Russian President Vladimir Putin yesterday said ties with the US have deteriorated under the administration of US President Donald Trump as their top diplomats locked horns over the Syrian conflict.
US Secretary of State Rex Tillerson met Russian Minister of Foreign Affairs Sergei Lavrov in Moscow in what he said was an attempt to narrow “areas of sharp difference.”
The two powers are at odds over the fate of Moscow’s longtime ally Syrian President Bashar al-Assad, a rift exacerbated after an alleged Syrian chemical attack last week that triggered a punitive US missile strike.
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 that was 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 al-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.
Lavrov said Moscow was hoping to better understand Washington’s “real intentions” and warned that Russia 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 looked set to be dominated by the war of words over Syria — where more than 320,000 people have died in six years of brutal civil war.
US officials have suggested Russian forces might have colluded in the latest atrocity blamed on al-Assad’s regime, and it remained unclear if Tillerson would be invited to meet Putin.
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 in the interview accused al-Assad’s opponents in Syria of planning to stage chemical attacks to be blamed on Damascus in order to lure the US deeper into the conflict.
The Kremlin leader again criticized the US missile strike and angrily rejected the allegation that al-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.
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