New Year in Russia is a major holiday and regarded as a time for optimism and friendship. The president has been getting into the spirit but as is customary, not everyone on his radar can expect the equivalent of a Christmas card.

President Vladimir Putin has sent out his annual flurry of New Year messages, telegrams, and calls to foreign leaders, the Kremlin press service reported on Thursday. The list includes around 80 heads of state, ranging from close allies to historic rivals. However, if receiving Putin’s warm wishes is an indicator of a country’s foreign policy clout, many will have to work harder in 2021 if they want to be noticed.

One new entrant on Moscow’s ‘naughty or nice’ list is US President-elect Joe Biden. Putin had held back from congratulating the Democratic politician until the results of November’s vote were confirmed by the Electoral College. Now, though, he has among the wordiest dedication, with the Kremlin using a Christmas and New Year greeting to set out its priorities for the relationship.

According to the President’s press service, he “expressed confidence that Russia and the United States, building relations in the spirit of equality and taking into account each other’s interests, could do a lot to strengthen stability and security at the regional and global levels.”

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Outgoing President Donald Trump, by contrast, might be disappointed with his slimmed-down message. While Biden’s includes a clear set of diplomatic asks, Russia clearly thinks the current White House has run its course and settles for wishing Trump “good health” and “cheerfulness.”

Among those on Putin’s regional list is Belarus, where his embattled Belarusian counterpart Alexander Lukashenko gets a lukewarm telegram. The veteran leader has faced waves of mass protest since claiming victory in an August poll that opposition parties, and many international observers, say was rigged. While acknowledging “the difficulties faced this year,” Putin hoped the two countries would continue to work together to “strengthen security and stability in the Eurasian space.”

While tensions with Turkey have at times seemed fraught, given ongoing conflicts in both Syria and the disputed province of Nagorno-Karabakh, Putin’s message to President Recep Tayyip Erdoğan was positively glowing. He “noted with satisfaction the progressive development of Russian-Turkish relations in all key areas.”

Another country that might have narrowly escaped the naughty list this year is the UK. Over the summer, the country’s Parliament published an explosive report that claimed Russian influence in constitutional votes. It was widely utilized by activists to push for a tougher stance towards Moscow, but faced criticism over its lack of evidence for the conclusions it was used to support. (RT)