The question posed to Vladimir Putin in September about the U.S. election drew a wry smile and an arched eyebrow from the Russian president.
Asked whether he preferred Donald Trump or Kamala Harris, Putin caught listeners up short with his teasing reply that also included a gentle jab at President Joe Biden.
โOur โfavorite,โ if you can call it that, was the current president, Mr. Biden," he told the audience at an economic forum in the Far East port of Vladivostok.

"But he was removed from the race, and he recommended all his supporters to support Ms. Harris. Well, we will do so โ we will support her,โ he said sardonically, citing her โexpressive and infectious laughโ that shows โsheโs doing well.โ
The election Tuesday carries significant stakes for the Kremlin, and despite Putin's noncommittal and somewhat teasing answer, it appeared to encapsulate Russia's view as a choice between two unappealing possibilities.
Analysts say neither offers much promise of improving relations that have hit their lowest point since the Cold War.
Harris, the current vice president, has taken a hard line against Russia, while Trump, the former president, is known for his admiration of Putin. Still, at the September gathering, Putin complained that when Trump was in office, there were โso many restrictions and sanctions against Russia like no other president has ever introduced before him.โ

Timothy Colton of the Harvard Academy for International and Area Studies said that the Kremlin leadership is "by and large convinced nothing good is going to come in the election from Russiaโs point of view.โ
But he added that on the whole, Trump "is probably their preference; heโs more of a known quantity.โ
Key issues for Russia as the U.S. election looms:
What will happen to aid for Ukraine?
Harris is seen as likely to continue the Biden administration's massive military and economic support for Ukraine as Russia's invasion stretches toward a third year.

Trump has bragged that his rapport with Putin and respect from Ukrainian President Volodymyr Zelenskyy are so strong that he could negotiate an end to the war โin 24 hours.โ He declines to detail his strategy, but recent remarks criticizing sanctions in general suggest he could lift those against Russia as an inducement to help settle the conflict.
During their debate, Trump twice refused to directly answer whether he wanted Ukraine to win the war, while Harris praised Western support for Kyiv and urged it to continue.
โOtherwise, Putin would be sitting in Kyiv with his eyes on the rest of Europe. Starting with Poland,โ she said.
Trump's running-mate Sen. JD Vance has mentioned proposals that could suggest Trump's thinking: having Ukraine demilitarize territory occupied by Russia and agree to permanent neutrality. Those terms would be anathema to Kyiv, but Trump has shown little sympathy for Ukraine, saying Zelenskyy โshould never have let that war start.โ

Harris has not specified how her position would differ from Biden's. The U.S. has provided Ukraine more than $59.5 billion in weapons and assistance since Russia invaded in 2022. She has said previously it would be foolish to risk global alliances the U.S. has established and decried Putinโs โbrutality.โ
A Harris win โlikely promises continued U.S. support as long at the administration can maintain congressional backing,โ the International Crisis Group said in a commentary, though it said she could seek an end to the fighting more actively than Biden did. Growing congressional animosity to vast outlays of aid for Ukraine could hobble or reshape her strategy.
How will the U.S. approach Russia on human rights?
Harris has confronted Russia directly on such matters, particularly in the case of the death in prison of Russian opposition leader Alexei Navalny. She was among the first foreign leaders to comment on his death, calling it โa further sign of Putinโs brutality.โ
Trump put off comment for days, then did not connect Putin to the matter. He likened Navalnyโs punishment to his own fraud prosecution, calling his case โa form of Navalny.โ

Trump has called for a bill declaring there to be only two genders and pledged to keep transgender women out of womenโs sports โ positions that parallel how Russia under Putin has rolled back LGBTQ+ rights and lauded โtraditional values.โ
His characterization of Democrats and his rivals as โthe enemy withinโ is little different in spirit than Russia's accelerating suppression of opposition.
How will NATO be affected?
Trump has wrestled with other members of the NATO alliance, demanding that they meet the agreed spending levels for their militaries in their national budgets. He said that as president, he warned leaders that he would not only refuse to defend nations that donโt meet those targets, but that Russia could โdo whatever the hell they wantโ to such countries.
Trump also has questioned the NATO charter's mutual-defense clause, asking in an interview why the United States should be obliged to defend the โvery aggressive peopleโ of NATO member Montenegro.

Harris says the United States' commitment to NATO is โironclad.โ She has not weighed in on whether she supports Ukraine becoming an alliance member.
What about arms control deals with Russia?
Putin has repeatedly brandished the nuclear sword as he seeks to deter the West from supporting Ukraine.
The last remaining nuclear arms control treaty between Moscow and Washington, New START, is to expire in 2026. a year after the new administration takes office, and its prospects are troubled.
Biden renewed the treaty quickly upon taking office, and Harris could be expected to follow that support for the pact that limits the number of intercontinental nuclear missile launchers.

Russia suspended participation in 2023 โ although it did not withdraw โ and the U.S. retaliated with measures including halting the sharing of information on missiles' location and status.
Trump, although he has warned of the threat of โnuclear warming,โ took steps while in office to dismantle the arms control regime, including pulling out of the INF Treaty on intermediate-range nuclear weapons โ which banned ground-based nuclear and conventional missiles with a range of 500-5,500 kilometers (310-3,410 miles),
While in office, Trump called for a new nuclear pact that would include both Russia and China.