http://www.themoscowtimes.com/news/article/kerry-pushes-for-common-approach-to-syria/479720.html

Kerry Pushes for Common Approach to Syria 
07 May 2013 | 
By Alexander Winning
 
Mladen Antonov / Reuters
U.S. Secretary of State John Kerry speaking on his cell phone on Red Square 
ahead of his meeting with Putin.

On his first official visit to Moscow as U.S. secretary of state, John Kerry 
told President Vladimir Putin on Tuesday that Russia and America had 
significant common interests in Syria and urged closer economic cooperation.

Opening talks in the Kremlin, Kerry said both Russia and the United States were 
interested in maintaining stability in the Middle East and combating the threat 
posed by extremists in the region. He then called on both sides to find common 
ground over Syria, where a two-year civil war has claimed over 70,000 lives.

Russia and the U.S. have long clashed over how to handle the crisis, with 
Russia shielding Syrian President Bashar Assad from UN Security Council 
sanctions with fellow veto-wielding power China. 

A joint plan for a political solution to the crisis that was approved in Geneva 
last June has stalled, and an analyst interviewed by The Moscow Times expressed 
doubt that any breakthrough would be reached during Kerry's visit.

"The United States believes that we share some very significant common 
interests with respect to Syria — stability in the region, not having 
extremists creating problems," Kerry told Putin, according to Reuters.

Kerry arrived in Moscow on Tuesday for a two-day visit, during which he is set 
to hold wide-ranging talks with Putin, Foreign Minister Sergei Lavrov and civil 
society representatives. His first official commitment was to lay a wreath by 
the Tomb of the Unknown Soldier in anticipation of Victory Day celebrations on 
Thursday.

The high-profile visit comes days after Israel — a key U.S. ally — launched a 
series of air strikes in southern Syria, prompting a harsh response from 
Russia's Foreign Ministry, which condemned the attacks as a threat to regional 
stability.

Putin discussed the Syrian crisis with Israeli Prime Minister Benjamin 
Netanyahu in a telephone conversation Monday, although the Kremlin did not 
clarify whether the strikes were discussed.

In discussions over Syria, a sticking point between the U.S. and Russia remains 
the question of arming the rebels locked in fighting with troops loyal to 
Assad. Washington has so far only supplied the rebels with non-military 
equipment but has refused to rule out sending arms. Moscow — a major supplier 
of weapons to Assad's government — strongly opposes such a move.

Another bone of contention is the use of chemical weapons, an issue the Russian 
Foreign Ministry has accused the West of politicizing as a means of paving the 
way for military intervention.

U.S.-Russian relations have become noticeably strained over the past year, with 
both sides trading barbs over a perceived crackdown on civil society groups in 
Russia, U.S. sanctions against Russian officials implicated in human rights 
abuses and Russian legislation banning U.S. adoptions.

Last month, however, U.S. President Barack Obama sent a confidential letter to 
his Russian counterpart seeking to ease tensions, and Putin said Tuesday that 
he would respond in the near future, according to a Kremlin transcript of the 
meeting.

Putin and Obama are expected to meet at a G8 summit in Northern Ireland in June 
and again at a G20 meeting in St. Petersburg in September. Kerry said Obama was 
anxious to meet Putin next month and exchange views on the North Korean and 
Iranian nuclear programs as well as ways to boost U.S.-Russian trade.

In comments in front of journalists, Kerry made no explicit mention of U.S. 
plans to install a European missile shield, to which Russia is angrily opposed, 
but thanked Russian specialists for helping with the inquiry into the Boston 
Marathon bombing.

The two men suspected of carrying out the bombing, Tamerlan and Dzhokhar 
Tsarnaev, are ethnic Chechens who emigrated from Russia to the U.S. around 
2002. Three were killed and more than 260 injured in the twin blasts in Boston 
on April 15.

Contacted by phone, Andrei Kortunov, president of the New Eurasia Foundation, a 
think tank, was optimistic that U.S.-Russian relations would warm under Kerry, 
whom he called "an experienced foreign-policy expert."

"Kerry has always been viewed as a balanced thinker in Moscow," Kortunov said. 
"His visit is a sign that dialogue between the two sides is entering a new 
stage, but it's too early to talk about a breakthrough in ties."


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http://www.themoscowtimes.com/news/article/kerry-pushes-for-common-approach-to-syria/479720.html#ixzz2SdLSNx3a
 
The Moscow Times 


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