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Viktor Vekselberg, a Russian energy and metals tycoon whom the Kremlin put in charge of the Skolkovo project, said Monday that it will need 180-200 billion rubles ($6-6.7 billion) over the next five years, half of it provided by the state and the rest coming from the private sector. "This project will only be successful if hundreds of independent companies join in," he said. Schwarzenegger faced criticism for his weeklong trade mission last month to China, Japan and South Korea, which came in the midst of a months-long deadlock over solutions to address California's $19 billion shortfall. Schwarzenegger signed a new budget into law Friday after it passed both houses of the state legislature. It came 100 days into the start of the fiscal year. "I'm very happy that the Democrats and Republicans came together finally to approve the budget so I could come on this trade mission," Schwarzenegger told Medvedev, who congratulated him on passing the budget during their meeting at the Russian president's suburban residence. Medvedev then drove Schwarzenegger to Skolkovo in his vintage car: a Soviet-made, cream-colored Chaika designed in the 1950s. Schwarzenegger said he was thrilled to be back in Moscow, which he visited while starring as a Soviet cop in the 1988 movie "Red Heat." "I never thought at that point that I would be back as governor," Schwarzenegger said. "It's really fun to be back here and meet the president."
[Associated
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