
Putin Marks US Independence Day with Call for Shared Nuclear Responsibility
The Kremlin’s message to Donald Trump invoked wartime alliances and urged constructive ties, while Lavrov separately hailed a multipolar order.
On 4 July 2026, Russian President Vladimir Putin sent a congratulatory message to US President Donald Trump on the 250th anniversary of American independence, the Kremlin’s website reported. The text recalled that Russia had “unconditionally supported” the North American colonists in their struggle against British rule and described the two nations as allies in both world wars who together liberated humanity from Nazism. It stressed that, as the world’s two largest nuclear powers, Russia and the United States bear “special responsibility for ensuring security and stability on a global scale.”
Viewed from Moscow, the message framed the bilateral relationship as one of equal partners whose constructive, mutually beneficial ties would serve not only their own peoples but the entire international community. Foreign Minister Sergei Lavrov, in a separate statement published by the Russian foreign ministry, added that a “sincere dialogue” based on equality, mutual respect and non-interference in internal affairs could yield effective solutions to the most complex global and regional problems. Lavrov also noted that the anniversary arrived at a “crucial moment for the world order,” as a more just multipolar model replaces an era of Western hegemony.
In Tehran, the economic daily Donya-e Eqtesad interpreted the message as Putin “flaunting” Russia’s nuclear power, a reading that underscores how the Kremlin’s invocation of strategic parity is received in capitals outside the Western alliance. European diplomatic observers, cited by the Italian news agency Adnkronos, highlighted Lavrov’s emphasis on a post-Western order, which aligns with Moscow’s long-standing critique of US dominance. Southeast Asian outlets reported the exchange without editorial comment, focusing on the nuclear responsibility theme. No immediate public reaction was issued by the White House.
The exchange follows a 14 June phone call between the two leaders, during which Trump again called for a ceasefire in Ukraine and Putin maintained that Ukrainian strikes on Russian infrastructure would not alter the battlefield situation, according to the Kremlin readout. The congratulatory message did not directly address the Ukraine conflict, but its emphasis on historical partnership and shared global duties signals Moscow’s interest in keeping diplomatic channels open despite deep divisions. No new summit has been announced, though the message suggests both sides continue to invoke their common history as a basis for dialogue while substantive disagreements persist.
| Russian & CIS press | +0.50 | aligned |
|---|---|---|
| Continental European press | −0.60 | critical |
Russia reframes the occasion as a tribute to a shared great-power past, from which an irrevocable bipolar nuclear order derives.
The gesture is framed as historical responsibility, linking the US jubilee to the memory of World War II and the primacy of atomic weapons, thus presenting Moscow as an indispensable partner.
Mediterranean Europe reduces the move to a suspect formality, highlighting its contrast with the day's humanitarian urgency.
By implicitly juxtaposing the gesture with the Pope's Lampedusa visit, the congratulation is drained of substance and presented as a distraction from true international priorities.
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