Updated
Updated · The Washington Post · Jul 14
Russia Seeks Washington Edge After Lindsey Graham, 71, Dies
Updated
Updated · The Washington Post · Jul 14

Russia Seeks Washington Edge After Lindsey Graham, 71, Dies

3 articles · Updated · The Washington Post · Jul 14

Summary

  • Pro-Kremlin officials and commentators are openly hoping Lindsey Graham’s death will give Moscow a new opening in Washington, particularly inside the Trump White House.
  • Graham had been regarded in Moscow as the toughest anti-Russia voice in U.S. politics, a role he came to embody even more after Sen. John McCain’s 2018 death.
  • That perception made Graham a singular obstacle for the Kremlin, so his absence is being viewed in Russia less as a symbolic loss than as a potential shift in U.S. power dynamics.

Insights

As Moscow sees a new opportunity, will US policy on Russia now soften under President Trump?
Without its staunchest ally in Washington, what is the future of American support for Ukraine?
Did a sudden illness kill Moscow's top critic, or will his toxicology report reveal a darker truth?