The US and Russia’s interests regarding the settlement in Syria coincide, US Secretary of State John Kerry told President Vladimir Putin.
The U.S. administration believes that our interests regarding Syria largely coincide, he said. This is so because the U.S. and Russia are interested in stability in this region, Kerry said.
Kerry thanks Russia for cooperation on investigating Boston attacks
US Secretary of State John Kerry thanked Russia for cooperation the investigation of the terrorist attack in Boston.
When meeting President Vladimir Putin in London he stressed that now Russia and the US are facing a number of difficult tasks which settlement requires the same level of cooperation.
Kerry said he was happy that Russian and American experts are working together investigating the terrorist attack in Boston.
Obama would like to discuss cooperation on Syria with Putin – Kerry
U.S. President Barack Obama expects to discuss cooperation with Russia on Syria at a meeting with President Vladimir Putin on the sidelines of the upcoming G8 summit in Northern Ireland.
U.S. Secretary of State John Kerry said at a meeting with Putin in Moscow on Tuesday that Obama is looking forward to meeting with the Russian leader on the sidelines of the G8 summit in Northern Ireland.
At this meeting, the U.S. leader plans to say that there are a number of issues, including economic ones and those concerning North Korea, Iran, Syria and some others, on which the U.S. and Russia could cooperate, he said.
John Kerry’s visit to Moscow no ordinary event – scholar
The current visit to Moscow by the US State Secretary John Kerry is not an ordinary event. The main problem that Russia and the US are facing today is that of building more productive and mutually rewarding relations, the head of a Higher School of Economics Department, Maxim Bratersky, said in an interview with the Voice of Russia.
According to the expert, the basic problem of Russian-US relations lies in the fact that the two sides see their relations in the field of security through the prism of nuclear containment. Bratersky feels that the top priority now is to find a new basis for mutually advantageous cooperation.
M.D