Russia, U.S. agree on joint work
over Syria amid battered ties
Russia and the U.S. on Wednesday agreed to keep on fighting international terrorism and continue discussions on Syrian conflict settlement, despite turbulent bilateral relations and a string of pending disputes between the two countries.
Russia and the U.S. on Wednesday agreed to keep on fighting international terrorism and continue discussions on Syrian conflict settlement, despite turbulent bilateral relations and a string of pending disputes between the two countries.
In a news
conference following talks with visiting U.S. Secretary of State Rex Tillerson
and a two-hour joint meeting Russian President Vladimir Putin, Russian Foreign
Minister Sergei Lavrov said the discussions were fruitful, underlining good
prospects for future joint work.
"It has
been a long day...The talks were comprehensive, frank and covered the whole
spectrum of issues, which are key to our bilateral relations and interaction on
the international affairs," The minister said.
According to
Lavrov, the two parties reaffirmed their determination in the talks for the
uncompromising fight against international terrorism and had deepgoing
discussions in that context about grim situations in various regions including
Syria, Yemen, Libya and Afghanistan as well as possible cooperation in
addressing those issues.
"With all
the existing problems, both objective and artificially created ones, we still
have quite a few prospects for joint work. Russia is open to dialogues with the
U.S. in different areas, and not only to dialogues but also to joint
actions," he said.
Echoing the
Russian stance on cooperation, Tillerson said that Russia and the U.S. will
continue discussions about how to find a solution to the Syrian conflict.
"Foreign
Minister Lavrov and I agreed we would consider further proposals made about the
way forward in Syria, including consulting with our allies and coalition
members." Tillerson said in the news conference.
Tensions between
Moscow and Washington have further aggravated over Syria after the U.S. missile
strike on a Syrian military airfield Thursday, which it claims to be in
response to the alledged Syrian government's chemical weapons attack last
Tuesday in Khan Sheikhoun.
Earlier in an
interview broadcast on Wednesday before the meeting with Tillerson, Putin said
that mutual trust between Russia and the U.S., especially on the military
level, had eroded in the first few months of Trump's presidency.
Putin's view was
share by Tillerson who, on the first visit by the Trump cabinet to Russia, said
that ties between the two countries were at a low point marked by serious
distrust.
"There is a
low level of trust between our two countries. The world's two foremost nuclear
powers cannot have this kind of relationship," he said in the news
conference, adding that Moscow and Washington had agreed to establish a working
group to identify problems and improve bilateral relations.
With a shared willingness
to mend the battered ties, Russia and the U.S. agreed on Wednesday to work
together on an investigation of the Syrian chemical weapons attack, although
the divergence in their stances have not changed much.
Tillerson
reiterated Washington is "quite confident" that the recent chemical
attack was planned and executed by Syrian government forces, which involved
chlorine bombs and other chemical weapons on more than 50 occasions.
Calling for an
"objective and unbiased probe" into the chemical attack in Syria,
Lavrov said that Russia has no intention to shield anyone responsible for the
incident and repeated Russia's view that the Syrian government was not
responsible for the attack.
Russia vetoed on
late Wednesday a UN resolution demanding the Syrian government cooperate with
an investigation of the suspected chemical attack, saying that Moscow had
consistently expressed its "categorical disagreement" with the draft
resolution, which led to further criticism from the West including the U.S..
"The international community has spoken. Russia now has a lot to
prove," U.S. Ambassador Nikki Haley said.
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