U.S. President Barack Obama and Russian President Vladimir Putin will meet in New York next week at a time of high tension in Europe and the Middle East, but the Kremlin and the White House disagreed on Thursday over the top priority for the talks.
The White House insisted the meeting would focus on eastern Ukraine, where
Russian-backed forces are fighting the Kiev government, prompting tough
sanctions that have damaged Russia's economy.
Moscow, however, said the main focus would be on Syria, where Russia has
built up its military forces in recent weeks with combat aircraft, tanks and
other equipment in support of President Bashar al-Assad.
Putin's spokesman, Dmitry Peskov, told reporters: "Of course, the
primary topic will be Syria." Asked whether Ukraine would be discussed, he
said: "Well, if time allows."
"There will be time," Obama's spokesman, Josh Earnest, retorted
during a briefing in Washington. Earnest, speaking at the White House, played
down the possibility for any "major announcement" from the meeting.
The leaders will be in New York to address the United Nations General
Assembly on Monday morning. Peskov said the meeting would take place after
Putin's speech, but Earnest declined to say when it would happen.
The two camps also differed over who called for the meeting. The Kremlin
said it was organized "by mutual agreement," but Earnest said it was
being held at Putin's request. He said the Russians were "more
desperate" to talk to their American counterparts because of the economic
sanctions' impact.
In an interview with CBS's 60 Minutes, Putin said he believes the only
solution to fighting terrorism in Syria is through strengthening
"effective government structures."
Past meetings between the two leaders have been frosty. One encounter in
June 2013, which also focused on Syria, resulted in a famous photo of the
leaders looking distant and glum.
Earnest said Putin had used similar body language in a photo after a
meeting with Israeli Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu this week.
"President Putin was striking a now-familiar pose of less-than-perfect
posture, an unbuttoned jacket, and knees spread far apart, to convey a
particular image," Earnest said.
The United States also hopes to advance political talks on Syria at other
General Assembly meetings, Sheba Crocker, assistant secretary for international
organization affairs, told a State Department briefing.
But Crocker said the United States would not back a U.N. Security Council
statement on countering terrorism proposed by Russia because of fears it would
send the wrong message to U.S. partners in the fight against Islamic State
militants in Syria.
(Additional reporting by Jeff Mason, Doina Chiacu, Mohammad Zargham and Darya Korsunskaya; Editing by David Storey and Jonathan Oatis)
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