta.
It didn’t take lengthy for all that fizz to go flat.
“Trump launched the heaviest sanctions in opposition to Russia at the moment,” recollects Remchukov.
“By the tip of his time period, lots of people had been upset in his presidency.”
Which is why, eight years on – publicly at the very least – Russian officers are extra cautious in regards to the prospect of a second Trump time period.
President Vladimir Putin has even come out and backed the Democratic Get together candidate, though that “endorsement” was broadly interpreted as a Kremlin joke (or Kremlin trolling).
Putin claimed he favored Kamala Harris’s “infectious” chuckle.
However you don’t should be a seasoned political pundit to grasp that out on the marketing campaign path it’s what Trump has been saying, not Harris, that’s assured to place a smile on Putin’s face.
As an illustration, Trump’s criticism of the size of US army help for Ukraine, his obvious reluctance responsible Putin for Russia’s full-scale invasion and, throughout the presidential debate, his refusal to say whether or not he needs Ukraine to win the conflict.
Against this, Kamala Harris has argued that assist for Ukraine is in America’s “strategic curiosity” and he or she has referred to Putin as “a murderous dictator”.
Not that Russian state TV has been notably complimentary about her both. A number of weeks in the past one in every of Russia’s most acerbic information anchors was fully dismissive of Harris’s political talents. He prompt she can be higher off internet hosting a TV cookery present.
There’s one other potential final result that will properly go well with the Kremlin – an excellent tight election, adopted by a contested end result. An America consumed by post-election chaos, confusion and confrontation would have much less time to give attention to overseas affairs, together with the conflict in Ukraine.
US-Russian relations soured below Barack Obama, grew worse below Donald Trump and, within the phrases of the just lately departed Russian ambassador to Washington Anatoly Antonov, they’re “falling aside” below Joe Biden.
Washington lays the blame absolutely on Moscow.
It was simply eight months after Putin and Biden met for a summit in Geneva that the Kremlin chief ordered the full-scale Russian invasion of Ukraine.
Not solely did the Biden administration ship a tsunami of sanctions Russia’s method, however US army assist has been essential in serving to Kyiv survive greater than two-and-a-half years of Russia’s conflict. Amongst the superior weaponry America has equipped Ukraine are Abrams tanks and HIMARS rocket methods.
It’s laborious to consider now that there was a time, not so way back, when Russia and the US pledged to work as companions to strengthen world safety.
Within the late Eighties Ronald Reagan and Mikhail Gorbachev fashioned a geo-political double-act to slash their nations’ respective nuclear arsenals.
If there was one factor Reagan appeared to get pleasure from as a lot as nuclear disarmament it was reciting Russian proverbs to Gorbachev in damaged Russian (“By no means purchase 132 bottles of champagne until you’re sure it’s price celebrating” would have been one).
In 1991 the First Women of the USSR and America, Raisa Gorbacheva and Barbara Bush, unveiled an uncommon monument in Moscow – a mom duck with eight ducklings.
It was a duplicate of a sculpture in Boston Public Gardens and was offered to Moscow as a logo of friendship between Soviet and American kids.
It’s nonetheless in style with Muscovites right now. Russians flock to Novodevichy Park to pose for photographs with the bronze birds, though few guests know the again story of superpower “duck diplomacy”.
Like US-Russian relations themselves, the geese have taken just a few knocks. On one event a few of them had been stolen and had to get replaced.
It’s to the Moscow mallard and her ducklings I head to seek out out what Russians consider America and of the US election.
“I need America to vanish,” says offended angler Igor who’s fishing in a close-by pond. “It has began so many wars on the planet. The US was our enemy in Soviet occasions and it nonetheless is. It doesn’t matter who’s president.”
America as Russia’s everlasting enemy – that’s a worldview typically mirrored right here within the state media. Is Igor so offended as a result of he will get his information from Russian TV? Or maybe it’s as a result of he hasn’t caught many fish.
The general public I chat to right here don’t see America as an evil adversary.
“I’m all for peace and friendship,” says Svetlana. “However my buddy in America is scared to name me now. Possibly there’s no free speech there. Or, maybe, it’s right here in Russia that there’s no freedom of speech. I don’t know.”
“Our nations and our two peoples must be mates,” says Nikita, “with out wars and with out competing to see who has extra missiles. I favor Trump. When he was president there weren’t any large wars.”
Regardless of the variations between Russia and America there may be one factor the 2 nations have in widespread – they’ve all the time had male presidents.
Can Russians ever see that altering?
“I believe it might be nice if a girl grew to become president,” says Marina.
“I’d be comfortable to vote for a girl president right here [in Russia]. I’m not saying it might be higher or worse. However it might be totally different.”
Between now and the US election on 5 November, BBC correspondents in different elements of the world are exploring the impression its final result might have the place they’re, and what folks across the globe make of this White Home race