Kremlin hopes Putin-Trump meeting to
establish working dialogue
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[July 05, 2017]
MOSCOW (Reuters) - Moscow hopes the
first face-to-face meeting between Russian President Vladimir Putin and
his U.S. counterpart Donald Trump later this week will establish an
effective working dialogue between the two men, the Kremlin said on
Wednesday.
The meeting, due to be held on the sidelines of the G20 summit in
Hamburg on Friday, will be closely watched at a time when ties between
the two countries remain strained by U.S. allegations of Russian
election hacking, Syria, Ukraine and a U.S. row over Trump associates'
links to Moscow.
"This is the first meeting, the first time the two presidents will get
acquainted - this is the main thing about it," Kremlin spokesman Dmitry
Peskov told a conference call with reporters.
"The expectation is that a working dialogue will be established, which
is vitally important for the entire world when it comes to increasing
the efficiency of resolving a critical mass of conflicts."
The meeting would explore whether there was a chance and a readiness for
the two countries to fight international terrorism together in Syria,
Peskov said, saying Putin would explain Moscow's stance on the conflicts
in both Syria and Ukraine.
But Peskov said the meeting's brief format meant the Russian leader
might not have enough time to give a full analysis of what Moscow
regarded as the causes of the Ukraine crisis.
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Three years after Russia annexed Crimea from Ukraine and a
pro-Russian separatist uprising broke out in eastern Ukraine, there
is little sign of a peaceful solution in the east despite a
ceasefire agreement signed in February 2015 in Minsk, Belarus.
Those accords were signed by France, Germany, Russia and Ukraine.
Kiev accuses Moscow of actively supporting the pro-Russian
separatists. Russia denies the charge.
The meeting with Trump would "be a good chance to reiterate Russia's
stance that the Minsk accords have no alternative, that the Minsk
accords must be implemented, and that measures must be taken to stop
provocations which unfortunately Ukraine's armed forces are still
carrying out," Peskov said.
(Reporting by Dmitry Solovyov; Editing by Andrew Osborn)
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