Angry Obama Forced to Deal with Russia’s Putin

The 90-minute meeting between Presidents Obama and Putin, finally held Monday, was no one-on-one, but a formal affair of five or six officials of each nation—Foreign Minister Sergei Lavrov and Secretary of State John Kerry among them—flanking their Presidents facing each other on opposite sides of a long table.

Obama said nothing about the meeting afterwards, leaving it to an unnamed “senior administration official” to give a brief report later that evening that the meeting had been “productive” and “focused,” dealing principally with Ukraine and Syria. The unnamed official did, however, report that U.S.-Russia military coordination on Syrian operations, which the Obama White House had earlier shot down, will be established. As National Public Radio summarized the official’s report, the two presidents “did agree to have their militaries maintain communication in order to ‘deconflict'” operations in Syria.

Putin Doesn’t Minsk Words

Unlike the White House, the Kremlin posted pictures of the meeting, and President Putin held a press conference with Russian journalists at the United Nations afterwards. Putin, too, characterized the meeting as “very constructive, businesslike, and surprisingly very frank,” and expressed his view that it was very useful, but he was blunt about the continuing dangerous state of Russian-U.S. relations, and who is responsible for that state:

“Unfortunately, the relations between Russia and the United States are at a fairly low level; this is clear without any comments from me. But it was not our initiative to cause such a slump in relations between Russia and the United States. That is the position of our American partners. Is it good or is it bad? I think it is bad, both for bilateral relations and for global affairs. But that is the choice made by the United States.

“We are always prepared to develop contacts and restore full-scale relations…As for today’s meeting, it was very useful, and, what is particularly pleasant, it was very sincere. I think that our American partners explained their position quite clearly on many issues, including settling the situation in Ukraine and Syria, as well as the Middle East overall. Indeed, surprising as it may seem, we have many coinciding points and opinions about all these issues. We also have differences, which we have agreed to work on together. I hope that this work will be constructive….”

Putin emphasized the importance of the Minsk process on Ukraine; as for Syria, he made clear that Obama’s regime change policy, and insistence that Bashir al-Assad must be removed from office before all else, remains a central difference.

Putin reiterated to the Russian journalists that Russia will not yield on the principle of national sovereignty. He reported that he had discussed with Obama the fact that U.S., French, and Australian bombings inside Syria are illegal, as there is neither a UN Security Council resolution nor an invitation from the legitimate government backing them up. As for Assad, Putin said:

“I have great respect for my colleagues—both the American President, and the French President—however, as far as I know they are not citizens of the Syrian Republic, and therefore should not take part in determining the future of another state’s leadership. This is the Syrians’ business….

[Russia does]…not rule out anything, but if we do act, this will be in strict compliance with the norms of international law,”

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