Putin
slams Trump ties as top diplomats spar on Syria
Russian President Vladimir Putin said ties with the United States have deteriorated under the administration of Donald Trump as their top diplomats locked horns Wednesday over the Syrian conflict.
Russian President Vladimir Putin said ties with the United States have deteriorated under the administration of Donald Trump as their top diplomats locked horns Wednesday over the Syrian conflict.
Secretary of State Rex Tillerson met
his Russian counterpart Foreign Minister Sergei Lavrov in Moscow in what he
said was an attempt to narrow "areas of sharp difference".
The powers are at odds over the fate
of Moscow's longtime ally President Bashar al-Assad, a rift exacerbated after
an alleged Syrian chemical attack last week that triggered a punitive US
missile strike.
And as the men entered a day of tense
talks, Putin admitted that relations between Washington and Moscow have
worsened in the three months that Trump has been in office.
"You can say that the level of
trust on a working level, especially on the military side, has not improved but
most likely worsened," Putin said in the transcript of an interview with
Mir television released by the Kremlin.
Tillerson said he wanted "a very
open, candid and frank exchange" with Lavrov.
"Our meeting today comes at an
important moment in our relationship so that we can further clarify areas of
common objectives, areas of common interest -- even where our tactical
approaches may be different -- and further clarify areas of sharp difference so
that we can better understand why these differences exist," he said.
Tillerson was expected to challenge
Russia to distance itself from Assad and his Iranian backers and to work with
Washington's Western and Arab allies to find a political solution to the
conflict with Syria under new leadership.
- 'Real
intentions' -
Lavrov said Moscow was hoping to
understand Washington's "real intentions" and warned that Moscow
considered it "fundamentally important" to prevent more
"unlawful" US strikes against its ally Syria.
He said the visit -- the first to
Moscow by a senior Trump administration official -- offered an opportunity to
clarify the chances of cooperation "above all on the formation of a broad
anti-terrorist front".
Despite hopes of an improvement in
ties under Trump, the Tillerson-Lavrov talks look set to be dominated by the
war of words over Syria -- where more than 320,000 people have died in six
years of brutal war.
US officials have suggested Russian
forces may have colluded in the latest atrocity blamed on Assad's regime, and
it remained unclear if Tillerson will be invited to meet Putin.
- 'Where is the
proof?' -
On the eve of the talks, far from
trying to calm tempers, both sides escalated their rhetoric as the US tried to
prise Moscow and Damascus apart.
Putin accused Assad's opponents of
planning to stage chemical attacks to be blamed on Damascus in order to lure
the United States deeper into the conflict.
The Kremlin leader again slammed the
US missile strike and angrily rejected the allegation that Assad's forces were
behind the suspected chemical attack on the town of Khan Sheikhun that left 87
civilians dead including children.
"Where is the proof that Syrian
troops used chemical weapons? There isn't any. But there was a violation of
international law. That is an obvious fact," Putin told Mir.
- Anger over
Hitler comments -
On the even of the Tillerson-Lavrov
meeting, the White House compared Assad's tactics to those of World War II Nazi
dictator Adolf Hitler, sparking widespread criticism for apparently ignoring
the Holocaust.
Trump's spokesman Sean Spicer said
Tillerson would go into the meeting with Lavrov to "make sure we let
Russia know that they need to live up to the obligations it has made" to
halt Assad's chemical weapons use.
A senior US official asked how Russian
forces could not have had foreknowledge of the chemical attack.
And US Defence Secretary James Mattis
said Washington has "no doubt" that Assad was behind the massacre.
He warned that the US cruise missile
strike in response "demonstrates the United States will not passively
stand by while Assad ignores international law and employs chemical weapons he
declared destroyed".
The UN Security Council is set to vote
Wednesday on a resolution demanding the Syrian government cooperate with an
investigation into the attack -- a measure Russia will likely veto, diplomats
said.
US relations with the Kremlin have
become politically toxic for the White House on the back of claims Putin
conspired to get Trump elected.
Tillerson, a former oil executive,
might once have looked like the perfect envoy to mend strained ties, having
worked closely with the Kremlin while negotiating deals for energy giant
ExxonMobil.
But the underlying tensions between
the former Cold War foes never went away and last week's chemical attack has
left ties once again in crisis.
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